The Sales Hiring Playbook - Steli Ef
The Sales Hiring Playbook - Steli Ef
The Sales Hiring Playbook - Steli Ef
Steli Efti
Copyright © 2017
Cover by Close.io
DEDICATION
I truly believe appreciation is the currency you pay the universe. I want to
give a huge shout-out to Ryan Frazier, Justin Gold, Ken Grace, Matthew
Himelstein, Paul Kudlow, Sarah Landstreet, Roland Ligtenberg, Michael
Momsen, Josh Morgan, Christopher Sheehan, and Jilian Voege for
reviewing this book. Thank you for your thoughtful feedback.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION i
RISKS AND RED FLAGS: WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR AND AVOID WHEN
HIRING 51
i
In 2011, we started a "Sales As A Service" business called ElasticSales. The
vision for Elastic was to build a massive sales infrastructure and empower
startups and companies around the world to tap into that infrastructure in
order to scale their sales efforts.
Our mission was simple: never again should a great company fail because
of a lack of sales.
We started hiring top sales talent, opening offices and signing up clients
within the first few weeks. It was clear that there was massive demand for
this service out there. Much more than we were capable of handling at the
time. We didn’t have a huge sales team with hundreds of reps readily
available. We needed to hire more people, fast.
We didn’t know “the right way” to do this. We didn’t know what the best
practices for sales hiring were or how to properly recruit, interview and
train sales reps.
For the first time, I’m sharing our playbook in a well-structured and
actionable way so that you can build out your team much faster than ever
before.
All the knowledge in the world is of no use if you don’t act upon it. So
whenever you come across something in this book that makes you think,
“Hmm, we should be doing this”, either put the book aside and do it right
ii
then and there or write it down and make time in your schedule to execute
the task.
iii
IT’S ALL ABOUT TIMING: WHEN TO HIRE
SALESPEOPLE
1
The 4 stages of sales hiring for startups
During my sales office hours, I often talk with startup founders who are
beginning to see success. They've developed their product to a point where
the few customers they have keep using it regularly. Their retention rates
are okay and they have early signs of revenue growth.
Begin with the low-hanging fruit and tap into your network:
Co-workers
Past employers
Alumni
2
Figure out which metrics truly matter for your sales outreach and
your business
This phase is all about getting your hands dirty in the startup hustle and
figuring out what works in the real world. It's all about lean sales and
validating your idea with the power of the hustle. The experience you gain
will help you later evaluate salespeople.
Now is the time to hire your first sales reps. It's about bringing others on
board and having them replicate the results you achieved in stage #1.
Don’t hire expensive sales veterans here. You want them young and
hungry. And hire two or three salespeople at the same time. It’s about
adding firepower to your sales efforts.
There are four simple reasons why you should hire two sales rep at the
same time:
1. Friendly competition
3
4. More firepower
With two or three sales reps, you will be able to do a lot more, try out
more things. It will energize all your sales efforts and add friendly
competition.
Now you have a sales team—you’re responsible and accountable for them.
Sales thrives in this kind of competitive environment and team spirit. And
staying afloat in an ocean of rejection will be a lot easier with a supportive
team, too.
When you tell your sales reps to try a new sales approach, it might work
for one but not for the other. In that case, you know that the sales
approach is working, and the problem is with someone's ability to execute.
If you have only one sales rep, you don’t really have anything to measure
against. Two or three sales reps are still far from perfect for validating
data, but it is a lot better than just one.
At this stage, you still need to be deeply involved. You’re managing and
leading this team. You’re still pitching, doing outbound and inbound,
working with your sales reps, listening to feedback.
You can’t outsource this. There are still too many critical decisions to be
made. You need all these one-on-one experiences with customers,
different sales channels, and lead generation methods. It’s not enough to
monitor numbers. You need to be living them.
4
Stage #3: Junior sales leader (3–15 sales reps)
At this point, your sales exploration has matured: Results are a lot more
predictable. You’ve established an effective sales funnel. You’re generating
consistent growth. It’s not about exploration anymore—it’s about time you
start focusing on sales execution.
You want to look for someone who has experience overseeing the growth
of a tiny sales team of three people to 10, 20 or 30 people because that’s
the next transition you’re going to make. And it’s one you don’t want to be
in charge of as a founder yourself.
These people should have started out as junior sales reps in a previous
company, and then grown into a managerial or leadership role there, and
have already managed a team that's a bit larger than yours, at a company
that already is where you want to be in one or two years.
You'll need a senior sales leader, a VP of Sales who can manage a few
sales managers/directors.
5
Someone with a proven track record of scaling things big, who is a VP of
Sales at a company that already is where you want to be in three years
from now.
A VP of Sales will work on sales strategy, scaling and expanding your sales
channels and partnerships, and moving your customer base upstream as
well as improving your unit economics. The VP will:
Add new channels like field sales to your inside sales team
To bring such a person on board, you'll need to throw a lot of money and
some equity at them—that's why this is such a crucial hire, and one that
you shouldn't make light-heartedly. They will guide your sales team on a
journey that can either make or break your startup.
6
DO THEY HAVE THE RIGHT STUFF: WHAT
TRAITS TO LOOK FOR IN SALESPEOPLE
7
What I learned from Jack Welch about sales
recruitment
One of the most useful frameworks for assessing a potential sales hire is
something I learned a long time ago from reading a book by Jack Welch,
former chairman and CEO of General Electric.
You want to have them in your organization, and they can really propel
your company forward.
When you find one of these people, do your best to hire and empower
them.
And if they're already part of your team, fire them as quickly as possible.
8
Incapable and willing
I call these underdogs. If someone doesn't possess the necessary skillset
to create the results you need in your company, but they have a great
attitude and are a perfect cultural fit, should you hire them?
If you provide them with the training and support needed to acquire the
necessary skills, and they learn fast enough, you've created a tremendous
amount of value: for your company, for that person, and for society at
large. These people will often also be the most dedicated employees to the
success of your company.
If they don't learn fast enough, or if the gap between their qualifications
and your needs is too large, they will slow your company down.
How much training, time and money are you willing to invest into
bringing that person up to speed?
How much training, time and money do you have to invest into
bringing that person up to speed?
How will you evaluate their performance and provide them with
feedback?
9
You can't answer all these questions with 100% accuracy—it's impossible
to know what's required to develop talent. But just take a couple of hours
to think this through and then make your best guess.
If you're a small company, you might feel you can't afford to be finicky. It's
tough to pass on smart and talented people.
A little voice in the back of your head will tell you, "Yeah, this guy might be
a highly qualified douchebag, but we need someone with his skill set, and
none of the other candidates have it. Just hire him to drive growth. We can
keep looking for someone with the same level of expertise and a better
attitude."
Don't bring someone who's a poor cultural fit on board, even if this looks
like a bad move on a spreadsheet.
This is even more important in your early hiring decisions, where a single
bad hire can have a strong impact on your overall culture.
10
2. Office politics can lead to separate factions that are divided from
your core company culture.
7. They can take away the joy you gain from your own company.
(Nowadays, Tony Hsieh, the CEO of Zappos, is famous for his
focus on workplace culture. However, do you know why he made it
his number 1 priority? Because he had previously founded
LinkExchange, a very successful company that grew to hundreds of
employees and was worth hundreds of millions of dollars ... but
dreaded getting out of bed in the morning because the culture of
his own company made his stomach turn. He didn't want the same
thing to happen with Zappos.)
There are plenty of other ways how hiring unwilling high-performers can
cause havoc, but rather than making this into an endless list, let's focus on
...
11
Think of all the time, money and resources you spend on recruiting and
developing people. It's a huge investment, and its ROI increases the longer
your employees stay at your company.
