In selling the most important thing you can do is be in front of customers prospecting, asking questions, listening, finding out their problems and showing how your product can help them overcome their problem and provide them with some personal, emotional benefit.
So why do some salespeople complain when they are asked to spend more time with customers? I was recently working with a client whose senior management had set a target for customer facing time. This, in my view, was not a difficult target to achieve but it seemed to be causing a problem for the salespeople who saw it as arbitrary and burdensome. Fancy that a sales force complaining that having to be in front of customers was a problem for them!
To understand the motivation behind this I did some digging. What I uncovered was an emotional set of issues linked to performance management and a difficult set of targets that were stretching in a difficult trading period of economic hardship and uncertainty.
So what did I conclude?
- Motivation is a personal thing that is based on your own internal needs aligned in selling normally to an external reward (e.g. earning a bonus)
- Given it is personal it is dependent on the individual adapting a set of behaviours to his/her needs
- You can have an organisational target that is sensible and based on organisational needs but if it is not recognised by the individual as relevant to him/her then it will create friction and uncertainty and may actually demotivate
- When people feel under pressure even the easiest of targets seem impossible to achieve
Talking to the sales managers in this organisation provided me with the opportunity to try to understand what was really happening. The managers take on what was going on was very interesting - their teams felt micro managed, resources seemed stretched after a long period of down sizing and the difficult trading and economic conditions were making their targets even more difficult to achieve
So how can you personally remain motivated when organisationally you feel everything is difficult or even virtually impossible?
- Keep the faith. Believe in your ability to remain focussed on what you have to achieve to win business and hit your number
- Do first things first - the important stuff like visiting customers, prospecting meetings that have purpose and outcomes and qualifying good quality opportunities comes before any reporting, spreadsheet manipulation or email chain responses
- Have a plan and stick to it, adjusting slightly as you go, not knee jerking and changing direction every time there is a slight hitch
- Write down your objectives and work on them every day. Understand what makes progress towards your goal of hitting your number.
Being positive and having a set of goals will completely obliterate any issues you may have about target customer facing time. In fact you will find that your only concern will be fitting in all of the customer facing time!
So next time you are worried about being motivated to hit your customer facing time think:-
- what actions am I taking to achieve my sales target?
- how can I get in front of more decision making customers?
- what coaching is my sales manager giving me to help keep me focussed and motivated?
- have I reviewed my goals today and ensured I am focussed on achieving those?
- what can I do to fit in more customer facing time?
Motivation in selling should be about doing everything you can to provide benefit to your customers. You can only "sell " benefit if you understand your customers needs. You can only understand your customer's needs if you ask them great questions, listen intently and get underneath their emotional demands. You can only get underneath their emotional demands by getting out and talking to them.
Selling activities should be focussed on 3 things -
1. preparing for customer meetings
2. meeting and presenting your ideas based on listening to your customer needs
3. following up to progress opportunities
Everything else is noise and fluff (before you cry foul, writing sales call reports is part of following up )
If you are not motivated enough to visit customers as often as you can then you are probably in the wrong job. Maybe you should do something else - I dunno how about becoming a hermit?

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