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John FoxAs his name suggests, John Fox has a sly and savvy take on all things sales — especially when it comes to getting more impact from your sales team. Today, he talks about his new ebook, 5 Management Blunders Causing Sales Impotence: why he wrote it and what it’s about.

Having spent most of my [egads!] 30+ year career working for and with fast-growing, small businesses, I’ve gotten an opportunity to witness revenue-generation like few others. I’ve participated in it, created it, nurtured it and mostly, fed it. It’s been a terrific ride, one that began when Intel punched my train ticket in 1979.

But saying all that, I also know the dark side of small business leadership. Regardless of management’s experience and formal education, somewhere along the line, the fundamentals have been forgotten, especially those related to the alignment of the entire company behind the sales people who make the top-line possible. And let’s remember, without a top-line, you have no bottom-line.

In some ways, it’s almost silly to believe that companies actually expect their top sales talent to do things that are way outside their comfort zone, to say nothing of things that are beyond their skill set. When executives expect sales reps to do tasks that literally prevent them from spending more time with prospects and customers, and then curse these same sales reps for missing quota, you have to wonder what planet management came from.

For example, when companies obligate sales people to enter copious notes into Salesforce.com contact records — a task that easily eats up an hour a day (12%) — you have to wonder about the value of those notes. For a sales rep carrying a $2M quota, those almighty notes have an implied cost of $250k. Seems to me, adding a secretary to the office (or some speech-to-text technology) would make much better financial sense.

Now in this example, I’m not saying all notes are unnecessary, just most of them. With a little effort, most sales calls could be summarized with exceptionally simple, standardized checkbox forms.

It’s this dark side that I want to expose. For it is the dark side that’s causing sales reps to be revenue-impotent. And while there’s no “blue pill” to bring an immediate “fix,” there are a few very simple things the leadership team can (and must) do begin the process of turning things around.

About John Fox:

John is president and founder of Venture Marketing. He has extensive hands-on experience as an entrepreneur and C-level new business developer for technology–enabled businesses. John has led the launch or re-launch of 44 companies, resulting in double and triple-digit growth for every client served.

5-management-blunders-3d-cover-600pxYou may download the ebook, 5 Management Blunders Causing Sales Impotence, here!

2 Responses to “Guest Post: 5 Management Blunders Causing Sales Impotence”

  1. John Fox says:

    Jonathan, thanks for letting me be today’s guest blogger.

    [And as a second thank you and note to those who read my Blunders eBook]: If you’re on the fence about writing your own eBook (heck, everyone has at least one book in them), I encourage you to get Jonathan’s eBook on writing an eBook (see: The eBook Ebook). I did.

    If you like my Blunders eBook’s on-screen readability and layout, it’s that way because I religiously followed Jonathan’s instructions.

    fox.
    (630) 355-6951

    Follow me: http://www.twitter.com/b2bmarketing

  2. No, all thanks to you for participating! Readers should know that I invited John to make this guest post after I had read his new book and was completely blown away by it. You won’t find pie-in-the-sky scenarios or jargon-laden new theories. Instead, John gives us blunt (un)common sense — and is not afraid to ruffle a few feathers. Check it out; you’ll be glad you did.

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