Let's say a sales rep tells you he cares about always creating win-wins. Ask
him to share a specific situation where he could have earned a big
commission, but advised a prospect not to buy. Ask for details and see if
it's a credible story.
Have them visit the office, work on a small project together, and if it all
seems promising, have them join your team on a trial basis for a number
of weeks or months. Get to know them in different environments and
situations before you make long-term commitments to each other.
And if you make a wrong hiring decision despite all these precautions ...
fire fast!
12
Do you need a wolf or lamb in SaaS sales?
What's the right attitude, mindset, and energy to sell SaaS products?
Use hostile strength to go for the close like a sales assassin and
bring in deals like the Wolf of Wallstreet
Let's take a closer look at thewhese two styles, and then explore why sales
candidates need friendly strength to succeed in SaaS sales.
The wolf
A wolf is effective at closing deals. He operates with strength, free from
inhibition, and doesn’t hesitate to apply pressure to make the sale happen.
It’s the archetypical pushy salesperson, utilizing hostile strength to get
what they want.
13
them, onboarding them and supporting them during the setup phase is
probably higher than what they paid your business.
And more importantly, that sales modus operandi is just unhealthy. You
don’t want an asshole—it’s not worth it. They might be the number one
closer but that doesn’t count for much if it hurts your business.
The lamb
The lamb is on the other end of the spectrum. Instead of hostile strength,
the lamb operates with friendly weakness.
It's a “soft” sales approach, without influence and leverage, without power
over the prospect, without confidence.
Consultative sales?
Many self-proclaimed sales experts advise salespeople to take a
consultative sales approach. They say selling has changed.
Which is all well and fine, but in the real world, too many people use this
explanation as an excuse to avoid doing uncomfortable things.
14
The good parent
I personally think that rather than act like a consultant, a salesperson
should act like a good parent.
Good parents have the best interest of their child at heart, but they also
communicate from a place of strength:
What would you tell him? “Well, I think there might be other alternatives
you could consider to have some fun. I’d be happy to inform you about the
choices available if you could spare five minutes of your attention.”
No. That's not what you'd say. You'd communicate with strength and
authority.
I can already hear some people taking offense with this: “Prospects aren’t
kids! They’re adults, they’re equals.”
Of course, they are, but a truly good salesperson knows more about their
product and marketplace than their prospects. They’ve dealt with the
challenges and problems their prospects are facing many times already,
whereas, for the prospects, it's probably the first time.
15
Dealing with rejection in sales: The $8 million
difference
Before she became a household name on the show Shark Tank, Barbara
Corcoran built The Corcoran Group, a $6 billion real estate business. For
Barbara, there are two simple traits that differentiated the top performers
from the underperformers in her sales team:
It's one thing to talk about embracing rejection and logically understand
the concept. It's a completely different thing to translate this idea into
behavior.
We're hardwired to fear and avoid rejection. When our ancestors still lived
in caves, being rejected from our tribe, and cast out on our own was akin
to a death sentence. The desire to belong, and avoid rejection, is deeply
programmed into our brains.
However, if you want to hire the best salespeople, you need to find
salespeople who can handle rejection.
16
Don't make your life harder than it has to be by hiring salespeople that
can't handle rejection at all and trying to completely change them into
rejection crushing sales ninjas.
Most likely, it's going to be a waste of time and energy. It's a lot easier to
coach a resilient person and help them develop that tenacity further, than
it is to take someone who's super-sensitive and try to teach
them perseverance.
17
How to find the best sales talent for your cash-strapped startup? Hint: it’s
not where 90% of entrepreneurs search.
Most founders and managers look for salespeople in all the wrong places:
job boards, recruiting sites, LinkedIn, Craigslist, etc. What’s the problem
with these sites? After all, the people you'll find there are looking for a
sales job.
You know who the only salespeople are who are actively looking for sales
jobs?
Bad salespeople.
The good ones are too good at selling to be out of work. And the last thing
you want is a bad salesperson.
Help them view the sales job at your startup as a step that brings them
closer to achieving their long-term goals. Many startup hustlers have
founder aspirations in the long-term.
18
Characteristics of great startup hustlers
These are the key questions you need to ask yourself:
Do they have a high tolerance for pain? Can they handle rejection
well?
Are they coachable? Are they willing to listen and learn, willing to try new
methods? Are they receptive to advice and able to handle critical feedback?
19
The magical formula salespeople need to
master sales: Competition & compassion
The two main pillars of great salesmanship are being competitive and
compassionate.
But if they want to achieve true sales mastery, it can't just be about them.
It has to be about something bigger than them. Ultimately, they need to be
driven by a mission to make the world better and help others.
20
Being mission-driven is almost like possessing a superpower in the world of
sales. It's a secret source of strength. If your sales reps ever fall on hard
times, it's their mission that will compel them to keep pushing, rather than
giving up as most people do.
And the deepest learning happens beyond the point where 99% of the
people have already given up. If they’re driven by something bigger, they
will persevere when others would already have lost hope.
Daily defiance
Every single day, your sales reps need to resist the temptation of
complacency. Every single day, they need to push themselves one step
further. They always have at least one leg outside their comfort zone.
Most people don't have it in themselves. They don't want it bad enough.
They want a break from all the pressure. Everybody feels that way—it's
normal. But normal won't lead to excellence.
Sales is like a sport. Every time your reps walk into the arena, it's a
completely new game.
Every single day, they need to get back in the ring, take the hits and throw
their punches.
21
Do what's difficult
Great sales reps take on jobs that others shy away from. They avoid "easy
money" jobs and low-hanging fruit.
They can sell things that are hard to sell. They will find the best people in
these markets and learn from them.
They would even go into areas where they have to be really great just to
survive. They might go broke—but desperation can turn them into a totally
different kind of beast. It's going to give them the muscle, the strength
and the energy to go into a market where things are easier and totally
crush it there.
They’re comfortable taking risks and going for things others are scared of.
Lifelong learning
Great salespeople study communication. Read as much as they can. Learn.
Practice. Constantly sharpen their saw. Listen to audiobooks. Go to
seminars. Find mentors. Become students of human behavior. Master the
art of the pitch. Work in places with the best sales culture and surround
themselves with other great salespeople.
Most importantly, they keep up their daily practice, day in and day out. It's
the 10,000-hour rule, the deliberate practice method.
22
IGNORE JOB BOARDS: HOW TO FIND AND
RECRUIT GREAT SALESPEOPLE
23
How to recruit your first top-notch sales rep
They recruit either too early, or too late. Too aggressively, or too passively.
They pursue the wrong candidates or no candidates at all (FYI: good
salespeople are not going to come to you).
The good news is they don’t have to. Create an outbound recruiting
machine and you’ll have a pipeline of high-quality sales candidates. Here
are the steps you can take to start building your recruiting process today.
Ask yourself these three questions to find out if your startup is ready for a
full-time sales hire:
If you can answer “yes” to all three questions, you’re ready for a
salesperson! But where do you start?
Don’t! That’s the biggest mistake startups make with their first sales hire.
24
Good salespeople aren’t looking for work. The kind of candidates you’ll find
on job boards aren’t salespeople; they’re scam artists who are great at
selling an inflated resume.
Instead of looking for sales experience, look for sales talent. Here
are some of the key characteristics of successful startup hustlers:
Shamelessness
The best place to find people with those traits? Your immediate network.
Don’t limit yourself to salespeople. Your next great sales hire may be
working as a teacher, engineer, or mechanic. Identify the people in your
network with an entrepreneurial spirit and talk to them about joining your
startup.
If you can’t find anyone in your immediate network, then ask for referrals.
Explain what you’re looking for in a salesperson and ask your contacts for
introductions.
