Building and Sustaining High Performing Sales Teams
August 17, 2009 Leave a comment
Portrait of a High Performing Team
Almost everyone who works with others wants either to be a member of a high performing team, or to lead a high performing team. In fact, I bet 9 out of every 10 managers I’ve ever spoken with have claimed their teams were high performing. Yet, when asked about the performance of individual team members, these same managers invariably cite a litany of “typical” shortcomings.
While I hesitate to question the self proclaimed assessment of another manager’s team without seeing them in action for myself, I have to wonder how they came to their conclusion. How can a high performing team be comprised of individuals with performance issues? Can the diversity of performance strengths and capabilities within a team actually make the overall team stronger, despite certain individual weaknesses? And how is it that these managers don’t ask themselves these same questions?
To be sure, individuals with performance problems are not high performers. That is not to say that an employee must be perfect; indeed, everyone has strengths and weaknesses. There is a distinction, however, between weaknesses and performance problems. Strengths and weaknesses between team members are like pieces of a puzzle. All the pieces must fit together to complete the picture. In the strongest teams, members should complement each other’s strengths and weaknesses. In fact, assembling a team in which there is diversity of strengths should be a priority.
There’s no single recipe for building a high performing team. The variables are simply too great. On the other hand, there are clearly common attributes that successful teams manifest, and at the same time behavioral patterns that destroy a team’s effectiveness and their capacity for achievement.
So, what does a high performing team look like? It’s really quite simple. While individual strengths may vary, high performing teams exhibit many (hopefully most) of the same qualities of highly effective, influential team leaders. At the highest level…
- They complement each other’s strengths and weaknesses.
- They exhibit integrity and self discipline, both individually and collectively.
- They have a balanced sense of selflessness (teamwork) and drive for personal achievement.
- They are responsible and accountable – to their leader and each other.
- They are enthusiastic and self-motivated.
- They are individually and collectively aligned with the company’s vision.
Of course there are many other skills and traits that high performing teams must possess and demonstrate – effective communication, mutual trust, respect, etc., and of course they must work harmoniously together to achieve the task at hand. Skills, however, can be taught, habits formed, and behaviors modified, while character and cultural fit are individual factors that are deeply ingrained.
High Performing Teams Begin with High Performing Individuals
Diversity, complementing strengths and skills, and achievement oriented members are all considerations when building or adding to an existing high performing team. From a practical standpoint, assembling a high performance team begins with a thoughtful and well developed hiring process. Recruiting often focuses on matching experience to a job specification. This is important where technical qualifications are concerned, but it will not necessarily identify people with high performance traits. High performers are almost always high performers – wherever they work.
Who are your high performers? According to a McKinsey & Company report on “The War for Talent,” top performing employees make a 50% to 100% greater contribution to organizations than do their less capable peers.[1] So ask yourself this, if you had to start from scratch, would you re-hire all the employees you currently have? If not, why? If you could select from just 10% of your existing work force, who would you choose and why?
In my experience, the highest performing sales professionals demonstrate the following characteristics…
- Achievement Oriented – Money shouldn’t be the goal, only a way of keeping score
- Perpetually Optimistic – Doesn’t concede defeat, doesn’t accept no as an answer
- Selling is a Lifestyle – A way of life, not just a job – they never stop selling
- Understand Customer Motivation – People buy on emotion and excitement, not logic and reason
- Walk in the Customers’ Shoes – Sensitive to customer’s needs vs. their own (understands difference between ability to buy and desire to buy – validates the customer’s desire)
- Leverages the Strengths of Others – Those around them
Strategic Hiring Decisions
Research on hiring decisions reveals that people tend to hire applicants with whom they share the strongest personal connection, i.e. those with similar outlooks, mannerisms, personalities, and ideas. Harvard Business School professor Rosabeth Kanter calls this phenomenon “homosocial reproduction.”[2] While this may be just fine in some cases, the implication is obvious in others. As Stanford Professor Robert Sutton indelicately puts it, “…assholes will breed like rabbits.”[3]
That’s an extreme (albeit accurate) example, but practically speaking, everyone including the most effective managers has areas of weakness. While we certainly don’t want to compound weaknesses, the inverse is also true. To use the puzzle metaphor again, whitewashing over weaknesses by cloning strengths is like trying to put together a puzzle in which all the pieces are the same size and shape. The strongest teams are comprised of diverse personalities with complementary skills, and they use this to their advantage. Reduce the risk of poorly influenced hiring decisions by having several managers interview a candidate and collectively participate in the decision process.
A Framework for Success
There’s a saying, “If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there.” A comprehensive plan helps hiring managers at each decision point by giving focus and structure to the process. With the following four-step plan, not only will you have the highest probability of making good hiring decisions, you’ll also establish a framework of success for ongoing team development.
1. Recruiting and Hiring for Excellence
Leading a high performance sales team naturally begins with the people that you hire. You simply cannot afford to settle for the best “available” applicant, you have to find the right person for the job and team. In building a high performing team, whether staff or management, qualification criteria should be closely examined before you ever run an employment ad or interview an applicant. Managers tend to focus heavily on education, job experience, and presence. These are all important, but also look closely at temperament, interpersonal skills, and character. Hire for fit within the team. You can always train for skill (you will probably have to anyway), but trying to train for cultural fit is an uphill battle.
2. Cultivating Success
Regardless of individual successes, a sales team is only as strong as its weakest performer. A successful high performing team depends on each member pulling his or her weight, contributing to and complementing the team, leveraging its strengths and adding value through individual performance. Cultivating team success involves addressing deficiencies, identifying and overcoming obstacles, and gradually redefining the very meaning of success in an existing sales environment. This may involve rooting out underperformers, holding them to a higher level of accountability, and removing them if they are unable to meet established standards.
3. Maintaining Performance Standards
Aggressive and inclusive performance development is a key component to managing and leading high performing teams. An integral part of the performance management process, regular coaching, feedback, and performance assessment measured against peer comparison benchmarks provide exceptionally flexible and meaningful tools for quantifying and qualifying employee performance. In situations where progressive discipline is warranted, a consistent approach using readily available performance criteria ensures a fair and actionable case for warnings and dismissal.
4. Nurturing a High Performance Culture
I previously discussed in detail creating and nurturing a Culture of Alignment. Developing a high performing sales culture requires a considerable investment in time, but it’s not rocket science. You have to realize, however, that any such move to alter the culture of your store and team must be carefully planned and executed. It will not happen overnight. In fact, it might take a few years. But the investment is well worth the effort.
[1] Fishman, Charles. The War for Talent. Fast Company, 2007
[2] Kanter, Rosabeth. Men and Women of the Corporation. New York: Basic Books, 1977
[3] Sutton, Robert. The No Asshole Rule. New York: Business Plus, 2007
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