Oversized Commissions: Big Treats Lead to Bad Behavior

Photo by Jay Wennington vis Unsplash.com

Woof!  The sound jolted me out of my commuter trance. 

There, in the driveway, a familiar Goldendoodle galloped in circles. Seamus! He seemed willing to do anything to get his chief neck-scratcher out of the car. This common occurrence, on one particular day, made me think. Are he and I all that different?  Yes, I do business in from my car and at customer offices and Seamus does his business (apparently today) in the front yard.  Still, isn’t the need for comfort and companionship at the heart of everything both he and I do?  

People vs. Dogs? No Contest.

OK, I’ll give you that humans are much more complex and harder to please.  We require money, recognition, challenge, and and a nice benefits package for motivation. And no two of us are the same.  Thankfully we have many careers to choose from!

In some jobs, if we follow several precise and, at times, complex steps and our job is guaranteed to be done (ie. Assembly line work).  In other jobs, like sales, we’re given recommended steps, often called sales models, but paid only when another person takes action. Ether scenario requires advanced learning and decision-making. Score one for humans over dogs!

Still, in sales, no technique works all time and therefore success is never guaranteed. This leads us to try a variety of tactics in order to find what wins the sale. Seamus does this too when he sees a treat in my hand and he performs all of his tricks to see what works.  Score one for Seamus!

Clearly, We Have the Edge!

Alas, as smart as he is, the poor Seamus would never know the difference if between a ‘commission’ of 1 treat or a bag of 20.  Nope. He’d run through the same routine of sitting, giving paw, and barking, regardless of what’s at stake. You, of course, would know better.

We know the difference between commissions of $500, $5,000, or $50,000 and can act accordingly. The higher the commission, the more we’re willing to do. And it makes sense doesn’t it?  In order to GET more we should expect to DO more!

Like I said, it makes sense – sometimes a little too much sense.

Photo by Sharon McCutcheon via Unsplash.com

Anything To Fill Our Bowl

Crazy commissions can induce, big surprise, crazy behavior.  When a single check can pay off a car (even a mortgage) or send our baby to college, let the salivation begin!  Suddenly, naughty urges to stretch the truth or withhold key information, dance in the heads of rational people. Luckily most of us resist these temptations. Most of us.

For me it was over 20 years ago, in college, when I first learned how far a salesperson might go. I sold computers for Sears in Akron, Ohio and remember a blond haired guy in his 20s, with glasses and an ill-fitting suit, who immediately after hire, crushed our sales targets.  Instantly, his encyclopedic knowledge and quick wit turned the rest of us into amateurs!  Two weeks later, he was fired.

Apparently our meager commissions were enough incentive for him to lie to customers. If he’d do that for an extra $50 or $100 per sale, what would a bigger reward inspire? Times, sadly, haven’t changed much. Some salespeople still behave badly. The recent Wells Fargo scandal is a prime example.

Those horrible, unethical salespeople!  Why do they keep reappearing? They all need to be fired and replaced!  WAIT.  Don’t we already do that? Haven’t we been firing them for years? Either sales is just an evil job that attracts bad bad people or maybe..just maybe..there’s a problem with the system.

Bad Policies = Bad Behavior

To the non-sales world, salespeople are all after one thing: commissions. All we care about is our cars (mine’s falling apart) and our fancy suits (I don’t even wear one). While none of us turn down the extra checks, there’s something we find even more important: survival.

For some reps it’s a daily dilemma, do what’s right and risk not selling enough or bend the rules and either win big money or the right to keep you job.  And, just to raise the likelihood of ulcers, what about salespeople who work in highly competitive environments?  (Aka all of them). What if you find out your ‘superior’ teammate secretly over-charges customers?  Should you do the same? After all you’ve got a family to support and how could you let them down?

“Hold on, you can’t do that,” says the voice of reason, “you’ll get fired!”  But you better sell enough, otherwise…you’ll get fired?

MAN, I AM SO JEALOUS OF MY DOG!

What We Can Do Differently

Humbly, I propose four ideas to help companies out of this dilemma:

  1. Pay higher and more competitive base salaries with less commission. That way salespeople focus on the enjoyment of selling, not life changing, ethics-altering rewards. 
  2. Stop comparing and start sharing.  You want your salesforce unite and defeat a common foe like in Lord of The Rings – not killing each other on a deserted island like in Lord of the Flies.  Reps frequently equate their peer’s high performance with cheating. Less comparison takes away the temptation to bend rules for survival.
  3. Establish ethical rules for the the sales force, make them clear, and enforce them equally.   No one will accuse top performers of anything but excellence, when they trust the rules apply equally to all.
  4. Use sales targets, not do or die quotas. People will follow rules when they don’t have to scan the horizon for threats.  They’ll also feel valued and work harder as a result.

