What is leadership? What is the purpose and function of the leader? It is to deliver business growth and is achieved by 1-Set Objectives, 2-Engage & 3-Deliver.

Leadership
Leadership
The sales leader purpose is to deliver business growth and leads both direct and virtual teams to achieve this objective. Leadership is therefore key to business growth success.
Aristotle defined leadership as requiring Knowledge, Skills and Practical Wisdom – the ability to see the good and realize it in a specific situation. All three are necessary and mutually supportive.
Montogomery defined leadership succinctly as:
“The capacity and will to rally men and women to a common purpose and the character which inspires confidence”.
The purpose in an organisation has multiple levels. The company will normally have a vision which states why the company exists and how it will make the world a better place.
The sales team itself has a specific purpose that serves the achievement of this vision and as such will have specific objectives. The sales leader’s overall purpose is to deliver business growth. This is achieved as follows:
- Set achievable but challenging Objectives (or targets) within the context of the vision of the organisation.
- Engage his team to accept these objectives wholeheartedly and in good spirit and then to
- Deliver the performance necessary to achieve these objectives.
Leadership Model
Leadership is not fixed and is dependent on the task at hand. It is also dependent on the type of organisation whether transformational or transactional and on the maturity of the organisation. But I find the following simple model of leadership useful.
A leader requires Knowledge, Skills (&Tools) and Practical Wisdom.
Practical Wisdom
Knowledge may be learned, Skills may be practiced but Practical Wisdom is grown through through experience and reflection. Practical Wisdom is the ability to see the good and realize it in a specific situation. In other words to decide and do what is effective to achieve the required objectives.
This is not a set of universal rules to be learned or a pocket guide to be drawn upon for the correct solution. It is something only achieved through experience and reflection. It is realized through the ability to relate new experiences to previous experiences, in other words to recognize patterns in situations that facilitate understanding and resolution.
Practical wisdom is supported by the qualities of the leader.
The following list is in a generic order of priority. It is derived from the book “ How to Grow Leaders” by John Adair.
- Enthusiasm. A leader must demonstrate unquenchable enthusiasm for the achievement of the agreed goal.
This may be quiet and slow-burning enthusiasm rather than the heat and fireworks of passion, but it is always there.
- Integrity. The quality that engenders trust. Trust is the foundation for all human intercourse.
- Demanding – coupled with Fairness. A leader has high standards and will not compromise on them.
But is also consistent, fair and will not ask of others more than he asks from himself.
- Humanity. The raw material with which a leader has to deal with is people and must understand them and go with the grain.
- Confidence. No leader can operate without a quiet confidence.
- Humility. The result of having a proper sense of one’s own limitations.
Its hallmarks are a readiness to listen and to be taught, a willingness to admit when one is wrong, and a reverence for others.
- Courage. Demonstrated by doing what is right, because the leader believes it to be right and despite criticism.
Knowledge & Skills
The knowledge and skills required may be described as:
- (1) situational skills and knowledge i.e. those relating to the particular situation which in this case is sales
- (2) generic leadership skills.
Situational Knowldege and Skills
Good Sales & Marketing knowledge & skills are the most obvious. General Management knowledge & skills enable better empathy and good communication with senior customer executives.
Project Management knowledge & skills enable better management of internal resources, better bid management and better planning. Technical knowledge & skills enable better understanding of products and how they can best be used to solve customer problems.
Skills will be supported by tools such as the sales model which enables:
- Performance monitoring,
- Performance appraisal,
- Close performance gaps through coaching and training.
Leadership Knowledge and Skills
Leadership knowledge & skills include:
- Defining Goals and Objectives
- Planning
- Communication
- Motivation
- Coaching
- Evaluation
- Execution
Purpose & Function
The Purpose of a sales leader is to deliver business growth. This is achieved as with the following functions:
1 – Set Objectives
A key purpose of a leader is to set objectives that will grow, change and add value to the organisation.
Objectives should not be dictated as they are unlikely to inspire the kind of effort and creativity that produces good results.
Objectives that are negotiated give team members an important sense of goal ownership. And people are naturally more committed to the things they own.
