Are you Ignoring a Better Version of Yourself?

Aug 4, 2015

The great thing about the world we live in, is that we don't need to look too far to find out where we need to improve. All around us, the world is giving us feedback which can guide us on the actions and decisions which will generate a better business and a better life.

In the world of business the feedback comes from our customers, suppliers, website, comments on your blog (or lack of - see below), bank account etc. In your personal life, it may be a spouse, your kids, your friends, acquaintances...

Now the trick to this feedback is that it may not be coming to you in an obvious way. In fact it may not be given to you directly at all. More often than not you have to actively look for it. It might be in what someone is not saying or what is not happening as much as what is.

This is not a complicated science. You don't need a degree to be able to translate and decipher it. But you do need to be aware and in tune with the people and events around you.

Take for instance your spouse. Are they smiling at you, giving you non-verbal cues that they feel loved, or are they distant and detached? Are your customers giving you referrals, written testimonials? Are they haggling about price or are they willing to pay a little more based on the value they perceive?

It is common to see this kind of feedback as one-off events or something that's beyond our control. In fact, the reverse is true. Every event around us is a reflection of us. It's a reflection on how we think, on the quality of our actions, and it's a reflection on the value we are creating.

One of my favorite feedback mechanisms is the bank account. Now money is not the only measure, I realise that, but in the world of business it is a critical measure and one that does not lie. It is hard to say you are doing well if your account is empty. And if the account is healthy, it may be an indicator you are on the right track

Another favourite mechanism it to look at your team. Do you have long term employees or is there constant turnover? Have you investigated the reasons for turnover? Is there as much smiling in your workplace as you'd like to see. This feedback is more subte but equally meaningful.

The lesson (and I'm writing this as much for myself as for you) is to conduct life and business with our eyes open. Receive the information and feedback that we are getting from even the non-obvious sources. And use it to create positive change within ourselves that will inevitably bring positive change in our businesses and lives.

Feature Image Source: Flikr/Peter

Culture Shift: An Interview with Aaron Lavell

Jul 28, 2015

[two_thirds]Today, we sat down with Aaron Lavell, Managing Director with WMS Chartered Accountants, to speak about the shift in workplace culture which led to the creation of WMS, and their fantastic culture growth which has seen them grow to be one of the Gold Coast's largest professional firms.

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Aaron tells us why principles matter in business planning - and what impact that has on retaining the best talent.

Enjoy! [/two_thirds]

 

 

J: Give us a bit of an overview of WMS and how you came to be...

A: We started in May 1994. 2 partners and 5 staff left a Big 4 accounting firm at the same time after an extended down turn period emanating from the “Recession we had to have”. The “W” and “M” stand for the surnames of the founding partners and the “S” stands for Staff. From day 1, the staff have been recognised as the core ingredient of what the firm is about.

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J: What led you to embark on formally developing your culture?

A: Day 1 was easy. We simply looked at where we had come from and assessed the merits of doing the opposite. That isn’t intended to be a criticism per se of the former firm, it was just a result of an extended down turn and their former policies around transparency in numbers and decision making processes. For example at WMS for over a decade, we were totally open book and staff set their own salaries. As the firm grew we found it harder to keep everyone on the same page and certain newer staff didn’t appreciate the history and the fragile nature of a true open book approach. We found staff making ambit claims for pay rises expecting to be shaved back. In the first 5 years of operations, not one pay rise was knocked back, because the requests were fair.

Around 2006 we implemented the “WMS Culture Wheel”. This was 10 core cultural concepts usually expressed as one word. We received immediate positive impact with same. A true test of any culture is hard times, with the onset of the GFC we found that some of the one word concepts could be interpreted in different ways and some were aspirational. As an example, our final concept was “Fairness” which was the outline of the wheel and designed to be a tie breaker provision. What is “Fair” can vary depending on your perspective. So with that by way of background, in 2014, we embarked on a fresh approach trying to keep the genesis of the firm’s origins whilst introducing an explanatory framework for each core principle. It coincided with a brand and web site refresh.