Find one with an established and successful sales team and reach out to
one of their junior reps. Say:
“Hey Janet, this is Steli from Close.io. I really admire what your company is
doing and I’m hoping you could help me out. You’re part of an incredible
25
sales team and we’re trying to hire amazing sales talent like you for our
inside sales CRM. Would you be willing to hop on a call with me this week
and tell me what you were looking for when you joined a company?”
Most reps will be flattered and take the call. Use that opportunity to
explore whether or not they’d be a good fit. If it seems like a match, be
upfront. Say:
“This might sound crazy, but is there any chance you’d join our company?
You’re exactly what we’re looking for.”
If the rep rejects your job offer, that’s okay. Thank them for their time
and, just before you get off the phone, ask for a referral that’s totally out
of your league. For example:
“Thanks for your insights, Janet. Before I let you go, I have one more
question. Now that you know what we’re looking for in a salesperson, who
do you know that’s so insanely talented at sales that they’d probably never
work for us?”
This twist on the standard, “Who do you know who would be interested?”
makes people really think and leads to higher-quality referrals.
“Hi Cathy, this is Steli from Close.io. I was speaking with Janet about
building an amazing sales team and she said you’re the best salesperson
she knows. She also said that I’d never be able to hire you, so I’m not
even going to try. But would you be willing to talk with me about your
sales experience?”
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If you’d be interested in working with this person in the future, start
building a relationship immediately. Find a way that you can provide lasting
value on a consistent basis and check in with them once or twice a month.
It may take a while (I knew my Close.io co-founders for five years before I
could convince them to start a company with me), but if you’re willing to
invest the time no one else is, you’ll win them over.
And if you don’t? You still developed a powerful relationship that can be
valuable in other ways.
Always be recruiting
Outbound recruiting is a lot like outbound sales.
You identify a prospect, qualify them, and go for the close. If you don’t get
it on the first try, you follow up relentlessly.
And if you don’t start looking for prospects until you really need them,
you’re in trouble. Don’t wait until you need to hire to start
recruiting. If you start making those connections today, you’ll have a list
of highly qualified candidates when you need them.
27
Hire above your talent class: How to recruit
the un-recruitable
I’ve been doing the impossible task of hiring way above my "talent class"
for over a decade. And here’s what I’ve learned about startup recruiting.
In fact, the type of person you want to hire should reject that. You
probably don't want to hire anyone you can hire that easily just by
throwing out an offer.
“A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.” —Lao Tzu
"Hey, Mike! We just hired your friend Bob. Every time we make a new hire,
we have a conversation and ask:
28
Who's the most amazing person you know who would never ever change
what they're doing to consider joining us?
I know you're happy and there is no way you would come and work here
right now, and that's fine. All I want to do is get to know each other since
Bob made me very curious. :)
You are one of the most impressive people that Bob knows, so now I want
to get to know you as well.
Etc.
"I'd love you to just stop by our office at some point, meet the team, and
give us some feedback. You seem to be really creative and really cool."
With this process, it's all about small steps. You go from a first phone call
(first tiny step) to the next step (come in and meet the team, and give us a
chance to meet you).
Do you sense there’s a great connection? Are both sides getting more
engaged and excited?
29
Now is the time to come clean and tell your potential superstar
hire your intentions:
"I told you I would not attempt to hire you. I know there's not much hope.
But I'm a bit of a romantic. It seems like this could be really great for both
parties. Maybe there is a way for us to work together and get to know
each other better before making any long-term decisions."
You indicate that you are interested, but you’re not asking them to join
full-time just yet! It’s too early.
Remember, little steps, not giant leaps. It would be too easy to refuse your
offer at this point and both sides have to do a bit more homework in order
to really know that this is a great fit.
"Hey, why don't you come for a whole weekend? We can work on a little
project together. That would be fun!"
This step can be bigger. You’ve built some emotional momentum. Mike has
already committed some of his time to your company. The steps
progressively get bigger and all ultimately lead to the giant leap of making
an offer.
Two good ways to do that would be to ask them to work with you:
On a part-time basis
"In all the meetings and calls we’ve had, it seems like this could be a really
great fit for both sides. Why don't you just come in for a little while, work
with us and in three months if it doesn't work out, you can stop at any
point.
30
That way we are both getting a chance to evaluate if this might really be
the right next step for you, and for us. There is no way to really know until
we've worked with each other for at least a little while. What do you say?"
If they’re truly a great fit for your startup, they won't be able to escape
gradually falling in love with your company and your team.
If they do, you simply pitch them to take the final giant leap and do the
unthinkable of joining your company now that they know they can't live
without it anymore :)
When you think of "sales" or "selling", what’s the first word that comes to
mind?
When Dan Pink, the author of To Sell Is Human: The Surprising Truth
About Moving Others, surveyed people, he got replies like “pushy”,
“sleazy”, “manipulative”, “dishonest and annoying.”
Make it clear that it’s about your team and your vision, and not about “a
sales job.”
Always sell them on the idea of working with your team and being part of
your company, not on the exact execution of things and their position as a
sales rep.
31
Be rigorous
Hiring great people is difficult. The easiest thing is to lower your standards,
find someone who is subpar, talk yourself into believing that they "have it"
and just give them the job.
Don't do that. Don't rush it just because you need to find someone quickly.
In the end, hiring the wrong person will cost you more time than taking the
time it takes to hire the right one.
32
DIG DEEPER: HOW TO INTERVIEW SALES
REPS
33
The truth about job interview questions
If you’re about to hire sales reps, how should you conduct a job interview
to figure out whether a candidate is a great fit or not? What interview
questions should you ask to determine if they’re a great salesperson?
How can you find out if someone is a great basketball player? Do you:
Watching him perform is a much more reliable indicator of skill and talent.
Meltdown.
He dialed the first number and when he started talking, it was as if he’d
become a different person. He had a massive meltdown, started sweating,
stuttering. It was horrible.
* Like when Dick Harrison interviewed Mark Cranney and asked him, “Do you think
you could kick my ass?”
34
He kept trying for a while, but he just disintegrated minute by minute in
front of our eyes.
At the end of it, he looked at me and said, “All right, this is not for me.”
Doing cold calls and exposing yourself to potential rejection can create a
lot of psychological pressure, and it just deflated that guy.
This was a guy who appeared to have the chops, but he didn't. He was the
anti-Mark Cranney (bad at interviews, lacking a winning personality, but a
top sales producer). Read Chapter 5 of Ben Horowitz' The Hard Thing
About Hard Things if you haven't done so yet.
Why? They had the skills, they could handle the pressure… but they lacked
consistency. They couldn’t perform day in and day out.
Reserve your judgment not for how great they are when you first meet
them, or the first day, week or month. Judge them on how great and
consistent their performance is day in and day out.
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The top 10 interview questions in sales hiring
There’s no single question you can ask to figure out whether someone is
the right candidate and will be amazing at sales.
Questions won’t give you all the answers. However, when you’re asking
questions, you’re collecting data. And what you want to do is collect
enough data so that you can make a judgment call: Will this person be
worth investing in?
Giving people practical tests and throwing them into the fire and seeing
how they react will normally give you more answers than your standard
interview questions. But since practical tests aren’t always possible, here’s
a set of 10 interview questions that’ll help you find your next sales hire.
1. Why sales?
This is the most fundamental question when hiring salespeople. Ask the
candidate why they’ve chosen sales as a career. Why have they been doing
it and why do they keep doing it? What is it about selling that attracts
them? What is it about selling that makes them want to be in this
profession? How did they get into it? What’s the reason? What motivates
them?
You can quickly explore if that goal aligns with the goals of your company
and team. If it does, then chances are it’s a good fit.
36
This is a good question to ask because you’ll find out if they’re thoughtful.
Is there a purpose behind them sitting here or did they just apply to a
bunch of jobs to see what would happen?
