Sales and Sales Management Blog

May 21, 2009

A Summer Full of FREE Training From 49 of the Best of the Best Trainers in the World

Everyday this summer you’ll have the opportunity to get the wisdom and guidance of some the best of the best sales experts in the world.

FREE

WITHOUT ANY EFFORT

JUST BY CLICKING YOUR MOUSE

I’m sure you’re aware that there are thousands upon thousands of blogs on the internet devoted to sales and sales management.  Some are really good, some are pure trash.  It is a very competitive market.  But like every market, the cream rises to the top.

I’m proud to say that my blog, Sales and Sales Management Blog, is ranked #5 out of the thousands of blogs devoted to sales. 

That ranking means I’m delivering real value.  That I’ve created a blog that people like and support.  That readers have found my blog to be one of top sources for real content and guidance.

But it is about to get much, much better.

Throughout this summer, from June 1 till the end of August, you’ll find a new aspect of sales or sales management addressed each week and each week the subject will be addressed by 5 different sales experts.

Each week will be dedicated to a particular segment of selling and everyday from Monday through Thursday a different sales expert will address the week’s subject, then on Friday I’ll give my take on the issue.

What are the subjects we’ll tackle?

June:
1 through 5:  Using the Phone to Generate Business
8 through 12:  Networking
15 through 19:  Referrals/Word of Mouth Marketing
22 through 26:  Prospecting and Social Media

July:
June 29 through July 3:  Building Client Relationships
6 through 10:  Building Trust
13 through 17:  Effective Sales Presentations
20 through 24:  Successful Sales Negotiation
27 through 31:  Hiring Top Talent

August:
3 through 7:  Managing In a Changing Sales Environment
10 through 14: Leading Effective Sales Team Meetings
17 through 21:  Coaching Salespeople to Success
24 through 28:  Special End of Summer Surprise Week

Who are some of the experts that you’ll learn from?

Charles Green on building trust

Colleen Francis on presentations

Jill Myrick on leading sales team meetings

Dr. Drew Stevens on hiring top talent

Jerry Acuff on building relationships

Bill Cates on referrals

Jill Konrath on using the phone to generate business

Keith Rosen on coaching

49 of the biggest and best in the business               

              Everyday

                                All Summer

                                                One great blog

April 16, 2009

Paul McCord to be a featured presenter in Sales Stimulus Package teleseminar series

St. Paul, MN, April 8, 2009 - Sales leader Paul McCord has been selected to be a featured presenter at the upcoming Sales Stimulus Package teleseminar series. Held weekdays from May 4th to 15th, the Sales Stimulus program will help business-to-business (B2B) sellers and entrepreneurs put an end to their sales struggles in today’s tough economic climate.

“I’m delighted that Paul’s presenting at this event,” said Sales Stimulus organizer Jill Konrath. “His depth of experience in networking, combined with his practical strategies can have a tremendous impact on a person’s sales success.”

During the Sales Stimulus Package teleseminars, participants will learn how to create a full pipeline quickly in a tough economy–despite the longer sales cycles and fewer buyers.

By attending the series, sellers will also discover:

  • How to reach decision-makers on the phone and via email to get their foot in the door, even when barricades are up.
  • Tools such as LinkedIn, social networking sites, Sales 2.0 resources and online intelligence sources that sales experts use to make big impressions and form rich connections with prospective customers.
  • What it takes to capture the attention of busy decision makers and get on their calendar.
  • How to ferret out the decision makers with power, so they don’t waste valuable time with the wrong people.
  • Strategies sellers can use to speed up their sales, even when prospects are slowing down their decision process.
  • How to quickly build relationships as a trusted, high integrity advisor who’s committed to customers’ success.
  • What it takes to eliminate the deadly mistakes that are causing sellers to lose sales or slow them down.
  • How to overcome sales objections and prevent them from happening in the first place.

“Every salesperson, freelancer and entrepreneur who I talk to right now is having a tough time cracking into accounts and keeping sales momentum going.” said Konrath. ‘They need more high quality prospects in their pipeline – and quickly. This Sales Stimulus Package will give sellers the tools they need to sell effectively even when times are tough.”