In short, Seamus and I both like nice rewards. There’s only so much, however, Seamus is willing to do to get them.  I like to think I’m the same and, given the right system, the rest of us human salespeople can be as well.

Sincerely,

Meaning2work.com

Non-Selling Activities: Let the Salespeople Sell!

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Why do we hire salespeople, at great effort and expense, and ask them to do non-selling work like completing reports?

“Because, aside from selling, that’s what we pay them to do,” is the response I’d expect from many a manager.  Still, would you hire a plumber for your sink and ask him to fix a ceiling fan? Even if he agreed, wouldn’t you expect him to get the plumbing work done first?

Just as your Spring lawn looks it’s best when your landscaper isn’t also doing your taxes, salespeople sell more when they’re focused on selling.

If we want salespeople to give us marketing or decision support data, we should pay them for it.  In lieu of money, this can mean lowered sales expectations or increased time off.

Seriously, don’t we have to pay for most goods and services of value?  Non-selling activities take away from what salespeople are hired to do, sell. 

Sincerely,

Meaning2work.com

Big Rewards: Why They Make Us Less Happy

Photo by Raymond Hui on Unsplash.com

Bigger salaries?  Better commissions?  Bring ‘em on! Whoever coined the phrase “less is more”, was clearly not in sales where rewards reign supreme.

A few years ago, I interviewed for a sales job with a prominent IT company. The realistic pay expectations offered were multiples higher than my current salary.

You can imagine my elation after both learning this AND being put into the company interview process. What would this new lifestyle mean?  A better house, car, or schooling for my kids?  “Be realistic!  The job’s not yours yet!” I would tell myself.  However, a couple of interviews later, I had myself fooled. The job was mine to lose.

Weeks went by with no answer.  Then, BAM!  Hearing the regretful words from the elusive hiring manager felt like a botched skydive. And, on came the guilt.  How could I have gambled away such a bright future?  It was past 9pm with a cold, pouring rain outside.  I went for a run.

On a smaller scale, big sales rewards can have the same debilitating effect.  Managers often want 100% of the sales force to believe they can win a prize given to only the top 5%.  And, who can blame them?  Inevitably, some us take the bait and chase the dream.

Salespeople need to remember that luck is, and may always be, part of our results.  It’s nice to have the opportunity to win big.  We just need to remember the money isn’t ours until the check has cleared.

Sincerely,


Meaning2work.com

Pharma Rep Confessions – What the Job’s Really Like

Dear Pharma Sales Reps,

Here are my observations from 14 years in the business.  Do you agree?

Six confessions of a long-time pharmaceutical sales rep:

  1. Achievement is highly overrated. I’ve been both in the bottom 15% of rankings and at the top.  I’ve earned bonuses as high as $47k and as low as zero. Every success felt like a lucky break.   I was almost never present when a prescription was being written.  Plenty of doctors told me they were excited to prescribe but never followed through. Others, who I thought hated my product (or even me) became my biggest supporters.  The money is nice, but quickly spent.
  2. Doctors don’t care nearly as much as we want them to.  I’ve sold lifestyle medicines, chronic medicines, and life-saving rescue medicines and it’s been mostly the same.  Doctors typically DO care about their patients.  The drugs they use, however, are like tools in a carpenters hand.  Unless they cause trouble or fail to work, they’re largely an afterthought.
  3. Out of sight, Out of mind.  For many physicians and their staff, their responsibility is to TELL the patient the right thing to do – not to ensure it gets done.  They may prescribe the medicine you sell but give little care to whether or not the patient fills the script.
  4. For the patient and the office, money trumps all.  We reps know this.  Our managers know it too but are sometimes too afraid to say it. Patients don’t see medication as being a matter of life and death until they are in pain or are dying.  Medicines that make them prettier, better in bed, or (sadly) give them a buzz, are worth cold, hard cash.
  5. The only thing that makes you an expert, to management, is your numbers.   Therefore, never get too full of yourself.  We’re all a couple bad quarters from some kind of probationary status.
  6. If you judge yourself using sales acheivement, you will never fully like your job, or yourself.  Whether or not you’ve finally become an expert is a question only you can answer!

