You’ve read a well publicized book filled with new ideas, attended a super-charged, inspired conference or webinar, participated in your mastermind or peer group and you are on fire. You come back to the office ready to go, excited to share what you’ve learned with your sales team and you experience what I call “the letdown.”
Your team doesn’t get as excited as you. They just don’t. Maybe it’s because they don’t see your vision or perhaps you haven’t conveyed it with as much excitement and intensity. Or maybe it’s because you’ve worn them out a bit.
I love “shiny new objects.” I want to try them out, understand how they work and then see if they fit into how we work. I consider it part of my job to seek out new things and understand if they can add value to what we do. Yes, it means that I disregard 95% of them, but that’s okay. I also want to try tools that will help us be more productive, sell more and serve our clients better. Several of the tools we used five years ago are not on our radar any longer. And others are our must-have, go-to tools that we couldn’t work without.
Leaders who are passionate about their own professional development, who engage in learning through industry or peer groups often find themselves filled up with great ideas they want to share and encourage others to, especially their salespeople, embrace.
I have noticed that sales teams are fatigued. They can’t keep up with the pace of change within some organizations or are in organizations where the pace of change is so slow they’ve fallen asleep and lost interest waiting for leadership to join the 21st century. (If you think those companies don’t exist, they do. I recently met a CEO who declared that he and his leadership team made an executive decision five years ago not to use LinkedIn or have their employees use it. Need I say more)?
For the salespeople in companies where it’s strategy and tactics du jour, there is rarely enough runway to test if something works before something new interrupts it. Cycling in and out constantly is tiresome for most people. It also becomes hard to measure success.
Which leader are you?
The one who tires everyone out with shiny new objects? The one who doesn’t present any new ideas or strategies?
Either way, your goal should be to figure out which one best defines you and consider how you can recalibrate yourself and your management to re-engage your salespeople.
If you’re the shiny new object/idea leader, choose your strategy and tools and commit to them for at least three months, or even better, six months. Pay attention to what works and what doesn’t; stay with it unless of course, it becomes so off kilter. One of my clients implemented a Center of Influence campaign for five months and in the end, the Excel spreadsheet highlighted the following:
The CEO, my client, committed after testing several other ideas. Once he committed, he stayed the course. Why only five months? He sold his company. The new much larger company commented they didn’t have a sales process as focused and successful as his.
By the way, today is a great day to begin. Why? This post is publishing at the end of August and more people gear up for September than January. We are wired from the time we are young to gear up for back to school and we move from being the student to the parent of students; so much of our life is geared to a September through June mentality. I know I do. And, most of my colleagues, friends and clients do too. I feel the September buzz in the air. So take advantage of September and I am confident it will roll right into the new year without the typical January business hangover.
Need some additional information on sales fatigue? Here’s another article by Chris Gillespie on How to Avoid Sales Fatigue—The Hidden Productivity Killer. A slightly different angle and valuable. Treat your salespeople well and they will treat your clients well.
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