An Interviewing Essential – Communicate Why You Are Successful!
Any sales professional looking for that new sales position recognizes that their success is based on a process. The sales process includes your understanding that each sales professional is different, and each product is different. The most important part of that is realizing that each sales professional needs to be able to determine and articulate what gives him/her success based on their own level of skill.
In Black Sales Journal 2/28/2011, How Many Prospects Do You Really Need we discussed knowing your metrics. This was a wake-up call to some who do not necessarily agree with the sale process fundamentals. I assure you those fundamentals exist, and the variable for each sales professional is based on individual effectiveness, product, and industry.
The most important item to know is that you need to be able to articulate the basis of your own success. This is powerful in an interview, and you need to be able to do it cogently and clearly. You will find, that if it is well rehearsed and documented, it will put you to the front of the line in getting that new sales position.
You Are the Expert on You
You have heard me cite the phrase “You are the expert on you!” as it is obvious that you should be able to define yourself better than anyone else. Nowhere is it more important than in the interview process. Knowing your strengths and weaknesses is one thing, and your benefit will potentially be that you may be able to sell someone on them and get past first base.
Knowing your process, and being proficient at articulating it can be the shot that you need to impress that hiring manager. What is more important, two things can happen on that next interview:
- You could be asked to define your sales process
- You could be asked to define why you are successful
Either way, you will need to be good at explaining it, yet not glib or slippery. You will want to show that you are successful because you do the things that make you successful intentionally, consistently, and systematically. You will want to show that your routine is solid, and not responding to what happens on a particular day. Your respect for the law of large numbers and volume will come through in your characterization of your daily effort.
You can give the best presentation of yourself possible, as well as the best display of your mastery of your own “process” by practicing it in the mirror and with a caring listener. Someone who cares enough to listen to you drone on and on until you have mastery of this important piece.
A Practical Example
The interview would lead to this statement and comment:
“Jerry, from what we can see your sales results are admirable, and enviable in terms of your percentage of goal attainment, and your ability to do this year after year. Will you share with us what makes you successful?”
Jerry responds “Bob, I would attribute the consistency of my success to the regimen that I hold myself to. In addition to that I wholly subscribe to the law of large numbers and their effect on prospecting and quoting. I measure my success against my continuous activities and results and adjust my prospecting efforts based on my call (prospecting) to appointment ratio, my appointment to quote ratio, and my sold to quote ratio. I track them and utilize them in determining my effectiveness and my level of future activity.”
Jerry expands:“I make 75 prospecting calls a week religiously by phone, and 20 in person cold calls per week. I believe that if I do this, I give myself a realistic chance of increased success and earnings. I reach all hard to get prospects by phone after hours, which means the hours of 5:00 to 6:30P, as I have found that to be a time when the “gatekeeper” is not on duty, and the decision maker has to answer the phone on their own.”
Then Jerry pulls it together: “What I do works for me and I believe in it. My results are in the portfolio that I just handed to you.”
Why does it work?
Every sales manager wants you to have a system that works. It makes management easier. Your sales statistics are yours, and others have their own. Believe me, if you cite you discuss your process like I am suggesting, and you are able to back up your claims, you will be a primary candidate.
When I was a sales manager, I knew my role was to get the most out of every sales candidate. A candidate with the basics well in hand was one who would be ready for advanced sales techniques, as opposed to me pressing him or her for the rudiments. Knowing your plan is more than rudimentary though; it is the start of being the true professional.
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