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Showing posts with label people. Show all posts
Showing posts with label people. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2014

Your Sales People With Learning Process Outsourcing

Your sales staff is not delivering its best. And the only reason in sight for this under performance seems to be their lack of communication and selling skills.

In the past, you have tried hard to enhance their communication and selling skills, to make them more customer-oriented, but the results have been far from satisfying.

Have you ever tried learning process outsourcing?
Learning process outsourcing has been around for quite a long time, but still many organizations are yet to take advantage of this.

Put simply, learning process outsourcing involves outsourcing the learning requirements to the third party, which will be responsible for developing and delivering custom made trainings to the employees of its client and thus helping them to be more effective and efficient in whatever roles they have been assigned in the organization.

In outsourcing, it is the supplier (training company) who invests in infrastructure, technology, and provides top-quality service. And thus you do not have to worry about taking out time and resources for conducting all these programs.

Now let's talk about your sales staff. You know they lack some where, and the in-house trainings (which you conducted in the past) were not much of help; in such a scenario, you may like to consider speaking to a training specialist, which has been around for long, and has worked with several organizations in improving their sales performances.

Once the trainers gauge the training needs of your sales staff, they will conduct a series of training programmed to better their sales and communication skills, and thus help them close more deals. The trainers will ensure that the staff at all customer - touch points is able to answer customers' queries and make long lasting relationships with them.
Now think about it: your staff will be motivated, and will perform better; they will also get to know their shortcomings and the best ways to overcome them. They will better understand their jobs and their responsibilities to the organization. Isn't all this fabulous? You just need to partner with a training company that has extensive experience in learning process outsourcing; this is all you need to do. However, you should make sure that you talk to them in detail and let them know in advance as to why you are seeking their services. This will help the training company in offering you customized, smart training solutions.

Learning process outsourcing is a sure-shot way to improve the performance of your sales staff.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Performance To People Management

Effective performance management begins with the identification of what's vital to the organization because if these priorities are not clear and it is not clear what role everyone plays in the priorities, the rest of an organization's performance management effort is unlikely to mean much.

Managing employee performance requires first and foremost clear communication of what is important for the organization and how the individual can best contribute. In fact, studies have shown that the primary reason people don't do what managers want is that they don't know what the managers want.

While communication about targets and goals can be done as part of the strategic planning, performance review and execution processes, it should also be reinforced in the everyday conversations and coaching sessions between employees and their managers.

Ideally, performance management refers not just to people management, but to process management, and plant management.

Yet we found the most common element of performance management was identified as annual performance appraisals, which came in for some criticism during our research.

For example, several people mentioned that the annual reviews were a source of angst and dread, perhaps by both parties. They were always late and were considered among the more onerous of management responsibilities.

Others questioned their effectiveness. For example, when a bank implemented formal performance appraisals that evaluated Loan Officers on the dollar value of loans approved, and measured the Credit Department on 'the quality of the loan portfolio' (i.e. no defaults), it reduced profits and created dysfunction and animosity. The Credit Department was careful to take no risks, while the Loan Officers focused on quantity, hoping that something, at least would be approved. The bank as a whole suffered.

 This example is by no means an exception - Purchasing Departments are often measured by purchase prices, leading to excess inventory when they order in bulk and substandard material when they give too much weight to price instead of incoming quality and timeliness. One of the drawbacks of annual individual performance reviews - especially when tied to compensation - is the high risk of driving the optimization of individual metrics while sub-optimizing the organization as a whole.
But a few people said that their performance review process was greatly improved by increasing the frequency from annual to quarterly, indicating the feedback discussions were both more timely and less stressful. Others found that when reviews were de-linked from salary adjustments they could focus more effectively on coaching.

While there are a wide range of views about how to manage performance, some of our key findings include:

1.Performance Management must be about much more than individual performance measurement. As Dr. Deming said, over 90% of problems are caused by the system not the person. To manage performance, we must manage the system by which people, plant, process interact to produce results.
    
2.Frequent observation and feedback is more helpful to people than formal annual reviews.
    
3.Frequent communication about what an organization needs and wants greatly increases the odds that the organization will get what they need and want.
    
4.Group rewards encourage teamwork, while individual rewards encourage an individual to optimize his or her own goals even if it may sub-optimize the organization as a whole.
    
5.Tying money directly to performance appraisal can be a two-edged sword - raising stress and reducing the intrinsic rewards and personal satisfaction from doing a good job for the team.
    
6.Avoid managing performance through the "rear view mirror" by including steps for more frequently assessing and impacting how people perform
    
7.Make more of the goal setting process which produces targets against which we measure performance (and take corrective action)