The Sales Stimulus program will be held weekdays from Monday, May 4th to Friday, May 15th from 1 – 2pm ET. Wednesdays will include an additional 2 – 3 pm ET session. Each of the sessions will happen live and the speakers will allow time for questions at the end. After each session, a recording will be available for download.

In addition to McCord, Sales Stimulus Package speakers include:

  • Jill Konrath – A leading-edge sales strategist and author of Selling to Big Companies who helps sellers crack into corporate accounts and speed up their sales cycles.
  • Colleen Francis - President of Engage Selling, author of Honesty Sells and an expert on selling in tough markets.
  • Patrick O’Malley - An expert on using LinkedIn to utilize it to research companies, make invaluable connections and increase sales.
  • Wendy Weiss - The “Queen of Cold Calling” and one of the leading authorities on lead generation, cold calling and new business development.
  • Mike Schultz - Author of Professional Services Marketing, publisher of RainToday.com and an expert in professional services marketing.
  • Mary Flaherty - An expert on social networking for business services and developer of research, case studies and other content for B2B professionals at RainToday.com.
  • Josiane Feigon - Author of the upcoming book, Smart Selling on the Phone and Online and an expert on inside sales.
  • Doyle Slayton - Founder of SalesBlogcast and an internationally recognized sales and leadership strategist, speaker, and blogger.
  • Andrea Sittig-Rolf - Author of Business to Business Prospecting, The Seven Keys to Effective B2B Appointment Setting, and Power Referrals.
  • Sam Richter - Author of Take the Cold Out of Cold Calling, a nationally recognized expert on sales intelligence, and SVP/Chief Marketing Officer at ActiFi.
  • Kendra Lee - Author of Selling Against the Goal, and a prospect attraction specialist who knows how to shorten time to revenue in innovative ways.
  • Jeb Blount - Author of Power Principles and 7 Rules for Outselling the Recession, whose Sales Gravy and Sales Guy podcasts have been downloaded 2 million times on iTunes.

“Each one of the Sales Stimulus speakers were chosen because of their knowledge of a specific part of the business development process,” said Konrath. “They’re the best in each of their specialties and sellers who want to improve their sales won’t want to miss any of them.

The Sales Stimulus Package teleseminar series will benefit business-to-business sellers responsible for driving sales in the midst of a recession. Additionally, every attendee will receive over $200 worth of exclusive bonuses provided by the speakers and downloadable mp3s of each session for later review.

For full teleseminar information and registration, visit http://www.salesstimuluspackage.com or http://www.sellingtobigcompanies.com. Special group pricing is available for sales teams of three or more. For more information on group rates, contact Chris Bedwell at (763) 783-9200 or chris@sellingtobigcompanies.com.

About Paul McCord

Paul McCord is an internationally recognized business development strategist. He is the author of the bestselling Creating a Million Dollar a Year Sales Income: Sales Success through Client Referrals, which was selected as an offering of the prestigious Forbes Book Club. He specializes in helping sellers learn how to find and connect with prospects in ways they will accept and respect. Paul’s clients include Microsoft, UBS, and Merrill Lynch.

About Jill Konrath
Jill Konrath is a leading-edge sales strategist and business adviser who helps sellers crack into corporate accounts, speed up their sales cycle and achieve their revenue growth goals. As a thought leader in the selling and marketing arena, Konrath speaks frequently to corporate sales forces and industry associations. She is the author of Selling to Big Companies, which has been an Amazon Top 25 sales book for the past three years. Most recently, Selling to Big Companies was selected by Fortune Magazine as one of eight “must read” sales books.

April 15, 2009

A Lesson in Why Sales Training Fails

A friend of mine is the Executive Vice President of Sales for a company that sells into the oil and gas industry.  His sales team is dispersed over a large section of the US and Europe and consists of dozens of experienced professional salespeople.  For me, as a sales trainer, this would be a prime prospect-except my friend, Dan, doesn’t believe in using outside training because, he argues, their past experience with outside trainers hasn’t produced results.

