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Other Added - Recruiting Sales Staff- Are You Selecting Thoroughbreds or Plough Horses?
Managers – Do You Have To Run A Motivational Training Session? - 10 Steps to Ensure Success! Skills and previous experience,
So, you’re a manager. So, you know you have to run a training session or a team meeting for your team (for the first time) that needs to be motivational and you’re not a professional trainer. So what! With a good plan and a well structured session, training can be enjoyable and most of all rewarding for both you and your team. Here’s how …1. Get people involved in the topic before the session – issue what the professional trainers call “pre-work”. This can be as simple as asking people to jot down some answers to one question about the topic.For example, let’s say that you need to improve the service to customers provided by your team, then your pre-work question might look like:“Assume that we have just had a very successful year, -Attitudes, temperament and motivations. When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting H As result of this lack of trained know-how, how do front line managers usually make their selection decisions? Let’s see if this sounds familiar…….. You advertise in the media or give a job spec./ man spec. to an agency, and in it you specify….”previous experience of the industry an advantage”. Big mistake! You are confusing “experience” with “expertise”. Two quite different things. The fact that someone has experience of a job role does not mean they are doing it well. The evidence is that people continue to make the same mistakes repeatedly- particularly in the selling role- and do not learn from failures. Do not be taken in by the thought of the “good contact list” they will bring with them. What happens when they run out of contacts? Over 75% of customers stay with their original supplier when a seller leaves for another company. Attracting Failure The 20: Young, hungry, ambitious go-getters who see you offering them a better opportunity than their present job. These are likely your best candidates for high performance, energy, and effort. They want to prove themselves. The 80: those who are under pressure or failing in their present job, and now would like to fail for you for more money! Very often this is indicated by someone applying for a job with you, in a role they are already filling in their present job. Let’s assume you get a good response to your advert. You are under time pressure. You cannot interview thirty people, so you use the application letter /form to eliminate twenty-five of the applicants, mostly based on their previous experience or lack thereof. The bad news is you now have a ninety per cent chance that your potential star performer is in the rubbish bin, doesn’t even get an interview. To back this up, I have moved from the advertising industry to selling concrete, biscuits, tobacco, and now coaching and training services. There is no relationship between these business sectors. I never applied for a job I was capable of doing, but I left every job in much better shape than when I started. Selling has been my profession and career, and I have never met a job where I could not learn a working knowledge of the product – sufficient knowledge to enable me to sell it -within two or three weeks. Designer Answer to Unskilled Questions A job interview is probably the most predictable examination we ever sit, with highly predictable questions, enabling interviewees to design “ sexy “ responses to tough questions and put a positive “spin “ on their answers. Assessment Criteria When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting Hi Attracting Failure The 20: Young, hungry, ambitious go-getters who see you offering them a better opportunity than their present job. These are likely your best candidates for high performance, energy, and effort. They want to prove themselves. The 80: those who are under pressure or failing in their present job, and now would like to fail for you for more money! Very often this is indicated by someone applying for a job with you, in a role they are already filling in their present job. Let’s assume you get a good response to your advert. You are under time pressure. You cannot interview thirty people, so you use the application letter /form to eliminate twenty-five of the applicants, mostly based on their previous experience or lack thereof. The bad news is you now have a ninety per cent chance that your potential star performer is in the rubbish bin, doesn’t even get an interview. To back this up, I have moved from the advertising industry to selling concrete, biscuits, tobacco, and now coaching and training services. There is no relationship between these business sectors. I never applied for a job I was capable of doing, but I left every job in much better shape than when I started. Selling has been my profession and career, and I have never met a job where I could not learn a working knowledge of the product – sufficient knowledge to enable me to sell it -within two or three weeks. Designer Answer to Unskilled Questions A job interview is probably the most predictable examination we ever sit, with highly predictable questions, enabling interviewees to design “ sexy “ responses to tough questions and put a positive “spin “ on their answers. Assessment Criteria When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting H Let’s assume you get a good response to your advert. You are under time pressure. You cannot interview thirty people, so you use the application letter /form to eliminate twenty-five of the applicants, mostly based on their previous experience or lack thereof. The bad news is you now have a ninety per cent chance that your potential star performer is in the rubbish bin, doesn’t even get an interview. To back this up, I have moved from the advertising industry to selling concrete, biscuits, tobacco, and now coaching and training services. There is no relationship between these business sectors. I never applied for a job I was capable of doing, but I left every job in much better shape than when I started. Selling has been my profession and career, and I have never met a job where I could not learn a working knowledge of the product – sufficient knowledge to enable me to sell it -within two or three weeks. Designer Answer to Unskilled Questions A job interview is probably the most predictable examination we ever sit, with highly predictable questions, enabling interviewees to design “ sexy “ responses to tough questions and put a positive “spin “ on their answers. Assessment Criteria When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting H Designer Answer to Unskilled Questions A job interview is probably the most predictable examination we ever sit, with highly predictable questions, enabling interviewees to design “ sexy “ responses to tough questions and put a positive “spin “ on their answers. Assessment Criteria When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting H When seeking to identify “high performers” for ANY job, it is attitude, temperament and motivations that will determine high performance, rather than skill and knowledge. Check out the typical technical “geek”. Hugely knowledgeable and skilled, but would you let him out in public to sell to your customers and clients?……hmmm, thought not. Experience (track record of doing a job) is different to expertise (record of high achievement at doing the job), and is NO INDICATOR of a high performer. Expertise is what you are looking for, not Experience. Ask any group of managers what is the biggest determinant of high performance in any job: knowledge, skills, or attitude, and without hesitation we will all agree that “attitude” is the biggest difference in our high performers. Selecting High Performers The reality is that lacking the skill to determine an applicant’s mental attitudes, we invariably select the applicant we believe to be most like ourselves. Human nature at work. "I’m a good guy. (S)he is like me. Therefore (s)he is good also”. You may, in fact, need someone quite different to yourself to balance the team you are building. The employment decision is too serious to be left to amateurs and “gut feelings”! If you have not had some formal training in the selection of high performing staff, it is well worth investing in the use of an expert analyst to help you. It is affordable and it will pay for itself a hundredfold….and if the investment is worrying you, consider the cost of getting it wrong. Good Luck as you go for it. Maitiu
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