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J: Can you give us an overview of the process?

A: We grabbed our 6 partners and a range of 6 staff. By range, we covered from our next partner in waiting to the leader of our Secretarial team. We were facilitated by someone external and we had regular break out groups of 3 armed with butcher’s paper to brain storm concepts and associated explanation. We had decided to include 3 to 5 core principles with about 3 explanatory lines per principle. This was designed to address the ambiguous nature of the original one word concepts. By day’s end we had a draft list of 5. We met again internally the following week and then again the week later with the entire office (approximately 50). During that workshop, which was again facilitated by the same external party, we updated the proposed imagery for the core principles to go onto our new website. We workshopped on a Friday afternoon and the website went live on Monday. This gave us bang for our buck internally and also drew attention to it for visitors to our new website.

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J: How did the team engage/react to the process/outcome?

A: You could feel the energy in the room which was great to be part of. As it was designed in-house, we all had ownership of it.

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J: What have been the benefits of the process?

A: Straight up, it gave us to have a focused above the line discussion as a group as to “what type of work place would you want to come to everyday?”. You then assessed each principle as to whether we as a group were prepared to commit to live and breathe it in both good and bad times. We have a go to framework to assess any key decision facing the firm.

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J: How do you keep it alive?

A: It has to come into your daily vernacular. As an example, every email our HR manager sends contains a footer with some different play on words of one of the principles. We filled an entire wall of our main break out area with graphics of the 5 principles. Our screen savers are a rotation of the core principles. We had about a dozen of the staff do a culture video which sits on our website. The framework was allocated in terms of what principle each team member would cover, but what they said was completely unscripted. We wanted it to be real and the only way to do that was to have it come from the coal face.

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J: What are some of the setbacks or pitfalls you’ve experienced around developing your culture?

A: We adopted two broad approaches pre the present framework. Both were entirely appropriate for the firm at that stage of the firm’s evolution, however, for broad reasons outlined above, they both ran their course.

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J: How has it impacted your ability to attract or retain talent?

A: Huge impact. 99% of applicants make reference to the culture video on the website and the initial perception of what it is like to work here is very high. Our challenge of course is to provide the tools and environment to enable the reality to match the brochure.

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J: How has it impacted performance and happiness of the team?

A: Our last financial year results were great. The staff turnover here has always been good compared to industry standard but has further been enhanced. I think the staff trust the culture and we encourage them to “shoot straight” if they feel we have slipped up as a partner group. We all work hard and deadlines can stretch the odd friendship, however the group get along very well because we have a common goal to understand our client’s business and make a difference to their lives.

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J: How did you get all leaders aligned to buy into the process?

A: That was easy, as our own observations combined with our 360 degree reviews told us the old Culture Wheel had run its race. When you get that feedback, you ignore it at your own peril. None of our partner group are perfect, but we all understand that if you don’t have the foundation right, anything you try and build on it will be fragile.

[divider line_type="Full Width Line" custom_height="20"]

[two_thirds]Aaron Lavell is the firms Managing Partner, and has over 20 years experience in the accounting industry with his initial years at Ernst & Young, before commencing as a founding member of WMS.

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Aaron has a strong focus in the property sector and heads the firm's Corporate Finance Team, which holds and AFSL

For more about Aaron, click HERE. [/two_thirds]

[one_third_last]Aaron Lavell [/one_third_last]

Are You Feeling Dangerous or Defeated?

Jun 29, 2015

When you experienced your most recent success—think back to how you were feeling leading up to that event.

Were you feeling skeptical, afraid, or tentative? Or were the feelings more like 'confident, excited, anticipation'?

It might sound like a silly question. You might be thinking "well of course I was feeling good".

Well, the next question is "How important were those feelings in creating those successes?"

This second question might be harder to answer, but in my experience, most people acknowledge that when you feel good and are thinking positive, good and positive things happen. Think to a time recently when you met with someone who was trying to influence you in some way (you shouldn't need to think too hard, we are always trying to influence each other in same way), how did their energy (an outward projection of how they are feeling internally) affect how you felt about them and what they were communicating? Did it affect you? Of course it did. It always does. You tend to get a 'feeling' about someone or a concept. How much you tune into that feeling will vary from person to person, but there is always a level of subconscious intuition going on.

