|
Can't-Miss Sales Meetings
Can't-miss sales meetings
By G.M. Filisko
If you gave sales associates
an option – attend a sales meeting or clean
their sock drawers – all too often the sock drawer would win. Right next
to the genes for independence and entrepreneurial spirit in sales associates'
DNA , there must be another gene that makes them bristle at sitting in
an office meeting and listening to a sales manager drone on about office
policy.
But you can overcome sales associates' innate aversion to sales meetings
and foster better office morale, teamwork, and productivity if your sales
meetings provide true value to associates. Here's how to create sales meetings
that sales associates will gladly attend.
Meetings matter
In today's technology age, why do you even need a sales meeting? You can
deliver all the information sales associates need through e-mail, voice mail,
or your intranet, right? Not so.
"In the past, without voice mail and e-mail, sales meetings were the
principal way to get information out to sales associates. We needed to get
people together to keep them updated on new regulations and office policies," says
Roger Turcotte, president of Roger Turcotte & Co. LLC in Contoocook,
N.H. "Today, the real purpose of a sales meeting is to make sales associates
better salespeople – period."
"A sales meeting is where your office's company culture and sales momentum
are built," agrees Carol Johnson, president of The Recruiting Network
and publisher of Recruitingpipeline.com in Schaumburg, Ill. "Sales associates
are very competitive, and when they hear other associates talking shop, telling
stories, and asking questions, it ramps up their competitive spirit. Sales
meetings also allow you to give recognition to successful associates, which
again feeds that competitive spirit. Sales associates who are lagging behind
get a nudge by seeing they're not measuring up."
Market your meetings
With
so much riding on sales meetings, your first big challenge is getting associates
to attend. To achieve that goal, make the meetings "can't
miss" events.
Start by showing that you consider sales meetings important by doing your
own homework.
"When managers wing it and don't have anything worth sharing, a couple
of those meetings a year kill office momentum," says Johnson. "Sales
meetings are just like parties. You have to plan all the ingredients, know
what you want to accomplish, and publicize the meeting. Say, 'At this meeting,
we'll discuss this and this.' And at the end of each meeting, hype the next
meeting."
Promotion begins with
the title of your sales meeting. "The title should
be about helping sales associates make more money," says Turcotte. "And
rather than just posting a flyer, I'm going to leave a voice mail for sales
associates; when I see them, I'll ask them to attend. I also use face-to-face
encounters to do some informal research. If a particular associate hasn't
made many meetings, I'll say, 'John, you haven't attended a meeting in three
months. I need to know how you think I can improve the meetings. What can
I do to make you feel the meetings are worthwhile?'"
You'll also go a long
way toward getting full attendance if sales associates see that top producers
are showing up. To get top producers to turn out, make them the stars,
suggests Johnson. "Tell them, 'I'd like to have
you come and do such and such. Would you do that for me?' Or if you take
a top producer out for lunch, you might say, 'I'm really disappointed I haven't
seen you at meetings. I could use your support because other sales associates
look up to you.'"
What did you teach today?
Another way to make sales meetings a must is to strengthen your own presentations.
"One of the biggest mistakes managers make is to use sales meetings
as an opportunity to discuss who left the coffee pot on or didn't lock up
the office," says Darryl Davis, a speaker and president of Darryl Davis
Seminars in Wading River, NY.
"I'd characterize it as focusing on the logistics of taking care of
an office. But that's not who the company is. Every office meeting is a moment
of truth to revalidate the company's mission and focus on what's being done
to move forward as a team."
"Sales meetings aren't about managers making speeches," adds Turcotte. "Get
out of the speechmaking business and focus on the takeaway value of the meeting
for your sales associates. After you walk out of a sales meeting, write down
the answer to this question: 'My sales associates are better after attending
this meeting because…' If you can't answer that question, you reassess the
value of what you're offering."
Creating value in meetings
is easier than you think. "Often managers
set a goal for the company and never bring it up again," says
Davis .
"The office meeting is an opportunity to keep drilling that message
home."
Davis suggests setting quarterly or monthly company goals, and then using
sales meetings to both remind sales associates of that goal and give them
the tools to achieve it.
Let's say your goal is
to achieve a certain percentage of market share. You can say, "Here's how we're doing with market share." Then
use the rest of the meeting as a brief training session to help sales associates
achieve the goal by doing something like targeting expired listings.
