Sales Managers: Hire Top-Performing Pharma and Pharma Revenue Reps
Sometimes, hiring pharma sales reps feels like a roll of the dice. You hope you get a winner, but you’re never sure you will.
In “Stop Hiring Poor-Performing Salespeople,” Brian Jeffrey wrote about 3 specific pitfalls of hiring revenue reps you should look out for, and that one way to avoid them and improve your odds of hiring a winner is to use a sales assessment tool. I think assessment tools are a great idea. I usually recommend to my clients that they perform personality assessments on their top-performing sales reps to use as a benchmark for potential hires. Combining that with similarities in background, education, training, and so on gives you a better shot at finding someone who will fit in and do well on your team.
I’d like to explore the pitfalls he mentions, and add to the discussion:
#1 – Can’t Sell
Essentially, some people talk a nice game, but they can’t provide results. Everybody likes ‘em–you were excited about hiring ‘em, and you like them so much you sometimes can’t bring yourself to let Them go, even though they cost your company time and money. (See The Sales Manager’s Dilemma.) Benchmark comparisons with your current team, like I described above, make a much better guide to hiring than how well the candidate aced the interview.
#2 – Wrong Revenue Environment
Just because someone was valuable at selling in one environment, doesn’t mean he can sell successfully in a new one. Background is important. It is true that not everybody can sell everything, and it’s true in pathology sales,too, where there’s such a difference in products and services. Pharmaceutical sales reps often can’t switch to, say, clinical diagnostics revenue, or medical device sales reps might have a hard time switching to biotechnology sales. Not always, but often enough. However, if the sales process is the same–maybe they both involve a long sales cycle where you’ve to build a relationship with your customers, or maybe it’s mostly a cold-calling situation–well then, your chances are fine.
#3 – Won’t sell
Those are the people who should never be in sales, but get hired by a manager desperate to fill a job. No matter how much potential you think they have, or how much time they take for training, or how many revenue discussions you call, they’ll never be precious. Brian says, “Any hiring tool that will help you identify these people before you hire Them is worth exploring.” That’s where I come in.
A medical revenue recruiter with 10 years of experience placing leading sales force talent into the most prominent healthcare companies in the country is the way to (legally) load your dice. Why use a recruiter? A fine headhunter will save you and your company time and money by sending you quality candidates hand-picked to improve your sales-force effectivness and benefit your bottom line. All of a sudden, hiring new sales reps for any area of healthcare sales becomes less of a gamble and more of a sure thing.
Click this link to see what we can do for you.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Recruiter at the nationally
recognized clinical and clinical sales recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved
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If you are a sales professional or want to become one, or if you are looking for a new sales job, you will face one of the toughest interview processes of any job seeker.
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