Having written a blog post about why sales training doesn’t produce the results companies want just a few days ago, the subject was fresh on my mind when I got a call from Dan early last Sunday afternoon.  Seems Dan had a problem-and an opportunity for me to possibly turn it into a teaching moment.  I don’t mean to beat the subject to death, but Dan’s problem proved to be such a great demonstration of why so often sales training doesn’t have the results companies want.

Dan called asking me if I could give him some help.  He and his family were at their lake home which is about three hours from Midland, and nowhere near an auto mechanic, especially on a Sunday, especially on Easter Sunday.

The serpentine belt on Dan’s car had broken, leaving him stranded in the middle of nowhere without transportation other than an old, barely running four wheeler, and no possibility of getting a mechanic out until the next day-if then.  Dan had sent his teenage son to the nearest town that had an open auto parts store to buy a belt.  Fortunately, the store had the right belt and the old four wheeler made it there and back.  Unfortunately, Dan’s son had failed to ask the guy at the parts store how to install the belt.  Instead of calling the parts store, Dan called me.  This was my moment to sell Dan sales training.  Lucky for me Dan doesn’t have a mechanically inclined bone in his body.

I told Dan how to install the belt: “The belt snakes around the various pulleys for the fan, the ac, the alternator, and the other accessories on your car.  There is also a tensioner pulley that will allow you to relax the tension on the belt so you can get it over the fan and around the various pulleys.  All you have to do is take a wrench and pull the bolt on the tensioner pulley, probably to the left, and it will move the pulley enough so you can get the new belt on.  Once you let up on the wrench, the tensioner pulley will again apply the right amount of tension.  It’s easy.  Won’t take you ten minutes.  Just make sure to wind the belt correctly around all of the pulleys, and make sure the belt isn’t inside out, the little ribs are on the inside of the belt.  If you get the belt on and it’s too big, make sure you’ve found all of the pulleys it must engage.  If you haven’t missed a pulley and it is too big-or if you don’t have enough belt, then they’ve given you the wrong belt.  Otherwise, if you need more help, just give me a call.”

In the course of three minutes I had given Dan all the training he needed to put the new belt on. 

Knowing that he probably would be calling me back, I decided to head in his direction.  Sure enough, about an hour and a half later Dan calls back.  He has spent more than an hour looking for the tensioner pulley.  He’s decided to stay until Monday and see if he can get a mechanic to come out to the lake house and put the belt on for him.  I let him know that I’m just a little over an hour from his place and we’ll get him up and running shortly.

When I get there it takes about 15 minutes to get his belt on.  It was easy.  Dan was embarrassed.  His response: “Man, I’m sorry.  After watching you do it, it seems so easy.  I’m really sorry you had to come all the way out here just for this.”

“No problem,” I said.  “You’ve just experienced the exact same thing your sales team experiences when you hire a sales trainer-the verbal instructions don’t mean just a whole lot if there isn’t real world application to go along with it.  Hear it and it makes sense but it’s kinda fuzzy.  Hear and see it and it makes great sense.  If we take the belt off and have you to do it from scratch, you’ll never forget how to put a belt on again.  Same thing for your team.  If you want sales training to work, it has to go beyond telling to applying.  You knew what to do after I told you on the phone but you didn’t have the experiential knowledge to actually put it into practice.  Your team needs the same thing when they learn new behaviors.”

I have a meeting with Dan and the president of the company early next week to talk about sales training–and coaching. 

April 10, 2009

Guest Article: “How to Coach the Talented-Slacker,” by Steven Rosen

How to Coach the Talented-Slacker
by Steven Rosen

Meet Jane.

Jane is an experienced and successful district sales manager who could work in any industry and for any company. In fact, there are many Jane’s in all companies. Jane is performance-driven, a very good coach and a people person. Each month Jane is put to the test with different sales reps she must coach to success.

Jane’s Profile:

Current:
District Sales Manager IBZ Inc. 2004-

Past:
Sales Manager Alba Inc. 2000-2004
Product Manager Alba Inc 1996-2000
Sales Rep Alba Inc. 1992-1996

Education:
Business Degree 1992

Courses:
Managing Effort Getting Results 2008
Professional Sales Management 2007
Sales Coaching for Success 2006
Professional Selling 1998

IBZ is a mid-sized technology company that has had some tough years but has turned the corner. It pays its reps a combination of salary and bonus for achievement of targets. This year the bonus plans have a super bonus portion which accelerates when a rep is 5% over quota.

