Of all the roles in a B2B company, sales leadership might just be the one with the biggest potential to help or hurt. Find out what you need to succeed.
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Sales Leadership: The Keys to Success
1. Post Link: 90 Days to Sales Leadership Success
90 Days to Sales Leadership Success
So you’ve been hired as the new VP of Sales in a manufacturing or distribution company and
are excited about the opportunity to build a rock star sales team within a great organization.
Sounds great, doesn’t it? Well, don’t get too excited just yet. We hate to burst your bubble, but
you should know that you’ve just been promoted into one of the most difficult jobs in the
executive suite. Sales leadership is a great opportunity, but it also has an extremely high failure
rate. The average tenure of the newly promoted or hired VP of Sales in most B2B organizations
is about 18 months. This number reflects the difficulty of building a new sales organization, and
the even more difficult task of rebuilding a sales organization when things have gone wrong.
But, it doesn’t have to be this way. In this post, we’ll walk you through some of the reasons why
sales leadership often fails, who these failures affect, and what to do in the first 90 days to
ensure sales leadership success.
Sales Leadership: Who it Affects
Of all the roles in a B2B leadership team, sales leadership might just be the one with the
biggest potential to help or hurt a company’s business.
Consider this: in most manufacturing or distribution companies, when a manufacturing leader
2. fails at his job, a new leader can simply be brought in to get things back on track, without it
necessarily impacting sales and customer relationships. There may be some impacts related to
the company being unable to meet production quotas, missed shipments, or problems with
inventory, but these can be rectified more easily than rebuilding an entire relationship, as might
be necessary if sales leadership hasn’t been doing their job.
So who’s impacted by sales leadership?
Companies: When sales leadership fails, companies miss their financial targets. Owners and
stockholders lose money, and the cycle of belt-tightening may begin.
Employees: When companies miss their targets, employees may have to be laid off or miss out
on bonuses.
Sales Teams: Ineffective sales leadership means that sales teams may not be meeting their full
potential.
Customers: Customers bear the brunt of ineffective sales leadership, as instability in the sales
team puts the customer in the position of having to retrain new reps about their preferences and
needs.
Competitors: When a sales leader fails, who benefits? Your competitors.
Why Sales Leadership Failures Happen
Incorrectly diagnosing business problems and needs. This leads to implementing the
wrong solutions to the problems that have been identified.
Lack of business understanding. Sales leadership fails when strategies are selected that do
not reflect a strong understanding of the business, industry, or product.
Right programs, wrong execution. While the solutions that sales leadership selects may be
workable, they can also be executed improperly.
Lack of engagement with the company. Sales teams that do not understand the importance
of their role and potential impact on the company may lack motivation.
90 Days to Make It or Break It in Sales Leadership
As with any new job, the first 90 days are the most critical. This is the time when you should be
gathering information, building relationships and beginning to develop the solutions that will
deliver the results your company is expecting.
So what should you be doing in those first 90 days?
Gather Data. You are not going to be able to solve the problems in a new sales organization if
you don’t know the issues you’re facing. The first and most important task is to gather the
information you need to make a correct diagnosis. This doesn’t just mean looking at your team’s