"The Navigator" News Blog

The Toughest Role in Sales

One of the questions I’m constantly asked is, “Troy, what do you think about having a selling Sales Manager?” By that, they mean a Sales Manager who also carries his/her own sales territory and is measured against a quota, not only for team production, but individual production. My answer is simple – I almost always dislike it.

Or, more to the point, I only like it when it’s a bridge to something else. For instance, I’ve always maintained that a dedicated Sales Manager needs somewhere between 4 and 12 direct reports. Less than four, you can’t support a Sales Manager. More than 12, your Sales Manager gets stretched too thin. But what of those situations where the object is to grow the sales force, but you’re not at the level of needing a dedicated Sales Manager yet? Well, that’s where the selling Sales Manager comes into play – but if you’re going to do it, you need to know the pitfalls and the must-dos. Hence, today’s article.

Having a selling Sales Manager (we’ll call it the SSM) has numerous pitfalls, and you need to be aware of these – whether you’re the owner employing the SSM, you’re the SSM, or you’re the salesperson working for the SSM. Here they are:

  • Competing Priorities: Every management position has competing priorities; however, for a SSM, the conflict is built-in. The SSM has to budget time between hiring, training, and developing his/her staff (the Sales Manager side), and protect a certain amount of time for selling (the salesperson side). This is a difficult balancing act, and all but the most disciplined people will struggle with it.
  • Personal Production: Production is, of course, important for all salespeople, but for the SSM, personal production can dictate the overall performance of the sales force. Think about it for a minute. If you’re a SSM, and you’re struggling in sales, how can you then coach and counsel performance issues? It’s hard to maintain the moral authority to keep your salespeople accountable for results if you’re not generating results. Hence, the SSM must produce, and ideally should produce at a star level (taking into account the reduced selling hours).
  • Stockholm Syndrome: A struggle that many SSM’s have is that they end up thinking more like salespeople than managers. Let’s be clear – a Sales Manager must be an agent of the company, thinking in terms of the good of the company overall. Sales reps are more free to think in terms of their own territories – they are solo performers. “Stockholm Syndrome” comes in when the SSM stops thinking like an agent of the company, and starts thinking like a salesperson. There are times when the Sales Manager must do things that the salespeople may not like, but are in the interests of the company. This is tough for many SSM’s.
  • The Compensation Conundrum: How do you pay and incent an SSM? One of the most common mistakes is to create a compensation plan that rewards personal production far more than team production. Let’s be clear on this – for the SSM, time and effort directed toward building and developing their sales force must be at least as valuable to the SSM, from a compensation perspective, as time spent selling – or the SSM would be a fool not to direct most of his/her time toward selling.

So, how do we make the SSM a successful position? Well, here are a few guidelines:

  1. Hire the right person. I know, this sounds obvious – but it’s not. The right person for the SSM spot might be different from the right person for either a Sales Manager slot or a Salesperson slot. They need excellent management abilities, precise personal discipline, and exceptional sales abilities (more than you’d normally demand from a Sales Manager). It’s a needle-in-a-haystack proposition.
  2. Have a very clear description and expectations. Clarity is even more important here than for a normal Sales Manager. The job description and expectations should clearly delineate how much time and effort should be directed toward selling vs. managing.
  3. Design the right compensation plan. As I mentioned earlier, the time spent (and results generated) through coaching and developing the team should be at least as valuable as time spent selling. You may need to play with sales commission and override plans, or put a team-centered bonus in place, to make this happen – but if you don’t, you’re on the path to failure.
  4. Manage closely. The SSM will need to be managed fairly closely by the immediate supervisor, whoever that is; managing tightly means that you will be constantly looking for that balance between selling and managing to become unbalanced.

Most business owners who hire an SSM find that their happiest day comes when they turn the SSM into a dedicated Sales Manager. Use the right processes and techniques, and you can achieve that day.