Jane wants to get 2009 off to a great start. However, as she shared in one of our monthly coaching sessions, she is frustrated with one of her most tenured sales reps.

For some background, Jane took over an underperforming region last year and has helped lead the team to be in the top 25% of districts in the country. Jane’s goal in 2009 is to reach the top 10% of the country and she is focused. Her key area of focus is on finding innovative ways to grow the business. She wants her team to develop new business opportunities for lagging product lines.

As she reviews her team, the one rep keeps coming up. Ray has been with the company for over 20 years and has worked with 10 DM’s. He has been on 2 personal improvement programs (PIP) and has won several sales contests in the last few years.

Ray knows his stuff, he knows his customers and he knows how to get others in the office to do his work. When Jane works with Ray she has a good day although she wonders whether he works full days when she is not with him. He picks her up at 8:30 and drops her off around 4:30. The day is well planned and Ray has a good rapport with his customers.

Jane has invested a lot of energy trying to motivate Ray and a lot of time giving him positive feedback on his skills, customer service and business plans and on his year-end review. She would like to see the results if he would put the extra call each day.

In reviewing Ray’s 2009 business plan, Jane determine that he had not included any new target customers or innovative approaches to driving the business further. She is frustrated with Ray’s lack of initiative and drive.

Questions:

1. How do you motivate Ray to put in the extra effort required to be a top rep?

2. How much time would you invest in Ray in 2009?

 

Dear Jane,

Ray is an example of a rep that has all the talent but lacks consistent effort to be a top performer. The first thing we need to remember as managers is that it is not our job to motivate our reps. External motivation is short-lived. It is not necessarily sustained when you are not with your rep.

Another way to approach Ray is to encourage him to focus on developing new business. He may think he knows best and he will appease you by picking a few accounts. He knows he will have a new manager in time and will outlast that manager as well. Provide Ray with positive reinforcement only when Ray demonstrates that he is driving new business and initiatives.

You can continue to invest in Ray’s development but will get limited returns for the time you invest. With 8 other reps you can achieve a better ROI by investing in those reps that put out a consistent high level of effort and are self- motivated.

Let me know how it goes,

Steven Rosen

Steven Rosen, MBA is the founder of STAR Results. STAR Results is a sales leadership consulting, training and coaching organization dedicated to leadership development in the Pharmaceutical industry. Steven works with sales executives to; hire top performing sales reps, develop a team of top sales managers and achieve greater personal and professional success. http://www.starresults.com/

April 4, 2009

For Sales Training to Produce Results, Management Must Change Their View of What Training Is

“We just don’t have any funds to bring in trainers this year.  Besides, we just haven’t had that much success with outside trainers anyway.  They come in and do their thing, but after they leave, we’ve never really seen much of an impact in our sales that we think came from them. “

“They come in and do their thing.” 

That’s the crux of the problem with training.  Companies and salespeople see trainers as “doing their thing,” that is, putting on a show and disseminating information, not changing the behavior of salespeople. 

If companies want to see real change in their sales teams, they must rethink what sales training is and how it is delivered.  Training isn’t just information exchange.  If it were, all the company need do is have each salesperson read a book or listen to a CD.  You don’t need to spend a small fortune to bring in the author of the book or CD if all he or she is going to do is give a verbal presentation of the same information contained in the book.  That’s nothing more than hiring a very expensive reader who presents the material in a bit more personal and entertaining format.

Training, at its core, is about changing behavior.  The information necessary to begin the behavior change is certainly critical, but it is nothing more than the beginning of the training process.  The real value of training is learning how to apply the information in the real world, that is, how to turn the information into the behavior that helps one sell. 

The world is full of salespeople who “know” what to do, but have no workable idea of how to do it, who have received the correct information, but haven’t received the necessary coaching to turn it from information into action.