You want to figure out if the person did their homework. How well do they
understand your customer? They might have been misinformed as to who
your customer is. If that’s the case, this is your opportunity to clarify that.
Next, it’s time to figure out if this candidate will care about your customer.
Why do they think they can communicate well with this person? Why do
they think they can influence them? Can they relate to them?
Have they done their research to see who else is in this space? Do they
know what sets your company and product apart? Why do they think they
could win selling against these people?
If they don’t know the answers, it’s not the end of the world. Most
candidates won’t know your competitors very well; it doesn’t necessarily
make them a bad fit.
37
Potential sales hires most likely won’t be prepared for this question. This
means their answer might be complete BS and just something that they’ll
say to make them look good.
Whatever the reason, work-related or personal, how did this person deal
with that situation? What was it that stressed them out? This is a simple
question that can be really revealing.
By asking this, you’ll get an idea of how this person might react in stressful
situations, when being put under pressure, or faced with challenges.
6. When was the last time you took a big risk and it
didn’t pan out?
This is another question most sales hires are unlikely to be prepared for. It
will reveal if they’re comfortable and secure in themselves, two crucial
ingredients for a good salesperson.
You want to know that these people are risk takers. Because they should
be. If they struggle to come up with a risk they’ve taken in the last 10
years, well—that’s not a good sign.
Don’t forget to ask how they responded when that situation didn’t pan out.
If someone says this, it’s very likely not true. But it might also mean
they’re not taking enough risks with their prospects.
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You want to know how often the potential sales hire loses deals, but you
also want to know the reasons as to why this deal didn’t work out. You
want to hear them analyze themselves.
If they’re good at analyzing what happened and why the deal didn’t work
out, it shows a certain level of maturity and indicates that they’ll have a
good understanding of a prospect’s situation.
If they have that understanding, it also means they’ll know what needs to
happen in order to close that deal.
And the same questions goes, do they know why they won this deal?
The best salespeople in the world are lifelong learners. They never stop
trying to find new ways to get better at their jobs and close more deals.
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The product they’re selling is themselves, and you’re the potential
customer. Now is when you want to see what this person thinks it takes to
close this deal and make you hire him or her.
How good are they at reading other people and can they make a good
judgment based on the conversation you’re having?
This will translate to their sensibilities when they talk to prospects and how
much they can influence the process. Do they understand what’s going on?
Maybe they think they killed it at a question where you were
underwhelmed. If the gap in your perceptions is too big, it’s likely that this
is not a very good salesperson.
If the answers to these two questions are “no,” do not continue the
process because they will not be a good cultural fit for you and your team.
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My startup hiring interview hack: Why? Why?
Why?
Hiring people for your startup is hard. There’s no way around that.
Whether you’re a little unknown startup nobody ever heard of, or a hotshot
rocket ship making headlines in the tech press, figuring out which
candidates to hire is really difficult.
How can you assess which applicants would add the most value to your
startup? (And whom you should avoid like the plague?)
I’ve learned from experience that some of the best interviewees make the
worst employees, and some of the best employees are the worst
interviewees.
You don't want to hire this kind of people, because they tend to be the
ones who are also good at playing office politics and claiming credit for
other people's achievements.
Many founders fail to look beyond the packaging. They see the big bold
letters on the box, and the shiny colors and make a judgment call: “Oh,
this candidate looks good!” Or “No way am I going to hire this person!”
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If they think it’s a good one, they’ll remind themselves: “Do your due
diligence. This is an important decision!”
So they turn the package around and carefully study the fine print on the
side. “Well, this still looks good! I’ll hire this person!”
The problem is they haven’t actually opened up the box and looked at
what’s inside.
To get insights into what’s in the box, you need to get through the
superficial layer of bullshit and have a real interaction.
If that sounds like a lot of work, don’t worry. You don’t need a Ph.D. in
psychology. There’s a super simple hiring hack for this.
So, come up with a list of questions you want to ask, and then follow up on
each of the interviewee’s answers by asking "why" three times in a row.
Interviewee: “That’s a great question, and I’m happy to share with you
that blah, blah, blah [insert a couple of bullshit phrases that make a great-
sounding answer]."
Interviewee: “Well, hm ...” [at this point you can often see the wheels
inside their head turning, and the answers aren’t as slick and polished
anymore] “so blah, blah, blah [still contains a good percentage of
bullshit].”
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Interviewer: “Oh, this is good. Why?”
Getting real
Now, these are the insights you’re looking for. You’ve opened the box and
got a glimpse of what’s inside.
Here's how you respond to those people: "Take a guess. If you had to
guess an answer, what would be your first guess?"
Don't let them off the hook. Push until you move the conversation beyond
the level of "things people say at job interviews."
When I interview someone for a job, I want to know a) what they want
from life, and b) why they want it.
So, I ask the candidate the first question, and follow up with "why" until
they get real.
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How Zappos asks questions that get candidates off
script
Another way to dig below the surface during an interview is to ask
questions for which a candidate isn't prepared, rather than just the typical
"job interview questions."
Which one of our “core values” would be most difficult for you to
uphold?
Describe a time when you had to break the rule to get the job
done.
"It’s not so much the number; it’s more seeing how candidates react to a
question", explains Tony Hsieh, Zappo's CEO. It brings out the personality
of a job candidate.
Hsieh also used to ask the limo driver who brought a job applicant to the
office how he was treated.
Now that I've shared all this advice on conducting hiring interviews with
you, it's important that you ...
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Don’t weigh interviews too heavily!
The interview shouldn't be the deciding factor in your hiring decision.
In a startup, it’s all about performance. What can each team member
contribute to the company?
This is why you want to place them in a situation where they demonstrate
their abilities as quickly as possible. If you're hiring a salesperson, make
them pick up the phone and pitch!
When you’ve made a bad hire, fire them quickly. Don’t give them the
opportunity to drag the whole team’s performance down.
Be respectful when firing someone, and try to help them transition into a
position at another company that suits them better. After all, it was you
who made the mistake of hiring them! But by all means, do not delay the
decision because you feel bad about it.
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The real test: 3 sales homework assignments
for candidates
In the last three chapters, I talked about the types of questions you can
ask in interviews, how to get real answers from candidates, and why you
shouldn’t rely too much on interview questions.
You can only get so much information out of questions. Putting potential
sales hires in practical situations to see how they act—and not what they
say—is when you’ll learn the most about their talents and truly discover
what they’re capable of.
Here are three simple yet powerful and practical tests that you can give
your potential sales hires to uncover whether they’ll be a good addition to
your sales team.
By the first look, you’re probably impressed and you might think, “If I feel
like this, then our prospects and customers will be impressed, too.”
I’ve seen a lot of people who’ve sailed through the interview process.
They’ve nailed every single question. Charmed the entire room. Said all the
right things. But the moment you put them in a realistic sales situation?
Complete meltdown.
That’s why asking them to pitch you something will help you find out if
they’re more than just talk.
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What should they pitch you?
The previous product they were selling. See how they act selling
something they’re experienced in and have extensive knowledge
about.
Ask them to sell you something in a way that fits your sales process. This
could be an in-person sales conversation or a mock call. You can do this
one-on-one or raise the stakes and do it in front of the entire team.
Here at Close.io, we do mock calls right in the middle of the office, in front
of the entire team. It adds to the existing pressure and you’ll see how they
handle the heat and the feeling of being judged.
This is a test to see what they’re made of, right on the sales floor. Do they
like the challenge and rise to the occasion? Or do they crash and burn?
You don’t want to make it as difficult as possible; you just want to make it
as realistic as possible. That means creating a scenario that fits your sales
process and the way your sales team works and see how they do.
At the end, give them one thing you want them to improve or change.
Then do the whole thing again. Be the same person and say almost the
same things. All you want to see is if they took your feedback and made
those changes. You want to know if this person is coachable.