In addition, with this interaction the leader can be sure that the team members have the capacity and the understanding to achieve the objective. Understanding team members will help align objectives and explain them in ways that are motivational.
To set effective objectives a leader must be able to initiate an idea, inform the team and plan to determine if the objectives are feasible.
What are the characteristics of effective objectives? Most experts agree that objectives must be:
- Specific ( Greater as we go down levels. Sales persons objectives are often very specific)
- Clear
- Important (Recognised by team member as important)
- Measurable
- Achievable (But challenging)
- Time-bound (To be achieved in a specific time)
- Aligned (To company Strategy)
- Rewarding (Supported by appropriate awards)
- Ethical
- Resourced
Objectives will be better received by the team if they are perceived to have intrinsic value, to matter,
and to make the world a better place. Ideally the objectives will be aligned to a company vision statement that envisions and communicates a better future.
2 – Engage
The leader may be required to hire the individuals and build the team. The leader is required to develop the individuals such that their performance improves.
Further, a leader must engage with his team and inspire them to want to deliver a great performance and achieve the assigned objectives.
In the best teams the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. Good morale, team spirit and mutual confidence between the leader and team members is the extra strength that creates a greater whole and inspires a great performance.
To engage his team effectively a leader must be adept at presenting, informing & supporting.
Engagement begins with participative goal setting ideally within the context of a positive and clear company vision statement. This is maintained through motivation, coaching and success. Success is the greatest single factor of good morale. All successes must be communicated.
Motivation is achieved through the application of rewards both intrinsic and extrinsic. Intrinsic rewards produce more intangible forms of recognition such as personal satisfaction, a sense of accomplishment, personal control over one’s work and feeling that one’s work is appreciated. Extrinsic rewards are external, tangible forms of recognition such as bonuses, pay rises, promotion and sales prizes.
- Extrinsic – Financial Rewards
- Bonuses, Commission & Salary Increase.
- Extrinsic – Prestige Rewards
- Increase stature of employees in eyes of colleagues and others
- Intrinsic – Job Content Rewards
- Autonomy (Goal Setting participation, Increased Responsibility, Opportunities to participate in Decision Making),
- Mastery (Grow Professionally and do interesting and important work, Training, Coaching, New Challenge, Working with talented motivated people,
Recognition),
- Purpose (Working in a company with a clear Vision, Making a Difference),
- Valued (Trust, Feedback, Coaching, Working in a positive respectful environment,
Working for a Good Boss)
Coaching is used to improve individual performance and to remove performance gaps. Used positively it can maintain and grow engagement as it facilitates individual personal growth.
Within a sales team focus is normally on extrinsic rewards but intrinsic rewards are very important and enable better performance and creativity.
3 – Deliver
A leader is ultimately judged on what he and his team deliver. How they execute a plan.
To deliver a leader is required to:
- Achieve the task.
- In a sales environment this is normally business growth measured by revenue growth, margin growth, market share growth, customer satisfaction and sales cost.
- Build and develop the team.
- Develop the individual.
The leader uses the sales model to enable him to:
- Monitor performance – Sales process, sales automation and sales management system.
- Appraise performance – Appraisal system.
- Close performance gaps – Coaching and training. Employee development.
- Handle problem employees.
- Remove barriers to performance.
Team members work best when given autonomy to deliver their goals and should know when to ask for help in removing barriers to performance. Identifying barriers to performance may be simple or may involve gathering data and problem analysis before a solution is reached. Barriers to performance often include the requisition of resources from other departments & from higher management to enable progress. They may include the resolution of a resource conflict or an interpersonal conflict.
As stated earlier the sales leader may be required to manage a virtual team in addition to his direct team to create and deliver a proposal to a prospect. Such a project may be complex and project management tools are useful to manage the delivery of a winning proposal on time and to utilise the resources of the company efficiently.
What makes a high performance sales team? What makes a high performance sales person? Can we analyse best practice and use it to improve ordinary sales people? Are relationships important? How important is Value?
To create a high performance sales team it is useful to analyse high performance sales people to understand what makes them successful. Such best practice can then be applied to a scalable sales model that will turn ordinary performers into stars.