The same goes for you. How you feel and think affects how others feel about you and how they are influenced by what you are communicating. Whether you are working on developing a team member, or trying to put a deal together, how you feel in the moment has a massive impact.

One of the philosophies I train my clients on is this:

Your Results = (Your Skillset x Your Mindset x Your Activity Level) x Your Current State.

This overriding variable in results is how you are feeling in the moment. So here’s my question to you: How do you need to be feeling to maximise the chance for success? And how do you check on this and manage it to work for you?

Here's how I do it:

Each morning and throughout the day, I ask myself the simple question ‘Am I feeling Dangerous or Defeated?’ These are obviously words that resonate with me, but you get the idea. If the answer to that question is not "Dangerous" (meaning I'm ready to blast through brick walls) then I've got a few rituals I use to get into that state. I'm not always looking for a 10/10 on Dangerous scale but I definitely want to be at an 8 or higher.

If I come back with a 7 or below, here are my go-to actions to boost me up a few notches:

  • Revisit my vision and why I'm doing what I'm doing. This is by far the most powerful and sustaining of all the strategies. Keep in mind, this will only work for you if you are extremely clear on your vision (what you are working to create) and why you are doing it. See Simon Sinek's TED talk 'Start with WHY' to learn more about this.
  • Review my plan. Similar to the point above, but my plan is a shorter timeframe (3-12 months) vs. my vision, which is years out.
  • Think about how I want to be remembered by my kids. This is another plan that is similar to the first point. It is a real motivator for me.
  • Exercise. This can vary between a full workout or a 5 minute walk. Usually the secret is to get the blood moving and get out from in front of the computer screen.
  • Listen to something inspiring or educational. I love listening to interviews with successful people. I also have some go-to audio books and books that lift me up a couple of notches. If you'd like some recommendations, comment below or email me jamie@jamiecunningham.com
  • Coffee. Notice this one's down on the list. For me, if I'm in a low mental state and I have coffee, sometimes it can just make the negative thoughts happen faster (not good), so this one is used more if my energy feels sluggish. Again, not one I aim to be dependent on.

If you've got some strategies to add here, I'd love to hear them. Comment below and share your own successes and strategies.

Make it a great day!

 

The Top 5 Technologies That Could Disrupt Your Business and Industry

Jun 17, 2015

There are massive technological changes coming and they are happening faster than you think. The good news is there is just as much opportunity in these changes as there is risk for your business. I recently spent two days in Melbourne studying with Roger Hamilton, where he shared these technology trends. For more detailed reading on each of these check out Peter Diamantis's latest book 'Bold'. In this book Peter gives a great road map on how entrepreneurs can go bold with these opportunities.

Here are the top 5 to keep an eye on:

#1 - Crowdfunding and sourcing - The ability for ANYONE to now raise capital on an idea means that even if you are in an industry that is capital intensive, the barriers to entry have been leveled. Further, the connectedness of people (the crowd) via the internet means access to skills and labour is abundant like never before. When you start seeing lawyers and accounts outsourcing overseas, you know it has become mainstream.

#2 - 3D Printing - This one is going to be an absolute game changer. Anyone in construction? Check out this video. The pace of change within this technology is blinding. Already since 3D printing became somewhat 'mainstream' (if you can call it that yet) the technology has increased in speed by 100x. And knowing Moore's law, this is only going to speed up. To give you an idea, doctors are already using the technology to print replacement joints and bones.

#3 - Cognitive Computing - Meaning websites and software that preempt what you are looking for. Where this becomes a disruptor is from a competition point of view. How are you serving your customers better by using technology to learn their preferences? The market is starting to expect things tailored to their needs and wants. The days of general information and services is going by the wayside. If you are not keeping up, you'll be perceived as not caring about your customer.