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You can start off easy and increase the level of difficulty throughout the
conversation to get a sense of how experienced this person is and how
they deal under pressure. Be really tough just to see what their natural
reaction is. Will they have a nervous breakdown or pass with flying colors?
At the end of the exercise, will they ask you for feedback? Did they see this
as a learning experience or are they not happy with you? You can tell a lot
about a person based on their energy and you’ll get a good sense of their
character once the exercise is over.
Explain who your ideal customer is, explain your product, and then tell
your candidate they’ve got 30 minutes to do the following:
This simple exercise will tell you a lot about what type of person they are,
what kind of experience they have and what their ability and talent for this
job is.
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Even if you don’t do cold emails, your salespeople will have to
communicate with your prospects and customers in a written format. If
they’re really good at it, it will be a huge plus.
Tell them to look at their products, sign up for a trial, request a demo and
get on a phone call with them.
Tell them to ask many questions to learn as much as possible about the
product. What features do they offer? Who buys from them? Why does
their pricing look the way it does? Then ask them to come back with a
summary of what they learned.
This is an exercise that’ll familiarize them with the competition, and help
you see how good they are at asking questions and being a prospect.
If you don’t know how to be a prospect, you don’t know how to be a good
salesperson.
For example, if one of the competitors says, “We’re really excited about
releasing a new feature in three months”, your potential sales hire should
ask:
The information they bring back to you has to go beyond, “They’re doing
X.”
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If they’re not in the habit of asking follow-up questions and going as far as
they possibly can in their quest for information, they’re not going to be
great at sales.
When they present you with all this data, ask them, “How do you think we
relate to all these companies?”
Because if they talk to a prospect and that prospect asks, “How do you
compare to company X?” They need to be able to present this information
to them in a way that puts you ahead of the competition. You want to see
how they think about the entire market.
These are three exercises that’ll help you uncover a ton of information
about potential sales hires.
There are other things you can do that are less explicit, but still action-
based tests that’ll help you evaluate your sales candidates.
Give them feedback throughout the day and see if they change
and adjust based on your advice. Are they capable of learning and
are they capable of learning fast?
How much are they driving the interview process versus relying on
you to drive it? Will they ask for next steps? Will they ask for
feedback? Will they ask questions or just say thank you and be on
their way? This is a great way to see if someone will proactively
ask for the next step instead of waiting for you to tell them. If
they’re not going for the close for their own job, it’s unlikely they
will close deals for your business. The follow-up is the most
important thing in sales. If they don’t have the follow-up hustle,
then things don’t look good.
Try these three simple exercises during your sales hiring process and you'll
have a better assessment of a sales candidate’s skills than any interview
could provide.
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RISKS AND RED FLAGS: WHAT TO LOOK OUT
FOR AND AVOID WHEN HIRING
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Why hiring salespeople won’t fix your business
These were the customers who wanted us to fix their business with the
magic of sales. Some of them were willing to throw a lot of money at us to
make it happen for them. Most of the time, we were strong enough to say
NO.
Often times, these are the entrepreneurs who build a beautiful product and
are in love with their idea—and think the only thing missing is some
marketing/sales/biz dev guy to come in and "do the business stuff." They
usually misunderstand what the business side of business is about, and
have very little appreciation for it.
Here's an ugly truth that outsourced sales companies don't want you to
know:
If you can't sell your own product, no one else will be able to sell
it for you either.
But that's just wishful thinking, born from the seed of desperation.
The truth is, if you have zero (or next to zero) sales, then ...
It's not the sales part that's at fault. It's your product
If you truly have a great product, you will be able to close at least some
deals.
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Even if you're not a salesperson.
If your product is solid, you'll be able to close your uncle, or your ex-boss,
or your buddy's dad, someone ...
But don't look for someone who will figure it out for you. If you're looking
for somebody who will do all the steps for you that are necessary to figure
it out, you're fucked.
Figuring out the basics is your job. You don't need to figure it out until the
very last detail—but at least you should have mastered the sales
exploration phase and be ready to transition into the sales execution
phase.
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I wrote about the four stages of startup sales in “The ultimate sales hiring
guide for founders and managers” and the transition point between sales
exploration to sales execution is between stage #2 to stage #3. You want
to have something that the outsourced sales company can build upon and
optimize.
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The 5 biggest risks when hiring salespeople for
your startup
When startup founders decide to hire their first salesperson, they try to
assess the risks involved in changing their engineering-focused culture by
bringing in someone for sales.
They know what the upside could be, but wonder what the downside of
making their first sales hire might look like.
Before you do any sales recruiting, you need to make sure you understand
the top risks involved in order to be able to proactively manage them and
maximize your chances of successfully building your startup sales team.
Trying to manage that kind of volatile sales machinery can be a huge (and
expensive) waste of time. You need to make sure you have the right
expectations and allow your salesperson to explore and experiment until
you hit sales/market fit.
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Risk #3: Hiring a salesperson can screw up your
culture
Salespeople and engineers have different DNA. They communicate and
think differently. Bringing salespeople on board can cause a lot of
misunderstanding and office politics.
You want ambitious, unstoppable salespeople. But make sure they are
compatible with your company culture. Be proactive about integrating them
into the larger team and teach them how to communicate effectively with
engineers and vice versa.
Some people are great at closing deals but still bad for your business
because they're too aggressive.
They'll try to close deals that shouldn't be closed, and they'll stretch the
truth or lie to customers just to earn a commission. They don't care about
long-term viability; they just care about bringing in cash today.
They can hurt your brand and reputation and destroy any trust you have in
the marketplace.
Lambs
They're the opposite of mercenaries: too soft. They lack the ambition to
succeed in sales.
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Risk #5: Hiring sales leadership too soon
When founders bring in seasoned sales veterans, it's usually because they
think the five, 10, 15 or even more years of sales experience will help grow
their startup faster.
But these people are often not good at sales exploration. They are good at
selling something the market already knows and understands, not creating
completely new sales models for a startup. But that's probably exactly what
you need right now. Your sales activities will look something like this:
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Spot bad fits early: 20 red flags for sales hiring
Hiring is a tough nut to crack. The amount of dilly-dalliers who hide behind
good looks and quick wit is impressive.
It’s not easy to uncover who’ll be the right sales hire for your company,
and the criteria that makes someone good or bad will differ for everyone.
But I want to share what’s worked well—consistently and historically—for
us here at Close.io.
Here are 20 red flags to look out for in your sales hiring process.
A good elevator pitch goes a long way. It’s not more difficult than
answering these questions:
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Where are you going?
If a candidate can provide you with a broader context of who they are,
you’ll be able to assess if they’re a good fit for your company and your
culture.
It might not be a bad thing necessarily, but pay attention to how they
answer the questions about why they left their previous positions after a
short amount of time.
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7. They share sensitive information from past
employers
If a potential sales hire starts sharing data and company secrets—they’re
out. This means they’ll be doing it at your company, too.
Some people just send off applications left and right. If a sales candidate
has no real purpose behind their application, they likely won't feel like they
have any purpose in their role either.
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carbonara, it’s not going to mean much. Doesn’t matter if the
person makes for a great lunch partner if they can’t close a deal.
If you don’t trust someone, you can’t work with them. Period.
Think about how these people would come across when they talk to a
prospect. No one enjoys getting ploughed down by an ignorant alpha,
especially when they’re looking for help.
At worst, this type of person could create a toxic culture in your sales
team.
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14. They lack enthusiasm
Enthusiasm is contagious. While this isn’t a deal breaker, if someone lacks
enthusiasm or energy, if they don’t get excited, then why should you get
excited about them?
One of the things sales managers love about our inside sales CRM is the
ability to automatically record all the calls their reps are making.