"At the meeting, tell them you're going to track who has captured the
most listings from expireds by a certain date," explains
Davis . "Then focus on how to talk to expireds."
Tell associates, "We
need to discuss how to respond to the common question from expireds about
why our company is better than the one they previously listed with. As
a team, let's make a list of why our company is stronger than any other
company."
After every meeting, sales associates should leave the room pumped up because
their manager gave them a message or lesson they can hang their hat on for
the next week, says
Davis .
Another example: Focus
on overpriced listings. "You can tell associates,
'I want to spend 10 minutes talking about overpriced listings and why they
aren't good for you,'"
explains Turcotte. "Do a mini training session offering suggestions
for handling sellers whose listings are overpriced. Then set a goal. You
might say, 'If we have any properties on the market for longer than x days,
and if after doing a CMA you feel the price isn't in line with other properties
on the market, I'd like you to talk to the seller about a price reduction.
Can we get 50 percent of our long-term listings repriced between now and
our next meeting in two weeks?'"
For the next two weeks, when you see sales associates, ask them how they're
doing on repricing listings. At the next meeting, revisit the issue.
"Ask whether any associates have had success in getting properties
repriced," suggests Turcotte. "An associate will say yes and explain
how he or she did it. Now you have the sales associate giving credibility
to what you've suggested. That closes the circle and encourages others to
do it. If you haven't met your 50 percent goal, you can ask, 'Can we keep
driving on this for another week?' You'll be surprised that it becomes infectious,
and salespeople will want to do it."
You'll have both a successful series of meetings and, in all likelihood,
more listings that will sell.
"A real estate company exists to make money – period," says Darryl
Davis. "Sales meetings should inspire and motivate sales associates
to get the heck out of the office to get listings and make sales. Anything
that doesn't make that happen means you're moving backward, not forward."
Meeting dos and don'ts
Some techniques are perfect for meetings; others are buzz kills that essentially
guarantee sales associates won't attend in the future. Here are the best
and worst techniques.
DO…
1.
Get sales associates to interact with you and each other. "I ask
questions, ask questions, and ask questions to get sales associates involved," says
Scott Nordby, broker and co-owner of Innovative Real Estate Group in
Denver . "I ask, 'What are you seeing on your listings? What are
buyers in the market saying? Have you heard of any new loan programs?'"
2. Encourage shop talk.
"We have a round robin and give everyone a chance to participate,"
says Staige Davis, CEO and broker of Lang McLaughry Spera in South Burlington,
Vt., and Hanover, N.H. "Sales associates love it because they get to
talk about their new listing or something in the marketplace or to ask a
question that somebody else can answer. They get to share, and they get information."
3. Acknowledge good work.
"Four times a year, we take 10 minutes at the end of the meeting and
say, 'This is your opportunity to acknowledge somebody who's done something
nice for you,'" explains Nordby. "It's a good team-building exercise."
4. Add surprises. "Have unexpected bonuses so that sales associates
who otherwise don't think they need to come will," says Turcotte. "Provide
sales associates with a physical takeaway, maybe a document from REALTOR.org,
a PowerPoint presentation from your franchise, or a research report from
your local university's real estate department. When associates who didn't
attend come to you and say they didn't get the takeaway, you can say, 'No,
you didn't, and I want to ask you why you didn't attend the meeting.' That
gives you the opportunity to chat with them about why they didn't come."
5. Ask for recruiting
leads.
"Always ask whether sales associates have worked with a co-op associate
they believe you should meet or who they think would be good on your team," advises
Johnson. "Some sales associates don't want more competition in the office
because they think it hurts their business. It doesn't. It helps everyone
because it takes someone out of the competition's camp and draws prospects
to your office."
DON'T…
1.
Reward latecomers or no-shows. Start on time, and don't restart the meeting
each time another sales associate wanders in. "We don't ever congratulate
people for accomplishments unless they're in the meeting," says Nordby.
2. Be a downer. "Never go over policy or anything that could be described
as negative – ever," advises Nordby.
3. Criticize. "If I have to criticize, I do that in a one-on-one counseling
session with the sales associate," explains Turcotte. "Some managers
don't like the conflict that comes from sitting with a sales associate so
they say at a meeting, 'This might not apply to all of you, but some of you
are …' That anonymous criticism is alienating and causes people not to attend."
(Reprinted from REALTOR® Magazine,
February 2009 with permission of the National
Association of REALTORS®. Copyright
2009. All rights reserved.) 
|