#4 - Sensors and Camera - In everything. From the garbage truck knowing how full the bins are on its route and rerouting to be more efficient, to the wearable sensor technology that tells you you're low on magnesium. The world of 'knowing before you do' is upon us.  Think about your products and services - how can you incorporate this technology with #3 to innovate your business?

#5 - Robotics and Automation - Sick of chasing your dog down the street? Get the cheetah to do it for you. This robot can run and jump over obstacles faster than Usain Bolt. When you mix this with #3 and #4, you start to understand why futurists are saying within the next decade or two, 47% of jobs will be replaced by robots. Now okay, that is not a short term threat - or is it? Foxcomm (Chinese manufacturer of iPhones) says within 3yrs it plans to make 70% of assembly line work done by robots?

So I hear you saying ... well that's all great Jamie but those changes don't really apply to my industry. My only comment to that is, "be careful". Young minds are thriving on these changes and industries are being turned upside down. Be the disrupter not the disrupted.

How to develop a High Performance Sales Team

Mar 6, 2015

How to Develop a High Performance Sales Team …

Every company yearns for a high performing sales team. And to get one, certain key factors need to be in place. This post outlines what they are. The one item that is critically important to building a high performing sales team that is not addressed in this article is recruitment. There is another post that discusses recruiting GREAT People. You can access it HERE.

 

Now for the juice - The key components in developing your high performance sales team are:

 

  1. Culture
  2. Roles and Expectations
  3. Compensation
  4. Goals and Action Plan
  5. Measurement and Feedback
  6. Training and Development

 

  1. Culture

The best culture is one that combines a team spirit and a healthy competition to drive growth. Growth from both a sales perspective and a personal development perspective. The role of the sales manager here is key.

 

The Sales Manager must build and maintain the culture through how they run sales meetings, coach and recruit their sales people and how they bring accountability to the team. For a great resource on building a sales culture, read Jack Daly's 'Hyper Sales Growth'. This is so important that he dedicates the first half of the book to it!

 

  1. Roles and Expectations.

The two key outcomes a sales person needs to achieve is new client acquisition and nurturing existing clients to maximise client retention. It is important to have benchmarks in place that help a sales person be clear on what is expected of them in each area. Ideally, their compensation package should be tied to the same benchmarks.

 

That said, compensation should not be the driving force behind a sales persons behavior but it must be aligned with the outcomes you are looking for. It is common for salespeople to be more motivated by financial compensation than other roles within an organization so it is important but it is only 1 point out of 6 in creating a high performance team.

 

  1. Compensation

As mentioned above, a salesperson's compensation should be aligned with the behavior you want them to display. If a certain role is pivotal to new business acquisition, then commissions should be heavily weighted that way. If client retention is more important, then the same should be true for that metric. Of course in many cases a balance is necessary, so naturally the compensation package should reflect that. Sometimes, it's not easy to tie compensation directly to one or the other so non-compensation metrics should be used in these cases. See – Roles and Expectations above.

 

Your decision on how to balance between salary and commission will have a bearing on the types of people you attract and their subsequent performance. I believe a compensation package highly geared towards commission, rewards the outcome you are looking for in sales people.

 

At the end of the day, the only reason to employ sales people is to make sales. So why would you tie their compensation to anything else? People should be remunerated for the value they bring to the company. And for sales people, it is very clear on how much value they bring … it is their sales.

 

Knowing your numbers here is key. For example, how are costs allocated through the business model so the company makes the required level of profit?

Here is an example.

 

 

COGS - Materials 10%
COGS - Direct Labour (including sales) 45%
Overheads Expenses 30%
Profit. 15%

 

If this was your business model, and you new that direct labour was 35% then you can pay up to 10% on sales commissions. If however you had a model that had a portion of base salary for sales then that would need to be accounted for in the overhead expenses. Either way you slice it, it needs to add up on the bottom line.

 

Of course the numbers don’t always present as neat like I’ve presented above, but you do need to understand your model to be able to put the right plan in place. If you overpay for sales, you’ll lack the cash flow to grow - or worst go bankrupt - and if you underpay, well you’ll never get the high performers you seek. It is very important that your high performing sales people can earn lots of money and still have the company grow profitably.