The basic reason sales training has not had the impact companies, salespeople, and trainers have hoped for is the failure to address the long-term coaching necessary to have individual salespeople’s behavior change.

Sales training results will continue to be less than satisfactory unless the group training session is followed up with consistent, disciplined coaching.  And the coaching must be more than simply monitoring behavior and results with the subsequent admonitions or pats on the back.  It must consist of analysis, guidance, and individualized training.  Whether the follow-up coaching is done by the original trainer, the salesperson’s manager, or someone from an in-house training department, the coach must be thoroughly immersed in the what, how, and why of the behaviors to be achieved, and how to help the salesperson acquire and implement those behaviors.   

If you intend to hire a trainer and have them “come in and do their thing” and leave, save your money because you and your team will be disappointed. 

If you want to see real change within your team-and to your bottom-line–change your view of training from a session to a long-term process of changing behavior.  Yes, it will certainly cost more up front.  It won’t produce the overnight change many sales trainers have led companies to expect in the past-and that never materialized.  But it will produce the results you want and instead of wasting the money you’ve wasted on training in the past, your money will be invested in your company’s success, not spent on the trainer’s success.

March 31, 2009

Consistency in Training Relates Directly to Consistency in Production

I had an interesting conversation on Friday with a sales executive for a mid-size company that produces accounting and HR software solutions for the manufacturing and medical industries regarding the inconsistency of training messages to the sales force within the company.  David’s concern is that although the company has what is supposed to be a sales process that is learned, perfected and used by every salesperson within the company, there is no consistency in the training or in the training messages they receive from the various training sources the company employs.  What, he wondered, is this inconsistency doing to the sales team?

Although David’s company isn’t unusual in the sense that many companies have an ‘official’ sales process that they mandate but don’t teach consistently, in my experience, David is unusual since so few salespeople or sales leaders ever question the consequences of presenting inconsistent training.

David’s company spends a great deal of money training each new hire on the sales process the company has adopted.  Each new hire will spend well over 100 hours during their first 60 days on the job in classroom and field training inn the process the company uses.  This includes a four day stint at an outside vendor’s training center.  Every new hire is sent to the training session, costing the company a significant investment -airfare, hotel, meals, the training company’s fee, as well as the new hire’s salary.  Lots of money goes into each new salesperson hired.

You’d think they would want to ensure those dollars were well spent.

You’d be wrong.

When the new hire finishes the basic training program, they go into their branch and from there receive the same additional training as any other salesperson in the company.  This additional training comes from their branch manager, the company training department, the occasional outside training session, and the company’s video and audio training library. 

Sounds pretty good so far.  Actually, it sounds like these salespeople get a consistent dose of training.

And they do.

Unfortunately, the additional training they receive not only doesn’t reinforce the initial training the company spent huge dollars on when the person was hired, much of it actually contradicts that training. 

Branch managers hear of some hot new idea and the next Monday they’re training their salespeople on it.

The training department attends a seminar that excites them and they immediately go back to their office and create a training program around it.

A company executive hears a great speaker and insists the company hire them for their next sales conference.

The sales library has all of the popular books and DVD’s on the market.

Little or no thought is given to how these training messages integrate with the company’s mandated sales process.  Training becomes nothing but a jumble of different messages that if any fit within the format of the company’s stipulated sales process, it is only by accident.

And what is the message all of this sends to the sales team?  Simply that they are free to pick and choose what they want to do since the ‘mandated’ sales process really isn’t mandated-it’s just a suggestion of a process they might consider using.

And then the management of the company wonders why all the training they do isn’t working.

Training is far more than simply exchanging information about a particular aspect of selling.  Training has far more to do with behavior change than it does information exchange.  Training doesn’t work for many companies because the behavior change is never implemented-it never has a chance to be implemented because the sales team is confronted with so many different-and often contradictory-behaviors that no one behavior is ever really learned before they are confronted with a new behavior.

This same lack of consistency is experienced by salespeople who must seek out their own training.  They too are confronted with a sea of training concepts and ideas that are often in conflict with one another. 