Based on research by Sales Performance International and recently Dixon & Adamson in the Harvard Business Review the following was found:
High Performance Salespeople Get the Basics Right
- They work hard & work smart. They put in the hours, prepare well, use tools and training to ensure their efficiency and effectiveness
- They react and solve customer problems . They understand the value of a happy customer as future references and as a source of future business. They have the ability to manage the organisation to deliver the resources to solve the customer problems.
- They build solid relationships. They are honest and deliver on promises and build trust with their customers.
High Performance Salespeople Deliver Value
- Open with Value and Close With Value. Successful salespeople use their deep understanding of their customers’ business to challenge current thinking and to create new solutions to old problems. They have a very clear view of how they can deliver value to the the customer and use this to open and take control of sales conversations. They understand the different concerns of the key players in the buying team. They know that such concerns change throughout the sales cycle and they work had to ensure that such concerns are adequately addressed. Successful salespeople use value as the cornerstone in all phases of the sales cycle and especially during negotiation and close. They understand that it is important to present value in language and models that the customer is comfortable with.
Best Practice Used to Raise Performance of all Salespeople
The most successful high performance sales teams use best practice. They learn from high performing salespeople and use this best practice to create a sales model that is used to turn ordinary sales people into stars.
- Hire Salespeople with High Potential. Sales people with the basics of a good work ethic, good basic relationhip building skills and a desire to win.
- Use Leadership. Building a high performance team in any discipline requires leadership to ensure that the team is focussed and inspired to deliver.
- Use a Scalable Sales Model. This will take all the best practice of the high performance sales people and use it in training and coaching and tools to turn salespeople with high potential into stars. This will include a Sales Process, a Sales Management System, Sales Automation and Marketing Integration. All will combine to improve sales efficiency and effectiveness.

A Good Business Consultant delivers Business Improvement
What do Good Business Consultants do?
- They improve business performance
- They deliver tangible results
- They relentlessly seek to deliver tangible value
I consider some of the perceived problems of Business Consultants and then consider what good Business Consultants can offer.
What are the Problems with Business Consultants?
Question: What does a consultant do if you ask him the time?
Answer: He asks to borrow your watch, he tells you the time and then walks off with your watch.
The word consultant does have some baggage, basically because it has become a term that has been used too much to mean too many things ….some of them negative. And without a well known brand name behind it the negative baggage may come to the fore.
It is associated in some minds with many initiatives that delivered few quantifiable benefits. It is associated with high costs and sometimes with a lack of drive, initiative and creativity.
And of course unlike a doctor or a lawyer, anyone can call themselves a consultant.
Without the support of a well known consultancy brand then some of the negative market perceptions of Business Consultancy may dominate in the mind of a prospective customer and a focus on value becomes even more essential.
I have asked some questions below to answer a few questions that may explain the benefits that good business consultants can offer.
What Areas do they Work in?
- Management Consulting 16% ( Operations Management(inc. Sales& Marketing) 43%, Strategy 31%,HR 20%, IT strategy & planning 6%)
- IT Outsourcing 36%
- Business Process Outsourcing 28%
- Systems Integration 20%
Why do Clients Hire them?
- People needs
- Specialist skills or a level of knowledge they lack internally
- Thinking needs
- A different perspective
- Gather and analyse data to back up perspective
- Challenge long term assumptions
- Process and technology needs
- Transferring an idea into reality
- Provide best practice and thought leadership
- Provide the focus the deliver on time and to budget
How do they Deliver Business Improvement ?
- Specialist Projects
- Utilize specialist knowledge
- Integrated Solutions
- Strategic Advice
- Generate business insight
- Focus on advisory work rather than implementation
What Business Improvement do they deliver?
- Improve effectiveness – getting the desired result (doing the right thing)
- Improve efficiency – getting it quickly (doing the thing right)
- Delivered with economy – getting it at a reasonable market rate
- Smaller firms with the right specialist knowledge, experience and tools can offer economy and flexible engagement models.
What kind of Consultancy Firms are there?
