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Making The Most of Your
Superstar Sales Ego
How Your Ego Can Help and Hurt
By
Steve McClatchy, President
Alleer Training & Consulting

MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR SUPERSTAR SALES EGO
by Sheree R. Curry
Face it, sales managers are ego-maniacs. It comes with the
territory. But too majestic an ego could put your
reputation - and job - in jeopardy. Your supreme confidence
may help you close deals, but it can be a real obstacle to
team development.
There is a way to attain success without letting your ego be
your guide. Sales expert Steve McClatchy, owner of Malvern,
PA-based
Alleer Training & Consulting, who's
improved sales teams at Nestle, Comcast, Microsoft, HP, ABC
TV and Terminix, among others, offers these tips to help you
keep your ego in check.
1. Establish a set of
ground rules and stick to them yourself. The
effectiveness of any group of people is driven by the rules
they've decided to play by. What is deemed acceptable or
unacceptable behavior and how violators will be
addressed helps a group to focus on its purpose instead of
on internal politics. People with large egos are constantly
breaking the rules or rather they make sure rules don’t
exist. Without rules they can do what they want, when they
want and to whom they want. Rules like "we start and end
meetings on time" or "we don't talk behind each other’s
back" are basics for a group to be productive but few sales
leaders can or will check their ego to create and
follow these rules. When rules are broken without
consequence, or rules don't exist, it’s almost impossible
for a group to produce superior results.
2. Promote a
collaborative, democratic culture. More often
than not, a dominant personality creates a culture that
suppresses subordinates and discourages innovation within
the team. To avoid this don't just
encourage employees
to offer feedback and ideas, create a formal process where
they’re required to do so. If you don't have a formal
process for receiving feedback from those that work with
you, then you won't receive it. Is your ego up for the
challenge?
3. Learn to love
admitting when you're wrong. Employees,
customers, and shareholders know when you're wrong.
Pretending that you don’t know doesn’t make you right, it
just undermines their confidence in you. If you want to
build productive commercial relationships, you need to be
viewed as trustworthy. Accordingly, own up to your mistakes
before others do it for you.
Think you're currently doing well as a sales leader? That’s
hardly surprising if you truly have a large ego. So why
take your own word for it when you can ask those around
you? Seek out a mentor, adviser, or peer you can trust and
ask them questions based on the above. Try: 1) Do I admit
when I'm wrong? 2) Do I solicit and listen carefully to
others' suggestions? 3) Have you ever observed me breaking
the rules? If so, how?
Remember, your ego can be a positive thing in that it keeps
you driven and confident – in fact, it probably got you
where you are today as much as your wits or persistence.
But it's humbling to note that nine out of ten new companies
and products that start in corporate America fail within the
first five years. We've all observed in the majority of
those cases how a blissful overconfident ego helped fuel the
failure. If you want to flaunt a resume with a stellar
track record, it would be wise to tame, fine-tune, and
otherwise tone down that ego.
* This article has been slightly modified from its original
publication.
Steve McClatchy is the president of
Alleer Training &
Consulting
a provider of
training, consulting and speaking services in the areas
of Consultative Selling, Time Management and
Leadership. If you
would like to learn more about the ways Alleer can be a
resource to your organization email
Steve.McClatchy@Alleer.com
or call 1-800-860-1171. |
Copyright
© 2007 Alleer Training & Consulting, All rights
reserved.
www.Alleer.com 800-860-1171 |
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