There are many sales processes that are viable.  There are a great many individual strategies and techniques that produce results.  But none of them will produce the desired results if they are not learned and implemented-if the right behavior isn’t ingrained so it comes naturally.  To learn a process to that point, what is often called unconscious competency, takes time, practice, and reinforcement.  If your company isn’t generating the results from training that you want to see, maybe the culprit isn’t the process or the strategies you want to use, but instead is the inconsistency of message your company is unconsciously sending your sales team.

March 10, 2009

Don’t Count on Your Company for Training in 2009

Brainshark,  a leader in on-demand presentations, has just released a survey of how companies will be handling training, travel and conference budgets this year.  For those who have relied on company training sessions and conferences for the bulk of their training, the survey doesn’t look good.

Brainshark found that about 40% of companies plan on significantly decreasing meeting and conference costs.  Worse, 67% of large companies surveyed plan on cutting meeting and conference costs.  Over 60% are cutting travel and almost 30% are cutting incentive trips.

What do these staggering numbers mean for you?

More than likely it means you’re on you own.

Certainly, some companies will fill the void with webinars, tele-conferences, or on demand training presentations.  Many others, if not most, will simply pocket the savings.

There is a whole generation of salespeople who have never sold in a declining market.

Even those of us who are grizzled and tested have allowed our skills to rust as we’ve sold in a strong market these last years.

What has been working isn’t.  What we relied on yesterday isn’t generating results today.

If we want to survive and possibly even thrive today, we have to adopt more productive strategies to find and connect with prospects.  We have to learn to engage prospects in ways they will respect and respond to.  We have to learn how to approach prospects that put us and our products in a position of strength.

If we simply do more of what isn’t working, we’ll simply get nowhere faster.

That’s the reality of today’s marketplace.

Salespeople and Sales Leaders

Unfortunately, Brainshark’s survey indicates that very likely your company won’t be helping you do that.

In 2009 you’re on your own.  And this isn’t the year to be kicked out of the life raft.

Sales Leaders and Meeting Planners

There are cost effective ways of getting your sales team ready to tackle this market.

No, you don’t have to spend a fortune on meetings and conferences.  The hard costs you save can be millions, while the soft costs tens of millions.

Whether you’re a salesperson looking for help and guidance or a sales leader or meeting planner looking to change your team’s fortunes, give us a call and let’s see how we can get your sales moving and your bottom-line flooded with income.

Call me at 432-853-8685 or email me at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com

February 24, 2009

Guest Article: “Will 2009 Sound The Death Knell For Sales Training As We Know It?” by Jonathan Farrington

Will 2009 Sound The Death Knell For Sales Training As We Know It?
by Jonathan Farrington

During the seventies, eighties and nineties, it was common for large corporations such as Hewlett Packard, IBM, and Compaq etc to put their new sales recruits through a twelve to eighteen-month training program.

Today, salespeople consider themselves extremely fortunate if they receive an initial two weeks of induction training or product familiarisation workshops.

So what has changed? Have companies discovered that training is not necessary?

On the contrary, training appears to be even more important today than it was thirty years ago and it is becoming more critical all the time.

Lower Training Budgets But Higher Expectations:
The dichotomy facing Sales Directors is how they reconcile the fact that most corporations today provide less upfront training for their sales staff than in years past, yet attach increasing importance to staff development?

This should not come as a surprise, because current stock market thinking provides a powerful disincentive for firms to invest in their people on an ongoing basis. An organisation’s investment in their human capital, in the form of training and other forms of education, is not separable from general expenditure. It therefore appears as a cost on the corporate balance sheet.

Tough Choices:
Unfortunately, as a consequence, many Sales Directors have concluded that their only realistic option is to cut back on training and instead look to recruit sales professionals who, in theory anyway, already possess the necessary skills needed to do the job. They then send them out to win business armed with what they know. However, most of those same Sales Directors are discovering just how difficult it is to find skilled salespeople who have all of the essential skills and personal traits. And anyway it is not possible to equate experience or seniority with success. As I often say: “Some sales professionals have ten year’s experience, most have one year’s experience ten times”

In skills development, there are many similarities to sport i.e. does an athletic champion stop training as soon as they win their first medal? In music, does a concert pianist stop rehearsing as soon as they have given their first recital? In art, does the artist stop improving after they have enjoyed the first exhibition of their work? The answer in all cases is obvious and we should apply the same common sense principals to the ongoing development of our sales teams.