 

A sliding scale can be a useful tool. What this means is there may be a base level of sales that pays a certain percentage. Then the next tier of sales pays a little higher. Then the next level pays higher still … and so on. In this arrangement you know your profit is covered in the lower levels but the higher levels bring a bonus to the company so subsequently you can pay more out too. It becomes an aligned incentive for both the company and the sales person. Here’s an example below

 

 

Gross Profit Levels Commission Rate Total Earnable (including levels below)
$0 - $500,000 10% $50,000
$500,000 - $1,000,000 12% $110,000
$1,000,000 - $1,500,000 14% $180,000
> $1,500,000 18% $270,000 +

 

In this example, your expectation might be that a sales person should be bringing in at least $1,000,000 in Gross Profit. And you know as long as they do, your profit goals will be achieved. If a salesperson falls below this target, that becomes a performance and coaching issue … not a compensation model issue. And once they are above the $1MM mark, they get rewarded more and more. This can provide a very powerful incentive, so long as the targets are seen as achievable. They may not be easy, but for a committed sales person who is willing to work hard, they should be able to hit it.

 

One final point on compensation, it is important to link compensation to things that drive the companies growth and are in control of the individual. Therefore carefully consider whether it is sales or gross profit that is the metric to calculate commissions. I think Gross Profit is a better measure. It ensures your sales people aren’t discounting to get volume and you are paying commissions you can afford.

 

  1. Goals and Action Plan

Each sales person should have a goal they are striving for. As noted by the points on compensation, this also helps them be clear on what the financial reward will be for them. It is important that sales goals are developed with each sales person individually. Someone with 2 years experience and limited contacts can’t be expected to achieve the same as someone who has 10yrs of high performance history.

 

It is important each sales person is responsible for developing their own goals. Obviously you will work with them but they must own it. The goal must stretch the individual, provide for them financially and be aligned with the companies goals. It is no good having your team with sales targets they are happy with but leaves the company 30% short of its break even!

 

Once sales goals (note: they are sales goals not sales targets. Sales targets generally invoke a feeling of fear vs a feeling of challenge. Any sales environment that is driven on fear is always going to be outperformed by one that is driven by challenge and growth) have been developed and taken ownership of, now each sales person needs to develop a plan that will enable them to achieve their goal.

 

A plan will be made up of a Critical Activity Calendar (CAC). A critical activity is an activity that contributes toward a sale being made and is within 100% control of the sales person. (i.e. networking event, asking for a referral, sales call, blog post or presenting a quote.) Each sales person must be clear on what critical activities are in their arsenal and how many of each is going to be required to achieve their goal. This is a rarely known quantity the first time you sit down to create one. A lot is learned over time. So when in doubt, stack the deck in your favor and plan for MASSIVE action 🙂

 

Execution of the critical activity calendar is not a guarantee that the goal will be achieved - but nothing is. Within the world of sales, we cannot control the outcome, only the activities that lead to the desired outcome. The factors that affect the outcome are the level and quality of the activity. The starting point for achievement of the sales goal is clear identification of the level of activity required over a specified period.

 

It can also helpful to look at the Sales GAP formula. The Sales GAP formula simply looks at - if nothing changed (i.e. no new activity was done over the next period) what level of sales could we expect? This is the Business As Usual (BAU) sales forecast. Next we subtract our BAU sales level from our Sales Goal to arrive at our Sales GAP.

 

E.g:

Sales Goal BAU Sales GAP
$2,000,000 $1,450,000 $550,000

 

We can then take a look at what has to happen to achieve BAU (e.g. reminder calls to existing clients) and what the CAC needs to look like to bridge the Sales GAP. This is the basis of a simple Sales Plan for each of your sales team.

 

  1. Measurement and Feedback

Once the goal and CAC have been established, it needs to be tracked and reported on. The most important part of making this happen is helping each sales person to discover the benefit to them of tracking. Most sales people as a general rule will hate measuring activity. It will seem like a waste of time and will be a ‘get off my back’ kind of topic.

