Bite-sized bits on Common Sense Management: Small in size but packed with powerful practical insights on most aspects of management
By Gerard Assey
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About this ebook
The book details the basics of Frontline Sales Management and broadly covers all aspects of managerial skills presented by a veteran with over two decades experience in sales and sales management with topics ranging from: *Managing oneself in terms of time and priorities to setting goals *Interviewing sales personnel, importance of training *Conducting training workshops, delegation, problem-solving, managing meetings, caring for the customer... and lots more. The book will empower Sales Managers with winning strategies on various aspects of management applicable to any type of organisation, regardless of the product or service (with emphasis on on-going coaching skills and self-development the most important areas for any Sales Manager). Packed with powerful, practical insights, each chapter is written in an independent, easy-to-read manner. Bite-sized Bits on Common-sense Management is a book that no ambitious Sales Manager can afford to miss.
Gerard Assey
Gerard Assey has had over 20 years' experience in senior positions in sales, sales management and general management. Gerard also had a three-year stint in the Gulf, as a Consultant with a leading British consultancy firm. During these 20 years, he was trained by several international organisations like GTE,USA, BCE (Bell Canada), DPC,Asia, et al. His experience spans hiring personnel to organising training programmes at all levels and working as a profit-centre head. Gerard is a certified NLP practitioner, an accredited management teacher and a member of several prestigious bodies and trade institutions. He contributes regularly to business and trade journals, including international ones.
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Bite-sized bits on Common Sense Management - Gerard Assey
Introduction
In most organisations, very often, top sales performers are moved up to the sales management position without evaluating whether they have the required skills to perform the tasks of a manager. The sales manager’s position is seen as a reward for the outstanding sales performer. But the person in question may or may not have the aptitude to be a manager, as the qualities required for a sales manager are definitely different from those required for a successful salesperson. An outstanding salesperson need not necessarily evolve into an outstanding sales manager!
As a consequence, the newly promoted manager is unable to cope with this transition from working independently to that of now handling a team. The saddest part is that the newly promoted manager has not been provided with any training whatsoever, but has just been moved up and asked to function from the very moment he assumes this new role.
In the process, the organisation has not only lost their top salesperson but also acquired a poor sales manager with this person eventually not doing justice to that position. This results in a build up of low morale and attrition all around, thus affecting productivity, tarnishing the company’s image and eventually ending in frustration for all.
In my years of experience of leading, controlling and interacting with several hundreds of salesmen and sales managers, I have had the good fortune of being able to observe and painfully learn from first-hand experience how these managers failed because of this lack of training.
Therefore, to some extent, this book should be able empower the newly promoted manager with the various aspects of management applicable to any type of organisation, regardless of the product or service (with more emphasis on ongoing coaching skills… the most important function of a sales manager). Small in size, but packed with powerful, practical insights, each chapter is independent and easy to read.
An invaluable resource for the newly promoted sales manager… his/her first kit!
Managing Your Basic Resource.
Imagine a situation where you are given Rs.86,400 and told: From this moment, you have 24 hours to invest this amount. You can invest in anything you want to with this money. Whatever you don’t invest, I get back tomorrow at this exact moment.
What would you do in the next 24 hours? You’d be working hard and fast to invest that Rs.86,400 - wouldn’t you?! That being our attitude, why aren’t we busily investing as much as we can of the 86,400 seconds given to us everyday? Yes, at the beginning of each day we are all given 86,400 seconds and as each one ticks by, we have lost it forever, unless we find a way to invest that moment in the future.
Most of us waste about half our time. Most wasted time is due to poor habits and lack of self-discipline. How do you then acquire good habits and self-discipline? Managing time is really a matter of managing your own behaviour. To change this behaviour you need to create a reward system that rewards productive behaviour and discourages time wasting. Good time management is making first-rate habits second nature. Remember, Until you can manage yourself, you can’t manage anything else
.
Before you begin, however, have a set of clear written goals that you wish to accomplish and have them ranked in order of importance. Next, take a one-week time inventory, as we may not be aware of most of our habits until we make a conscious effort to discover them. Taking a hard, objective look at your own behaviour is one of the best favours you could do yourself. You can’t replace bad habits with good ones until you identify the former. Write down everything you do for one week on a DAILY TIME LOG form (Fig 1), starting each day with your name, the day and date. Be sure to list every activity and why it occurred, rating each activity for its importance and urgency (e.g., for very urgent, write Al; for medium priority or not urgent, write B3), whether planned (P) or an interruption (I). When you finish working on one activity or an interruption, write down the amount of time used.
At the end of the week take an inventory, noting the kinds of activities that occur most frequently, like phone calls, interacting with customers, visitors, paperwork, meetings, socialising etc. Summarise the week by writing down each major category of time used and the percentage of total time consumed. Now you know where your time is going! Chances are it isn’t going where you thought it was! But don’t get discouraged. Even the best people waste around two hours a day!
Now, honestly write the answers to these questions:
What are my greatest time-wasters?
How much time is consumed by interruptions? Who or what is most responsible for them? How can this be reduced?
Am I doing tasks that are unimportant? How can this be reduced, eliminated or delegated?
Whom do I need to see more or less often?
What activities need more time?
What activities need less time?
Am I trying to do too much?
Am I procrastinating?
What habits or tendencies are causing me to waste time?
When you have made your time-inventory statement and answered the questions, treat yourself to a nice reward for having the courage to discover your own weaknesses. It’s a tough exercise but one that will pay big dividends. Once you have recognised your faults or time-wasters, it takes about three weeks to transform a new way of behaving into a comfortable habit. Most people fail to realise this. Instead, they try to make radical, wholesale changes in their behaviour, find it unbearable and go back to their old, comfortable habits. The key to making lasting changes in your behaviour is to make them gradually, smoothly and systematically.
Review your time-inventory questions. Now choose one new habit that you feel will have the greatest timesaving value and resolve to practise it for three weeks without fail. Once you decide on a new habit, announce the change to everyone and start practising it immediately, while deciding a reward you can give yourself after three weeks of consistent success at practising the new habit. This will be your incentive to practise the new behaviour until it becomes second nature. The reward for your success and self-discipline need not be enormous, but it must be meaningful.
Bear in mind: every good, new habit you acquire has in-built rewards for more free time, less stress and higher productivity with long-term payoffs. You are gaining the skills that turn talent into ability.
After you unfailingly practise a new behaviour for three weeks, it will probably become a well-entrenched habit. So give yourself that reward and choose another new habit (and reward!) to practise for the next three weeks. Keep repeating the self-management cycle and over a period of months you will begin to see drastic and lasting improvements in your productivity.
Simultaneously, decide daily what goals and activities are most important, as they would have become obvious after the exercise. Eliminate low-priority items. Ritually prepare a TO DO LIST (Fig 2) for the following day and rank your goals/activities in terms of URGENT, HIGH, MEDIUM and LOW.
Begin each day with a definite plan referring to this TO DO LIST. Develop your own systems so that you do not waste time shuffling paper (bills, memo’s etc). And do not worry about what was not completed - you cannot fix something that is past!
Lastly, we must all learn to work smart. Talking about working smart, I’m reminded of the story Dale Carnegie once narrated. Two men were out chopping wood. One man worked hard all day, took no breaks and only stopped briefly for lunch. The other chopper took several breaks and a short nap at lunch. At the end of the day, the man who had taken no breaks was quite disturbed to see that the other had cut more wood than he had. He said, I don’t understand. Every time I looked around, you were sitting down, yet you cut more wood than I did.
His companion remarked, Did you also notice that while sitting down, I was sharpening my axe?!