This allows them to listen in to the sales conversations their reps have
when they’re not in the room. As a sales manager, if you randomly listen in
to archived call recordings, you can very quickly get a sense for how
consistent your reps are.
A good test is to give someone negative yet constructive feedback and see
how quickly they apply that feedback. If someone can’t take feedback on
board, they won’t be able to learn and improve in their role either.
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17. They’re defensive
Excuses, excuses, excuses. If a person responds to critique or negative
feedback in the form of excuses, they don’t know how to take responsibility
for their actions.
Whatever it may be, there’s a reason why we all get out of bed in the
morning. Having drive and motivation is key to doing anything well, let
alone selling.
Perhaps they’ve only done things they know they’d be successful at.
The vast majority of us have experienced failure and misfortune in one way
or another. If a person hasn’t, it’s likely they haven’t taken any risks or
truly challenged themselves.
These red flags don’t apply to every company and sales team. Choose the
red flags that fit your culture and utilize them in your sales hiring process.
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Are you guaranteed to make the right hiring decisions based on this? Of
course not. But I hope they’ll help you in the process of weeding out bad
sales candidates.
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The diamond in the rough: How to handle
underdogs
Ten years ago, I hired a salesperson with incredible drive. He had recently
lost everything—his job, his house, all his money. But he was hungry to get
back in the game and work his ass off. He was underqualified, but what he
lacked in experience, he made up for in energy. So I took a chance on him.
I ended up wasting my own time and my new employee's time, just trying
to get him to be good enough. By the time I let him go, not only was he
out of a job, but he had just wasted a year trying to fit a role that wasn’t
right for him.
He was one of many hiring mistakes I’ve made. And while I still believe in
hiring based on attitude and not just experience, I’ve realized that risky
hires need to be carefully managed to ensure they become successful.
But underdogs present the toughest hiring decisions, because you have to
bet on whether they have what it takes to catch up to the rest of the team.
As a result, you need to walk a fine line between giving them a chance to
meet their potential and knowing when it’s time to cut your losses and part
ways.
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How to work with underdogs
Underdogs are such tempting hires because they are often greatly
undervalued candidates. They’re not applying for the job to work for a few
years and then move on. They are looking for a growth opportunity to kick-
start their career, so whoever offers them that opportunity will earn their
allegiance and undivided attention.
But not every underdog is a success story. Sales requires a grit and hustle
that they might not have. The trick in dealing with underdogs is knowing
when to call it quits, since the more time and money you invest, the more
emotionally invested you become, and the more difficult it will be for you
to make a rational and objective decision when to call it quits.
Gauging your expectations will help your underdog achieve top results and
succeed within your company. Here are four questions to ask yourself
when preparing to hire them.
Likewise, people tend to exaggerate their work ethic. They think, “Well, I
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could be hardworking if I wanted to be.” So some applicants will fool
managers into thinking they’re underdogs when they’re actually just
cleverly disguised misfits.
Check to see if they are eagerly taking notes and learning the
processes
Get feedback from their peers to see how well they’re absorbing
new information
Ask for concerns from the hires themselves to get a sense of how
motivated they are to improve
You hired the underdog because you thought they’d dig deep and give you
their all. If their work ethic is anything less than excellent during
onboarding, think about how they’ll act in six months. Cut your losses
quickly if you were duped in the interview process by an undercover misfit.
2. How long are you prepared to wait for them to catch up?
In just the US and UK, companies spend about $37 billion dollars annually
to keep on unproductive employees who do not understand their jobs. To
stop yourself from falling into this trap, set a time limit before you hire the
underdog in the first place.
You’ll need more time than you think. Sales managers drastically
underestimate how long it should take someone to get the hang of the
processes. Training a new sales rep typically takes 7 months, but over 27%
of employers judge the success of an entry-level employee in just two
weeks.
So I recommend that you decide how much time you think catch-up should
take for someone with no sales background, and double it. Setting time
expectations before hiring the candidate lets you know when to cut your
losses should their passion and work ethic not make up for their lack of
experience.
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3. How will you onboard this hire?
To see whether your training program is working, have a weekly 1:1 with
the new hire yourself. This way you can see first-hand whether any
progress has been made.
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among your sales reps.
So, if doubling the amount of time you anticipated isn’t enough for the
underdogs to meet your standards, then you'll know that it’s time to let
them go.
What sets underdogs apart from other hires is their contagious passion.
They are so energized by their ambitions that they will stop at nothing until
they’ve reached their goals. And while most sales skills can be taught, this
superb attitude cannot.
If you catch these gems early, you’ll find that the underdogs can have a
spectacular, long-lasting impact, both on overall sales performance and on
the team dynamic—making them well-worth the risk and the investment.
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The senior sales hire that will destroy your
startup
Charlie knows how the game is played in the big league. Yet, he chose to
play with you in little league. Why? Oh, he can explain sure! Reasons you’ll
enjoy listening to: He believes in your vision, he can see the potential in
your idea. He thirsts for the speed and spirit of a new startup.
You’ll meet Charlie when you need him the most: Early on when your
startup is struggling to find product/market fit, struggling to grow
consistent revenue and sign up new paying customers.
There he is, Charlie, your knight in shining armor, ready to slay the
monster that’s holding you back from explosive growth.
Charlie will start calling, reaching out into his network, building a stellar
pipeline. You’ll hear him talk much about prospects, leads and
opportunities.
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All that’s needed to turn these opportunities into customers is …
A redesigned website
Charlie will initially make little asks, reasonable requests, but they’ll
increasingly turn into bigger and bolder demands. After everything you’ll
have invested already, you're not going to suddenly pull out. All of it would
have been wasted.
All those hot deals he’s working on take forever, and never materialize. “It
takes time to close those massive deals,” he’ll tell you. Which isn't wrong,
but you need to be involved, to have a read on the temperature of the
deals yourself and not just trust someone else’s judgment at the super
early stage.
At one point, most likely when it’s already too late, you’ll realize it: Inside
that shining armor is not a knight, but a black hole that devours all your
startup's resources, until there’s nothing left of it. Charlie will be on to the
next startup, peddling his counterfeit sales expertise.
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Why do so many smart founders fall for Charlie
Charlatan?
For the same reason smart people have fallen for con men's schemes since
hundreds of years: they want to believe them! The shysters’ promises
sound so good; we desperately want it to be true. That desire overrides all
the sophisticated processing going on in our neocortex.
Even Charlie often believes his own bullshit. From his point of view, it’s
always forces outside of his control—the founders, the market, the VCs,
the other reps, the incompetent VPs, the CEO—that prevent him from the
breakthrough success he’s chasing.
The simple truth is this: A truly great, successful senior salesperson won’t
join your scrambling little startup. That salesperson would earn hundreds
of thousands, maybe millions of dollars a year, without the stress and
uncertainty of startup struggle.
It’s great advice, but there’s an important clause that needs to be added:
Recruit someone who is a little bit better than you are at _____.
Hiring people who are a level above you, a bit more experienced, a bit
more skillful, a bit better at what they do than the things that you are
doing, that’s crazy hard.
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If you’re a scrappy little startup with a handful of employees, you won’t be
able to recruit Tim Cook as CEO, and you won’t be able to recruit a top VP
of Sales.
But anything other than that? Almost certainly a pipedream. You’ve got
better chances of success driving to Vegas and betting all that equity and
money on red.
Reality check
If you ever find yourself in a situation like this and you’re still tempted after
reading this because you’re too scared to lose the great opportunity to
bring that sales rock star on board, put your Charlie to the test.
Don’t hire nor reject him yet. Instead, say this: “Hey, Charlie, before you
leave your amazing job and join our high-risk venture, let’s make sure that
this is really the right opportunity for both of us. I know you have this
incredible Rolodex, deep industry knowledge and valuable experience. Let’s
close one deal together before we do this.”