 

Some simple coaching like “what would be your advice to someone who said they wanted to lose 10 kilos?” They may answer, "eat better food and exercise more". You may follow up with “how would you advise them to be consistent with that?” or “What are their best ways to make sure they do that?” You want to lead them into the understanding we can be our own worst saboteurs. Someone looking to lose 10 kilos has a tendency to forget about the donut that passed through their lips at 9:30am when you ask them at 4pm what they ate that day. The same goes for sales people. If you asked them to recall how many sales calls they made in a day, they would say “lots” - when the truth may in fact be three. You want them to acknowledge that if they let themselves off the hook, they won’t achieve their desired financial reward.

 

"What get’s measured gets managed” - Peter Drucker

 

Help them to take ownership of this task. If they see you as big sister/brother who is looking at it every week and giving them a slap on the wrist if they didn’t do enough, pretty soon you won’t be seeing the real numbers.

 

This point links very closely with the next point “Training and Development”. The whole point of measuring data is so they can start to pin point the obstacles that are preventing them from achieve their goal. It is not just about you and the company.

 

People who are authentic and are in the right environment will want to improve. Everyone at his or her core does. The challenge can be that when we are put under the microscope we can start to feel vulnerable and will lean towards being defensive or not telling the truth. To prevent that from happening, your sales people need to feel you genuinely want to help him or her and you are not judging them. They will judge themselves enough … you don’t need to pile on top. Your role is to help them discover the opportunities to get better.

 

The best catalyst for putting the issues on the table is always the actual sales results. If the results aren’t there, there is something to discuss. Your biggest challenge as a sales manager will be to bring down the barriers that prohibit candid discussion. Your willingness to be vulnerable, trusting and authentic will be key here. Some good reading is Patrick Lencioni’s “5 Dysfunctions of a Team”. While this book is not sales centric, it does give some great insights on how communication can be enhanced through trust and vulnerability.

 

  1. Training and Development. 

The level of activity can be guided and measure through the points we’ve discuss above, but the quality of the activity can only be improved through training and development. While all the points discussed to date are essential, it is perhaps this last point that yields the biggest payoffs in the long term.

 

Big pay offs for two key reasons. The first may be obvious - if you make your sales people better, they make more sales and your company prospers. The second less obvious point is the goodwill and loyalty you build within your people which has massive intangible effects. One of the biggest concerns to a company is that their top performing salesperson will defect and go to the competition or leave them and start a competing company. The only way I know of combating this real threat is to create so much goodwill within a person they could not bring themselves to do it to you. This might sound like a hope and prayer kind of strategy, but there is much evidence it works.

 

In Malcom Gladwell’s book “Blink” studies showed that the doctors who were most likely to be sued were not those who made mistakes but those who spent less time with their patients or had poor bedside manner. Doctors who built more relationship and goodwill were not sued. People don’t want to hurt those they care about.

 

Developing your people and improving their quality of life pays dividends in ways that can’t be measured. When people develop their skills and results, their self-confidence increases, they walk taller and bring a more positive impact to your business.

 

So how do you train and develop your sales team? Here a short list:

  • Seminars
  • In house training
  • Regular sales meetings focused on development
  • Reading books (have a library at your business - have a sales book of the month)
  • Online videos (YouTube, Jeffrey Gitomer’s Virtual Training - search my blog for Gitomer VT)
  • Case study review (successes and failures)
  • Current situation brainstorming - difficult client situations
  • Best practice sharing - identify sales people who excel in certain areas and get them to run a group training on how they do it.
  • Develop your own in house video and audio library.
  • Role playing
  • Daily motivation nugget

 

I think it is essential that sales people are getting some mental nutrition every day that puts them in the right state and builds their skill set and mind set. It is your job as the sales manager to give them access to these resources.

 

Summary

It can take some time to have all this in place. And that's OK. What might be most important is the constant and clear communication of what you are building. Let your people know where you want to take the sales team, look for their input and enable them to help with the journey. It is a team effort – you are just there to serve and enable them to become better.