Dave Stein

It’s Time to Throw Generic Onboarding Overboard

comments 0 comments  |  1681 reads

Mis-hiring isn’t the root of all sales ills, but it sure continues to run like hell for first place. At ESR we’re amazed here at how many companies we speak with have no formalized hiring process. No profiles. No pre-determined, structured interview questions. No training for interviewers. No simulations. No predictive assessment tools. No reference checks. No background checks. No income verification. And no onboarding process. And they wonder why only 20 percent of their reps are delivering 80 percent of their revenue.

If you’ve hiring the wrong sales candidate, onboarding is a waste of time and money. And it gives you false hope that the person might be productive in within a reasonable period of time. They won’t.

I’ve read a number of articles and posts recently about onboarding and some of them miss the most important point: onboarding plans shouldn’t be generic. Putting all new sales hires through the same one-day, ten-day, or hundred-day program will not get the most out of them in the shortest period of time.

Companies that use a profile-based, behavioral interview approach have a reasonably accurate assessment of what each candidate brings to the table. Hiring authorities know what traits and skills the candidate possesses and how that candidate has performed in relevant and important selling situations in the past. If a candidate doesn’t have enough of the most critical traits they don’t get hired, because you can’t train them to perform in one way when their DNA, personal attributes, or other strong tendencies are directing them elsewhere. (There are exceptions, of course.)

The skills side is another story. There are no perfect candidates. But to know, when you offer a candidate a job, by how much they fall short in important skill areas and have a plan to train, coach, reinforce, educate, support and in other ways close any gaps that exist using the onboarding process—that’s how to get a B player to A more quickly and predictably.

Here’s a real example: Jason (not his real name) came through the interview process for a software company with flying colors. There was a strong match between his traits and what had been identified as being critical for the job: analytical thinking, positivism, courage, extroversion, etc. He did very well in the skills area as well: territory management, presentation skills, planning, negotiation, leading customers out of their comfort zones. But Jason was short on financial knowledge. The software company sales leaders knew that that financial knowledge is critical for making a sale. In fact, being able to read and interpret a prospect’s financial statements and articulate where, how, and specifically by how much their software would make an impact, would make the difference between being a finalist or not.

You can see where this is headed. The onboarding plan for Jason didn’t have him sitting in classes wasting time on things he already did well. Sure, he was provided with enough product and industry training to get him going. But the real focus was on getting Jason up to speed in financial knowledge and the business contribution his product makes to his customers. So Jason was given a detailed 90-day ramp-up plan as condition of employment. The plan provided resources (six hours with an in-house financial expert, for example), several books to read, a two-day program at the AMA, and monthly progress discussions with his manager.

That was three years ago. Jason’s performance has been stellar, just as they knew it would.

Are you still using using the same onboarding program for all your new reps?


Republished with author's permission from original post by Dave Stein.

Dave Stein

After a career in sales, then as a sales consultant, trainer, and author, Dave Stein is now founder/CEO of ES Research Group, Inc., which publishes independent evaluations and comparisons sales training companies and their programs and services. ESR is recognized as the leading authority on sales training programs and sales performance improvement. For the past twenty years Dave has focused on sales performance improvement, sales effectiveness and especially sales training.
0
No votes yet
 

0 comments »

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

MarketPlace

Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program

[May 30-31, Frankfurt; July 25-26, Hong Kong] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 34 times in 13 cities with attendees from 50 countries, the program is developed based on the U.S. patent-pending Branded CEM Method which aims to drive customer loyalty and brand differentiation with quantifiable business results. Limited offer: USD300 early bird discount.

Register today for Confirmit’s Mobile Research Roadshow!

Join us on May 29th in New York City. Stuart Ryder, SVP, Mobile Research Lead for Ipsos IOTX & Roxana Strohmenger, a leading Forrester analyst, will be in attendance to share best practices and new trends in mobile market research.

Register today for Confirmit’s San Francisco VoC Roadshow!

[June 12, Sir Francis Drake Hotel] Gregson Siu, Vice President, Ariba Business Operations, Ariba and Bob Thompson, CustomerThink, will be in attendance to share best practices, new trends and latest research to help you develop your customer experience program.

Social Networking and sCRM International Congress in Colombia

[June 25-26, Bogota] Thirteen international thought leaders will present, from different perspectives, the trends, the uses, and the magic - as well as the reality - of Social Networking and how it impacts the way customers are doing/will do business.

Driving ROI With VoC

Walker has identified multiple ways to measure ROI – there is not a one-size-fits-all solution. This paper will address each and conclude with some recommendations to help B-to-B practitioners evaluate which ROI approach will work best for their particular business need.

Featured Links

Salesforce CRM

The leader in customer relationship management and cloud computing.

Strategic Roadmap for Digital Marketing

Free e-book (no reg required). 15 articles by digital marketing thought leaders.

Get your event or resource listed in the MarketPlace, reaching 200,000 business leaders monthly.
For more information, contact CustomerThink advertising sales.