The reality is that selling in today’s climate is both an art and a science. Selling is a profession that demands a far wider range of skills than ever before, skills that require continual fine-tuning and constant practice.

In Summary – Ongoing Reinforcement and Development Is Essential:
The operative word here is “ongoing”. Even if salespeople have undergone progressive sales training, there’s no guarantee that they will be successful. It is common knowledge that skills grow rusty over time and salespeople are prone to pick-up bad habits along the way or to simply skip steps and take shortcuts that can lead to long-term trouble. Perhaps even more important these days, is the fact that markets, competition, technologies, and customer preferences are all in a constant and accelerating state of change. This fact requires that sales people are able and willing to rethink their sales strategy and approach frequently and receive a regular top-up of skills and motivational coaching.

Unfortunately, the task of selling never becomes any easier and as competition continues to intensify, sales people will face issues that can be extremely difficult to deal with i.e. decreased product uniqueness, increased competition within ‘safe’ markets, longer sales cycles and shorter product life spans. Every organisation that intends to survive in the re-engineered environment which arrived with the new millennium must, in my view, respond to those realities.

Jonathan Farrington is a globally recognized business coach, mentor, author, and consultant, who has guided hundreds of companies and tens of thousands of individuals around the world towards optimum performance levels.  He has authored in excess of three hundred skills development programmes, designed a range of unique and innovative process tools and has been published extensively on a wide range of business topics including organizational and sales team development, leadership and the customer imperative.  Jonathan’s first book, “Tougher At The Top” will be published early in 2009.  Visit his website at www.jonathanfarrington.com

February 10, 2009

Run Don’t Walk

Today’s the day!  Can’t say much till Noon Pacific Standard Time–but it is worth the wait.

Noon today PST, the doors open – on an offer that has the potential to save you thousands of dollars, increase your sales exponentially, and perhaps best of all give you peace of mind in the midst of a downward spiraling economy, massive budget cuts and increased sales quotas!

Watch the countdown to noon here.

Best,

Paul McCord


At noon PST run, don’t walk to here

February 6, 2009

Guest Article, “From Training to Education,” by Nido Qubein

From Training to Education
by Nido Qubein

Let me make a suggestion that at first may sound strange, coming from a management consultant. If your company has a training department, do away with it. Replace it with a Department of Education and Development.

The reason: The new business environment needs fewer people who are trained to do things a specific way and more people who are educated to find new ways of doing things.

As Stanley Marcus once said, “You don’t train people; you train dogs and elephants; you educate people.”

What’s the difference?

Let me put it this way: Would you want your teenager to have sex education or sex training ? The choice is clear.

The word education comes from the Latin educo, which means to change from within. Training provides an external skill. Education changes the inner person. Training deals only with the doing level. Education teaches people how to think.

Let me give you an example: I once ordered an apple pie and a milk shake at a fast-food restaurant. The server smiled and asked, “Would you like a dessert with that?”

This young woman had been trained to act. She had been conditioned to smile and try to upgrade the sale by reciting her memorized lines. And she rehearsed them to perfection.

But she had not been educated in customer interaction. She hadn’t been taught to listen to the customer, to think about what the customer ordered and to acquire a feeling for what might appeal to the customer under the circumstances.

Education deals with the feeling level. The ways you and I act are based on our responses to stimuli. First we think about it, then we begin to feel it, then we act based on that feeling.

Ronald Reagan won a landslide election in 1980 by asking people to think, feel and act. He did it with a penetrating question:

“Are you better off now than you were four years ago?”

The voters thought about it. They felt uncomfortable about the economy. This feeling of discomfort moved them to behave in the way Reagan wanted them to behave. They voted against the incumbent administration.

Training attempts to add on the qualities needed for success. Education builds them in.

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that you should never train people. Training is essential when a specific skill must be learned, or a specific procedure must be followed consistently in a manufacturing process. But training should be part of a broader educational process.