That’s it. If they are really that excited about joining your startup, it’s not
too big an ask. In fact, it’s in their own interest. Have them close a deal for
you.
Not promises, not a pipeline, not a partnership proposal. Have them bring
in real revenue from paying customers.
Can they do it? Great! Disregard everything I told you and hire them.
(Also, send me an email to tell me about it. I want to hear THAT story!)
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RAMPING UP: HOW TO ONBOARD,
INCENTIVIZE, AND STRUCTURE YOUR SALES
TEAM
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Designing a winning sales commission
structure
"I don't know the right way to do this, but I want to find out together with
you.
I will pay you a base salary for the first couple of months while we develop
the commission plan.
We'll have to create this sales commission plan not just for you, but for
every future sales rep as well. So this won't be an easy job."
Find someone truly excited about tackling this challenge, and then get to
work together. Or go in the opposite direction.
You let them go, lower your expectations, adjust your commission
structure and then hire new people.
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Why can't you keep the same reps? Why do you have to fire them?
Because they will be (rightfully) upset if you gave them a flawed
commission structure.
They won't trust you and won't feel excited about working for you
anymore. So bring in new people and start from scratch with them—this
time with a more achievable commission structure
Don't wait
Which way should you choose? That depends on your personality and the
kind of company you want to run. Both are viable, both work, and more
importantly both will get you going immediately.
One of the biggest mistakes I've seen founders make is waiting way too
long to figure out "the perfect commission structure" before hiring
salespeople.
There is no such thing as getting the commission structure right the first
time around. This, just like everything else in a startup, will be about trial
and error. Success will be achieved by moving fast, learning fast, and
course correcting rather than thinking your way to perfect solutions and
getting it right with the first execution.
We know founders that have been waiting for over two years before hiring
much-needed salespeople because they had analysis paralysis about the
"right compensation structure." Don't be one of those startups!
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Real-life case study
A friend of mine got hired as the head of sales and business development
at a cool startup.
He was about to hire the first salesperson, and needed to come up with a
commission structure.
Their product costs several hundred dollars a month. His idea was to pay
out $100 every month for the sales rep who brought in the deal for the
first 12 months.
I told him to not spread things out so much. Instead, pay upfront, but pay
a little less.
Rather than paying out $1,200 over the course of 12 months, he could pay
$600 after three months.
It will keep the sales rep motivated. If a sales rep knows he'll still get
commissions for the deals closed six months ago, he might become
complacent. You want your sales reps hungry.
Is this the perfect commission structure for his business? I doubt so. But
it's a decent way to get started.
Compensation/sales fit
But what about churn? Expansion revenue? I know there are a lot of
details that need to be fine-tuned to design a compensation plan that will
fuel and scale your sales efforts. I don't want to suggest that it's easy at
all.
Just like it's impossible to hit product/market fit without having your
product hit the market, you won't get compensation/salesperson (and sales
model) fit without having salespeople perform under your compensation
plan highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of it.
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For more advice on this topic, you can also read Aaron Ross's excellent
book Predictable Revenue for some examples of how to develop your
compensation structure with your sales team.
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The 3 models of effective sales team
organization
Here are the three basic sales team structures that you can use to ramp up
your sales game and start off on the right foot.
The island
The island model of sales organization leads to a more traditional, “sell-or-
die” environment that people typically associate with sales reps. There’s
actually very little organizational structure that goes into it. You provide
your team with some basic back-end services: some training, a range of
products they can sell, a commission structure, maybe an office—and that’s
it.
In this model, every sales rep is essentially responsible for each step of the
sales process on their own. They have to generate leads by themselves,
qualify them, and close them. Reps within this framework tend to be more
aggressive. They’ve got their elbows out in fierce competition—not just
with the larger market, but their own teams as well.
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This model dominates traditional sales operations, like real estate or
financial services. Think about your average real estate agent. She’ll walk
into her office each day, and nominally represent a larger real estate
agency, like Coldwell Bankers, or the Corcoran Group. But she’ll promote
her listings mostly on her own, by posting them online, calling prospects on
the phone, and running open houses—all in hopes of a close.
Pros:
Cons:
You have much less control over how your brand is represented in
the market, because it’s highly dependent upon each individual
rep’s style.
Takeaway
The island model isn’t great for most startups—it’s too aggressive, and too
competitive—but there’s always exceptions. It typically suits companies
that work in established markets, with high levels of competition. The
island model works best for low complexity, high-transaction sales
processes. Sometimes, simplest is best.
You can apply the assembly line to your sales team. Your raw materials are
essentially your prospective customers, who are cultivated and refined
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during the sales cycle. The assembly line typically breaks down a sales
force by function into four different groups:
The assembly line allows your sales team to specialize among different
functions and roles. Each step of the sales cycle has a dedicated team. As
customers walk through the funnel—from leads, to qualified opportunities,
to new customers—they’re passed on to the next team.
You can dive right in, and see what’s up with your SDR team—whether an
individual member of the team simply isn’t converting quality leads, or
whether it’s a more global problem. You could institute further training and
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data-driven coaching, to boost SDRs up to 50% of leads qualified rate, and
hit your broader sales goals. Looking at the segmentation of your funnel is
one of the most powerful ways to fine-tune the engine of your sales
machine.
Even with only two sales reps, you can still start specialization early. Have
one focus on prospecting new clients, and the other on closing deals,
based on their natural abilities and talents. Use the 80/20 rule to determine
when to build new stations on the assembly line—when your reps spend
20% or more of their time on a secondary function, it might be appropriate
to pass that role on to a specialist.
Pros:
Cons:
When you’re starting out with two sales reps, it’s difficult to split
them into four different teams—you just won’t have enough
manpower for the job.
Takeaway
Most startups will find that some form of the assembly line will work best
for them. It’s great for reducing the complexity of your sales cycle,
increasing sales efficiency, and scaling your team. Your sales cycle is
probably relatively complex. It will only grow more complex along with
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your business. The higher your annual customer value (ACV), the more
important it is to have specialized sales team members dedicated to each
part of the customer journey.
The power of the assembly line sales model lies in creating a reliable and
repeatable process for nurturing leads. In doing so, it takes your funnel
and transforms it into a revenue powerhouse as you build your business to
scale.
The pod
A pod works along similar lines to the assembly line model of sales, but
instead creates focused tight-knit groups, or “pods” that are composed of
team members that play different roles. A podular organization is
customer-centric.
You still utilize the specialist roles we outlined above, with SDRs, AEs, and
Customer Success reps. But instead of having all of your SDRs or AEs
compete against each other, with a podular organization of your sales
team, pods compete with other pods. Each pod works together to win the
customer, and keep them happy afterwards. They’re more fluid, and come
up with ideas independently.
With the pod, you build a more modular and flexible structure than the
traditional model. Since success is measured by pod, each member of the
sales force has a larger, more holistic view of the entire company. Pods
build more meaningful connections between teammates. You can specialize
pods based on different industries, verticals, or countries.
Pros:
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Pods are more flexible and agile
Cons:
With the pod structure, there’s less opportunity for your individual
sales reps to compete and grow, and push each other to excel
Takeaway
Take a look at the other competitors within your industry—how are their
sales teams structured? You don’t have to imitate what they’re doing. But if
everyone in your market is crushing it in a specific way, it’s worth asking
why—and finding out if there’s a good, rational reason behind it.
As you structure your sales team, what’s most important is finding the right
fit that will drive the results you’re looking for.
It’s critical that you constantly ask yourself, “What kind of team are we?
What kind of culture are we trying to create?” The team you build and the
way you structure it in the early-stages of your startup will leave a huge
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footprint on your sales process, as you further grow and scale your
business.
