Here are some questions for you to think about as you consider whether or not you have a culture of sales accountability at your company:
Here’s the hard truth. It's easy to coach when salespeople are performing. It becomes much harder when salespeople are struggling.
Frankly, it’s easier to keep giving struggling salespeople another chance than to go through the hassle of finding, interviewing, and onboarding a new salesperson. So instead of working through the tough coaching conversations required to improve performance, it’s easier to just tolerate mediocre results and offer encouragement. Sales managers rationalize this with phrases like, "Well, they'll get better as soon as they get past this trade show" or "If they can just close this large deal, their pipeline's right back on track." It's more of a hope than an actual reality.
What can you do if your salespeople aren’t performing? We recommend implementing a system for coaching and accountability. But that is only part of the picture. We also recommend implementing an effective sales hiring system that allows sales managers to build a virtual bench of high performing salespeople.
Do your sales managers have a system that allows them to maintain a constant search for high performing salespeople while investing minimal time and effort in the process? What would they do differently if they had a constant flow of high performing sales candidates coming to them that they can screen efficiently? How would this change the dynamic of their coaching conversations with lower performing sales people? Would it give them the freedom to comfortably move on from a struggling salesperson who's not accepting coaching and is not committed to improving their performance? What would your revenue look like next year if you had these types of systems in place?