One of my favorite proverbs conveys the wisdom that when you give people fish, they’ll be hungry tomorrow; if you teach them to fish, they’ll never go hungry. Training gives your employees a fish — a specific skill applicable to a specific task. Education teaches them to fish.

Corporations have no choice but to invest substantial resources in developing people. So it’s best to invest in ways that let people grow; that teach them to think for themselves; that create a pool of solid candidates for promotion to higher positions.

My message to clients is clear:

  • Training focuses on teaching people yesterday’s skills.
  • Education focuses on teaching them to develop tomorrow’s skills.

Education without the vision for a better future is only training.

As Charles Kettering said: “You can’t have a better tomorrow if you’re thinking about yesterday.”

We’ve spent entirely too much time in the past teaching people what to do instead of concentrating on how they think and how they feel and how they behave; far too much time getting a job done instead of producing excellent results; far too much time conforming instead of creating.

Yesterday’s thinking looks at the tasks people perform today and asks, “How can we train our future employees to do these things?”

Today’s thinking looks at the kind of people needed to fulfill corporate strategy and finds ways to develop them.

A reporter once asked Wayne Gretzky, the great hockey player, why he always seems to be where the puck is. Gretzky replied, “I don’t do that at all. I always go to where the puck is going to be.”

Executives, too, must go where the action is going to be. We need to look down the road 5 or 10 years and ask “What kind of company do we want to be by then, and what kind of employees will it take to get us there?” Then we can plan educational and development programs to develop such employees.

To carry out such programs, you need behavioral change agents, not trainers. Trainers are easy to find. They are plentiful and inexpensive. Behavioral facilitators are less plentiful, and they’re in strong demand. But they nurture lasting qualities that won’t become obsolete when the next technological breakthrough occurs.

In our company, Creative Services, Inc., we’ve dedicated the last two decades to helping clients transform their corporations from mechanistic organizations into thinking organizations. Mechanistic organizations are like machines, doing the same things over and over. Thinking organizations are constantly alert for new concepts and new methods.

Think about your company. Is it a thinking or a mechanistic organization? Some hints that will help you:

In a mechanistic organization:

New ideas and methods are discouraged because they vary from the mechanical norm: “We’ve never done it that way before.”

Managers and supervisors rely solely on their own judgments, backed by the policy manuals, instead of empowering their people to make on-the-spot judgments that might improve quality and service.

Rigid procedures discourage employees from playing with an idea or a solution during its development.

Communication flows “through channels” rather than spreading throughout the business organization.

Some identifying marks of a thinking organization:

People at all levels can talk directly to people in other departments and divisions, and to customers and suppliers.

Teams are formed across departmental lines, including employees at all levels, to execute new projects or to solve common problems.

Line employees are routinely asked for their opinions and rewarded for ideas that work.

Failures at innovative projects are regarded as learning experiences and not as black marks against the person who failed.

Corporate structures are flexible and therefore able to adapt to the stress of innovation.

Educated, thinking organizations aren’t made up of people trained only to turn screws and wield levers, although those procedures are certainly essential to some jobs.

They’re made up of people educated in such skills as goal-setting, problem-solving and decision-making, communication, conflict management, negotiation, total quality management, time management and teamwork.

Such people, I’m convinced, are not churned out by training departments. They’re molded and nurtured by departments of education and development.

Education must replace training in organizations that succeed in the global marketplace. It’s a prerequisite for survival.

Nido Qubein is president of High Point University, an accredited undergraduate and graduate institution with 3,000 students from 50 countries and 44 states. He has written numerous books and recorded scores of audio and video learning programs including a bestseller on effective communication published by Nightingale-Conant and Berkley. Qubein’s business savvy led him to help start a bank in 1986 and today he serves on the board and executive committee of a Fortune 500 financial corporation with 115 billion-dollars in assets and 25,000 employees. He is also chairman of Great Harvest Bread Company with 218 stores in 42 states. He serves on the boards of several national organizations including the La-Z-Boy Corporation, one of the world’s largest and most recognized furniture retailers. Learn more about Nido Qubein at www.nidoqubein.com

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