- Traditional Delivery (Almost all skills in house)
- Relationship
- e.g. Mc Kinsey, Bain. Mainly focussed on effectiveness projects such as strategy advice
- Product
- e.g. Simon-Kucher. Top line growth through advising on pricing and marketing.
- Hub & Spoke Delivery (Hub with brand, support and winning business with spoke as associates/partners for delivery)
- Broker Firms
- e.g. Eden McCallum. Cope well with variable income stream with variable cost base. They co-ordinate the resources necessary to deliver a broad range of consulting services to clients
- Diversifying Firms
- e.g. Xerox. Company with historical product heritage and use it a launch pad into the world of professional services.
- Integrator ( Prime contractor managing subcontractors/partners as required)
- Transformation Firms
- e.g. IBM/Accenture. Moving from transactions to transformation. Requires (1) scale to deliver results – organizational and financial. (2) Depth of knowledge and (3) correct fusion of business(consulting & outsourcing) and technology. Is about long term continuous improvement and relationships.
- Transaction Firms
- e.g. CapGemini,LogicaCMG,EDS. Small number of large deals focussed on on large scale systems delivery or outsourcing. Tend to be one off deals rather than continuous.
What does a Good Consultant offer?
- Relentless effort to increase value for customers
- Trust
- Specialist knowledge
- And continuous learning to maintain knowledge
- Breadth of Experience
- Perspective
- Good interpersonal & communication skills and an ability to inspire trust
- Development of case histories, best practice and tools
- Thought Leadership (truely original or at least original to the organisation..most customers are happy with ideas that are pragmatic and have well defined case histories that demonstrate tangible value delivered.)
- Ability to manage projects that will deliver tangible business improvement
What is the Best Method of Promoting Business Consultancy?
Lead with Value
It is better that they lead with the tangible value that they can deliver very clearly as otherwise they will not brand themselves positively in the mind of the prospective audience. Without the support of a well known consultancy brand then this approach becomes essential as some of the negative market perceptions of Business Consultancy may dominate.

Plans - Improve effectiveness and efficiency. Don't waste time.
Plans improve Effectiveness and Efficiency
Effort spent in planning will reap rewards in sales effectiveness and efficiency.
Planning tools include Territory Plans , Account Plans & Opportunity Plans. These plans are most effective if stored on a Sales Automation system to ensure that the information is retained and communicated as required.
Territory Plan
A Territory Plan focuses on the segmentation of accounts and opportunities in a defined territory in order to prioritize which ones in which to invest sales resources. It will normally include:
- Customer Profile and Qualification Criteria
- Market Analysis
- Segment Accounts by Business Potential and Current Business Relationship
- Alpha High Future Business Potential – prioritised by level of current relationship
- Beta – Moderate to Low Business Potential, high level of Current Relationship
- Delta – Little or no near term Business Potential, insufficient data to accurately assess potential, low level of current relationship
- Territory coverage strategy
- Messaging Strategy
- Resources allocated to Alpha, Beta and Delta accounts.
Account Plan
An Account Plan will help achieve the highest levels of revenue attainment and client satisfaction for teams selling to large, strategic accounts. It will normally include:
- Account Profile
- Company, Financials, Offerings, Market Analysis, Competition, Exec Biogs, Likely Business Issues, Potential Capabilities Required
- Install Base
- Recurring Revenues
- Customer Satisfaction levels
- Recent Projects
- Key Player List Summary
- Account Team & Coverage Summary
- Current Initiatives/Projects happening inside the Account
- White Space & Share of Wallet analysis
- Current & Future Opportunities
- Total Opportunity Portfolio
- Action Plan
- Resource Plan
Opportunity Plan
Each Opportunity will have its own plan. The size of the plan will be in relation to the size of the opportunity. It will normally include:
- Business Pain/Issue
- Value Proposition
- Customer Rules
- Analysis & Presentation
- Is it compelling?
- Key Player List
- Coverage strategy
- Access to key personnel?
- Qualification Status
- Solution Creation status
- Evaluation Plan /Buying Process
- Competitive Strategy
- Analysis of Strength and Position
- Negotiation & Close Strategy
- Implementation Plan