Beware of Hiring Your Competitor's Sales People
By Lee SalzHiring sales people from the competition always seems like
a no-brainer, but there are many pitfalls with this hiring
strategy.
Life would be grand if we could sprinkle a few seeds in the
ground, fertilize, add water…and a great sales person would
sprout. This is truly a pipedream, but one often pursued by small
business owners and sales management executives in their quest to
find great sales talent. Rather than grow their own, they attempt
to steal the crops from their competitors. Why not, their
competitor is much better at growing a sales organization than they
are. They will grab some magic from their competitor's land and
they too can enjoy great success.
When did the competition begin building a better sales
organization than your company? Before you harvest their crop,
consider these five myths when hiring your competitor's sales
people.
"Hiring from the competitor means the sales person
will hit the ground running with no training." Some
of the attraction to the competitors' sales people is sheer
laziness. Hire a sales person from the competitor
today…instant revenue tomorrow. No need to train them, they
already know everything. Needless to say, this is flawed thinking.
Sales people always need training and development regardless of who
their former employer was.
That said, every once in a while, lightning will strike and
you will hire a rainmaker. More often than not, this approach is a
recipe for a making a bad hire. A thought…What sales people
do you really think are available from the competition? Rarely is
it the top performers. It's the bottom 20% that, truth be told, the
company is glad to see leave.
"Our industry is so complex that we must hire a
sales person from within it." How can this be true?
No one ever came out of the womb mastering your industry…not
even you. You were taught it and so was everyone else. If you truly
feel that industry experience is the top requirement, be prepared
for another major challenge…scalability. There are only so
many people in your industry and very few that you will consider
hiring. At some point, your talent pool will run dry.
Sales people need to have a certain level of knowledge to
effectively sell in an industry. Determine what they need to know
to be effective and develop training tools to quickly get them up
to speed. Identify resources in your company that can help them
with their questions. Test their knowledge assimilation along the
way to make sure they are getting it.
"They're going to bring a book of business with
them." Before you buy that argument, consider these three
points. First, despite what they tell you, it is extremely
difficult to move clients. The pain of change is not one that is
easily resolved with clients. It is rare to find a sales person
with that strong of an influence to overcome that issue.
Second, the sales person doesn't own those clients, their
employer does. While non-competes don't usually hold up in court,
client list protection does. And, you can be at risk in the mess.
Do you really need that headache?
Third, don't think for a minute that the sales person you hire
today will one day retire with your firm. They will leave your
employ some day. Imagine your sales person attempting to take your
clients with them when they go. It doesn't feel overly ethical,
does it? And, it’s a flawed reason to hire a sales
person.
"We're a little firm and we could really use a sales
person that comes from one of our large competitors." This
statement is true if, and only if, your company and the large
competitor are identical twins. A synergistic match between your
company and the candidate is needed to put together a long-lasting
sales marriage. There are a number of nuances that affect this
synergy.
The flaw with this statement is that it assumes a complete
sales culture match. Every sales organization is different, even
within the same industry. The large competitor may have a ton of
sales support for prospecting and presentations, while in your
company the entire burden is on the sales person. The sales person
at the competitor may enjoy great name recognition in the
marketplace while you do not. Thus, a different skill set is needed
to get in the door with prospects. The list goes on and on. The key
is develop a profile of your ideal sales candidate with the
required and desired attributes and interview accordingly.
"Since they have been in the industry, they are
passionate about it and passion sells." Absolutely true!
Passion sells, but it's an incorrect assumption that these sales
people arrive with passion. Sales people who bounce from company to
company in an industry become "vanilla."
Years ago, I had a sales person on my team who had sold for
three of our competitors prior to joining our company. I
participated in a ride-along sales call with her and the meeting
was interesting to say the least. She could have had any of her
former employer's business cards in her hand, or ours for that
matter, and everything she said was accurate. There was no passion.
It was all vanilla information that failed to arouse any excitement
in the prospect.
Sales hiring is daunting for companies of all sizes. The key is to
have a profile of your ideal sales candidate and interview the
prospects against it. This will help you find the right sales
talent for your team whether they worked for your competitor or
not.