Congratulations!  You win the Ritalin award for reading the whole article!  

Feel free to comment below or send me a note at Meaning2work@gmail.com with your thoughts.  And, don’t forget to subscribe if you want to hear more!

Sincerely,

Meaning2work.com

4 Reasons to Love Selling (And Why They’re Making You Less Effective)

Do you like your sales job for the wrong reasons?

“Pride cometh before a fall” – Biblical Proverb

Many of the stereotypes of salespeople are unfair. Not all of us are the money-hungry, hyper-competitive, egotists portrayed in movies like Boiler Room. Still, some grains of truth can be found in the way we act when times are good. Consider the following reasons why, as a salesperson, you might love your job:

You love the money and all it brings
The fit of a new suit. The sparkle of a new stone. The smell of a new car. Who doesn’t savor these things?

You enjoy the respect you receive from mangement and co-workers.
You just finshed a great sales year. Your name mentioned multiple times at the sales meeting. Co-workers are asking for your secrets. Life is good!

Your customers love you!
Obviously they do. They buy from you, don’t they? Being liked is much better than the alternative. No doubt, a salesperson can make the difference when choosing between two similar products.

You play to win. And, more often than not, you do.
You’ve never shied away from a fight. You take pride in how focused you are on achieving your goals. Other salespeople aren’t as effective because they’re less confident or they get distracted with customer concerns.

“Yes? So what’s the problem?”, might be the response of a typical salesman at this point. Read on, if you dare, and see how your love for sales may betray you.

Big Money, Bigger Problems
The joy of spending money is in all things new. Alas, like the sales contest you won last month, all things new become old. After a long day of enticing customers with new things, we often, ourselves fall victim to them. Sometimes we make them the very purpose of our work.

Do we expect physicians to work soley for the money? Of course not. They take an oath to put a patient’s welfare before themselves. Teachers consistently say they teach for the joy of teaching. Yes, there are others, perhaps a vast majority of people, for whom work is strictly a means to a paycheck. Sales is different. Salespeople are enticed with wealth.

“Glittering prizes and endless compromises, Shatter the illusion of integrity.”Neil Peart

In the place of taking serious oaths, salespeople jump and cheer at sales meetings for the new goodies that define next year’s success. Houses have house payments. Expensive jewelry needs to be insured. Luxury cars have luxury repair bills. As years tick by, a salesperson’s “success” accumulates until she wakes up to working for a company she hates, just to pay the bills.

The price of fame
One month after finishing on top of the salesforce you receive the new year’s sales goal. You now have to sell 30% more than you did last year! Within a span of weeks, the intense effort you put in last year becomes “not enough”. Following traditional (and de-motivating) sales management logic, you can never be allowed to feel too confident. Why? Because confident salespeople are lazy! Salespeople respond by working harder to regain that original feeling of confidence. There is another group of people who live in constant pursuit of an original good feeling. They’re called drug addicts.

When you work for the respect of your co-workers you give up something much more important. Respect for yourself.

Your customer is cheating on you
The result of basking in too much customer praise is, however, blindness. We get so wrapped up in being charming that we fail to realize our customers have jobs to do and lives of their own. Salespeople who believe they are loved are often not listening to their customers. Take away the product they sell and away goes the romance. Relationships are important. Still more important is the problem you solve for your customer. That’s why you’re getting their time and attention. If you’ve done your job correctly, your customer is in love with your product, not you.

Playing to an empty stadium
However effective in short-term scenarios, theres a problem with focusing on competition in sales. Customers don’t care. When buying a car, do you want to work with the Salesman of the Year to wait on you or someone who needs your business? Customers like what you and your company do to help them solve problems. The more difficult their problems, the more creativity is required. When we’re in competition mode, our brains can only focus on a few things. To customers, this makes you appear single-minded. This isn’t helpful when an innovative solution is required.

Should salespeople fear success instead?
No. Don’t fear success. Fear the all-consuming need for success. It’s easy to love something when it gives you immediate rewards. A new car never looks (or smells) better than the day you drive it off the lot. Romantic relationships feel great when we haven’t been with the other person long enough to have a disagreement. Being a salesperson feels great when you’re on top. What matters is this, do you have a reason to go to work when times aren’t good? Don’t let what feels good now set you up for disappointment in the future.

Sincerely,
Meaning2work