Pre-employment tests plus other applicant evaluation methods help you select salesperson job applicants who will turn into highly productive, super-profitable sales reps. These applicant evaluation methods include pre-employment tests, intriguing bio-data, vague job interview questions, plus colorful role-plays.
Hiring fantastic sales reps is crucial. As Henry Ford wisely observed, “Until someone sells something, no one else has a job.” A company with monstrously effective sales reps can grow and prosper. However, a company with wonderful products but lousy sales reps will wither away.
So, how can managers hire highly productive sales reps?
Here are four great methods you can start using immediately.
Previously, we discussed the first method, which is...
1st METHOD = PRE-EMPLOYMENT TESTS – CUSTOM-TAILORED FOR SALES REP HIRING
Today we discuss Methods 2 and 3.
2ND METHOD = INTRIGUING BIO-DATA
Bio-data means biographical data, and yields loads of super-useful insights into which applicants you should seriously consider.
Suggestion: When you conduct your pre-employment test benchmarking study of your best sales reps, also have them fill-out a questionnaire on their bio-data from before they started working for your company. The bio-data questionnaire helps you gather specific details of your company’s best sales reps’ work experiences, education, training, compensation, and more.
For example, in bio-data questionnaires I created for many companies, I continually find successful sales reps worked during high school. That is only one example of useful bio-data.
Armed with exact bio-data of your best sales reps, you then can include relevant bio-data questions in your interviews. For instance, if all your best sales reps worked during high school in service-type jobs, then you definitely want to see if each applicant you interview had similar experiences.
Translation: See if each job applicant you might consider has bio-data similar to your best sales reps’
bio-data.
3RD METHOD = VAGUELY WORDED IN-DEPTH INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
If the pre-employment test scores of an applicant are similar to scores of your best sales reps, then you probably want to make time to conduct an in-depth job interview.
Unfortunately, too many sales applicants come across exceedingly wonderful in typical job interviews. After all, salespeople know how to make a good impression and “knock your socks off.”
Secret Revealed = Here is a trick sales applicants use to make you “fall in love” with them: Immediately upon meeting you, the applicant gives you a nice handshake with good eye-contact and a smile. The applicant compliments something about you, your company, or your office. Then – and here is the cincher – the applicant makes you laugh within 120 seconds after meeting you. After that laugh, the applicant’s charm offensive has melted the heart of most interviewers – and the interviewer then incorrectly slobbers positive ratings on almost everything the sales applicant says.
Fortunately, you can avoid doing a typical interview, and getting conned by a salesperson.
First, only interview job applicants who got pre-employment test scores similar to scores of your company’s best salespeople. Second, make a list of the most important 6 – 9 job talents you must have in anyone you hire. These might include persuasiveness, friendliness, teamwork, handling obstacles, action-orientation, and desire to earn incentive pay.
Third, avoid telling the applicant you are looking for those job talents. Instead, ask vague questions. Then, listen to whether the applicant might have talents you need. For example, if teamwork is important, do not ask a question like “Do you like teamwork?” Any applicant with some brains would know to say, “Yes” to such an obvious question.
Instead, ask a vague question, such as, “What are examples of the work situations you enjoy most?” Then, notice if the applicant tells you examples of work situations involving (a) teamwork or (b) working alone. If teamwork is a key job talent, then you prefer an applicant who gives examples of enjoying teamwork – and not examples of enjoying working alone.
Warning: Never ask any interview question that gives clues to job talents you want the applicant to have.
Whenever I create custom-tailored “Interview Guide Forms” for a company to use, I always make sure none of the questions I create tell the applicant either (a) the specific talent is being evaluated nor (b) the desired “right” answer is. Unfortunately, most managers give hints to the answers they want to hear. Do not be one of those naïve managers.
Next time Part 4.