Don’t leave it up to chance. Choose the sales model and team that works
for your business and you’ll build a sales machine capable of sustaining
long-term growth.
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How to onboard a sales team in 4 weeks
Guest chapter by Nick Persico. You can follow him on Twitter @NickPersico
and read his personal blog at https://nickpersico.com.
The beauty of being a startup is that you get to skip all of that nonsense.
Forget long training sessions filled with hypothetical bullshit.
Let’s turn people with little or no experience into selling machines in just
four weeks.
At the end of two weeks, what milestones should each new hire have
under their belt? Should they already have a pipeline? Closed a deal?
That’s up to you, but set a benchmark and make it clear that everyone
should be on pace to hit the milestones.
Your sales team’s first day should always be on a Saturday. I’ve written
about this in the past, and I believe it’s the most effective way to onboard
anyone joining a company.
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Most importantly, they know what’s expected of them when they come in
Monday morning.
Stop fucking around with training sessions and put them in front of
prospects as soon as possible. Let them learn the hard and fast way like
you did.
Use the first week to let them learn the ropes on their own. Schedule a
stand up at the end of each day where they can ask you questions. A daily
stand up is very important for a number of reasons:
The team asks questions about direct feedback they are hearing
out in the market. You can help them get better at managing
objections or improve their pitch.
You’ll be able to figure out if the leads they’re calling are any good.
Look at daily reach rates to see if you can add or improve on the
lead list overnight.
You didn’t learn how to ride a bike from your parents telling you about
every aspect of how the bike worked. You just got on the bike, fell a bunch
of times, and eventually figured it out. Treat new sales hires as if they are
learning to ride a bike. They’ll appreciate the process.
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Week 2: Train them on the sales process as they
move deals forward
The biggest mistake people make when training salespeople is overloading
them with processes. You should not be spending time training the group
on how to send a proposal or create a new user account.
No one sends a proposal or creates a user account until they earn it.
I always train new hires on the sales process as they are moving their
deals forward. The most common and basic SaaS sales process is four
weeks long. If they start their first week calling people trying to schedule
product demos, they may be conducting those demos and creating
opportunities in the second week. Tell them what they need to know as
they move the deal forward.
New hires will reach certain parts of the sales process at different times.
Train each person individually on each part of the process as they move
forward. It will give you the opportunity to work with them 1-on-1 and
continue to evaluate if they are a good fit.
One person may be weak at organizing their day. Another may be using
the wrong terminology to describe something. Identify those weaknesses
and communicate them, and have each person focus on improving on that
single aspect of their sales game.
Use the single focus to see if they are capable of prioritizing things. Did
they improve on that metric or trait? Did they take the feedback?
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together to improve by sharing feedback? Are they following the schedule
laid out in the first three weeks?”
By the fourth week, your team should have a clear understanding of what’s
expected of them, from their quota to their goals. Even if the goal is team-
oriented for now, they should be aware and focused on making it happen.
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The one-day sales rep onboarding hack
Instead of weeks or months of training before your reps are allowed to talk
to prospects, I’m going to show you how to train sales reps to make
sales calls from day one. Turn new hires into product experts at the
speed of startup, so they'll be able to answer any question right away.
It’s a scalable strategy for training and onboarding new sales hires a lot
faster.
It’s like learning to swim - you can’t learn it by reading about swimming.
You need to actually get in the water.
The documentation you give them is just a life jacket to keep them afloat,
not a boat that prepares them for getting in the water.
(Involve the most successful members of your sales team in creating this
training guide for new sales hires.) You’re basically creating an objection
management document.
Have your new sales hires study this document, so that they can
confidently answer the majority of questions prospects ask.
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Don't know the answer?
What if a prospect asks the new sales rep a question they haven't been
trained on?
3. But I will find it out for you. I will go to a person in the company
that’s the best person to answer this and I will make sure to come
back to you with an honest and accurate answer today. Is that ok
with you?”
It enables your sale reps to get the right answer to the prospect,
and learn more about your product.
How should a new sales rep respond if they can’t answer such a simple
question?
Same formula, just add these words after “I don’t know the answer”:
“Because this is my first week. I just got started here.”
Nobody is mad at people who are new at a business. Everybody has been
in that position and knows what it’s like.
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What’s your company culture?
Don’t expect your salespeople to be perfect and know all the answers. It’s
going to create pressure for them to bullshit when they don’t know the
answer.
They will just say things like, “Oh we have been around for three years.” -
“Why did you say that?” - “Well, I didn’t want them to know that I don’t
know and embarrass us.”
Just be honest. It’s an opportunity to stand out from the crowd, and it
starts with the way you onboard new sales reps.
Don’t require them to have all the right answers— require them to have
the right attitude.
1. Great question.
4. In the meanwhile, let me ask you, “What would you want the
answer to be in a perfect scenario?”
5. Why?
Prospects have a chance to say what they want and then explain why they
want it.
Your sales reps can flip the question around, and turn it into an
opportunity to learn more about the prospects, to understand them better,
to qualify them.
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Here are some questions that will be helpful for this step:
How are you going to use this? / What’s the use case?
Tell me a little bit more about your company/team, and by the end
of the conversation I will make sure to come back with any missing
information.
Typically, what happens with new sales hires who don’t ask these
questions is that they don’t provide enough context.
They’ll go to the engineer and say, “Somebody asked me, how do you
configure this on the API level?”
Engineer: “What’s the use case for this question? Why is this relevant?”
New sales rep: “I don’t know, I just put down the question. I didn’t ask
them anything about it.”
And then an engineer can’t provide them with a good answer, because
they lack context.
Most sales leaders teach new reps to give the right answers. Great sales
leaders teach new reps to ask the right questions.
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BONUS: THE QUICK START GUIDE TO HIRING
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You’re ready to start hiring.
I covered everything from when you should start hiring sales reps to how
to quickly yet efficiently onboard them, as well as my unconventional
interviewing hacks.
And if I’ve did my job right, you should be feeling more knowledgeable and
motivated to hire some great sales reps.
There’s only want thing possibly holding you back from jumpstarting your
own sales hiring process: you.
Too many people put off doing what could be done today for tomorrow.
While you may be feeling pumped now, if you don’t immediately get the
ball rolling on sales hiring, you’re going to keep putting it off until the lack
of salespeople goes from being an inconvenience to a full-blown pain.
That’s why I want to show you the power of right the fuck now and
challenge you to apply it to your own sales hiring process.
PG laughed, logged in and sent the email right then and there.
Could I have emailed him about it later? Yup. Would he still have done it?
Probably. But this was important for us and “probably” wasn’t good
enough.
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The power of right the fuck now challenge
At this point, you should know if you’re ready to hire sales reps and what
type of traits to look for.
Now, it’s time to take that knowledge and start searching for those great
sales reps.
That’s why I want you to take the right the fuck now challenge.
It’s only three steps, the exact steps you need to take to start finding sales
reps.
1. Make a list of 10 people who you think are great and killing it.
2. Write them an email asking if they know anyone else who is killing
it.
3. Contact the people they refer and start recruiting them, using the
advice from the chapter “Hire above your talent class: How to
recruit the un-recruitable.”
To make it a little easier, I’m going to give you an email template to use
when asking for referrals.
At the back of this book is a special link to a collection of sales hiring tools.
Not only will you get the email template but you’ll also receive other great
free tools such as a sales hiring checklist and the 4-week sales onboarding
schedule. Each tool is designed to be easy-to-use and actionable for
maximum impact.
Finding great sales reps won’t be easy—that’s why you have to start now,
instead of tomorrow.
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GET THE BONUS MATERIALS!
Make hiring even easier with the right shortcuts:
Visit resources.close.io/saleshiringbook
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WANT MORE GREAT STARTUP ADVICE?
Visit the Close.io blog at blog.close.io
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