Friday, November 30, 2018

Hamilton Free to Run

The Reds did not tender a contract to Billy Hamilton:

Arguably the biggest name on the list, Billy Hamilton has game-breaking speed and can run down just about anything in center field. Unfortunately, he can’t hit. Hamilton finished with an OPS+ below 70 for a second consecutive season in 2018, and hasn’t so much as topped 80 since his rookie season in 2014. His wheels and glove are certain to land him another gig. The question is if his next employer will figure out a way to better improve or hide his shortcomings.

He would likely fit best on a team with a very good offense and a fly ball pitching staff. One has to believe that the Reds pitching staff probably looks a lot worse without Hamilton in centerfield.



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Aoyuan Dawson Street near Brentwood Town Centre Skytrain

Aoyuan Dawson Street by Aoyuan International is a new vibrant community in Burnaby, South East of Willingdon Avenue and Dawson Street. The project includes signature residential towers, commercial and retail space over four phases on an 9.3 acre site. Aoyuan Dawson Street will include around 1,400 condominium units and 50 townhomes. This community has stellar location, just a 3 minute walk to the Brentwood Town Centre and Millennium Line Skytrain Station.

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Royals Relievers

The Royals reached an agreement with Brian Flynn to avoid arbitration. They are trying to rebuild their bullpen. Their pen, of course, is what helped them win two AL Championships and a World Series.

The Royals bullpen was terrible in 2018. How much they pitched was one measure of that. AL relievers faced about 40% of batters on average in 2018. The Royals pen faced about 38% of batters. The starting pitching allowed a slash line of .273/.334/.442. That’s poor, so Royals starters were not being kept in game because they were performing well. The relievers gave up a .279/.356/.454 slash line. The starters walked 299 batters, the relievers 250. The starters gave up 19 triples, the relievers 17.

Flynn contributed to the high OBP but limited power. He was a high walk, low K pitcher, but lucking most of the hits went for singles. He’s not exactly the shutdown reliever the Royals were stock-piling a few years ago.



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Thursday, November 29, 2018

Are Our Customer Conversations Substantively Different Than Internal Discussions?

The other day, I published a post, “Are Traditional Selling Skills Even Relevant Anymore?”  It’s generated a lot of great ideas and good discussion on both sides of the topic.

One of the premises I had in the article is that the skills/challenges we face in driving change within our own organizations, and  that those customers have within their organizations are not much different than the conversations/engagement that sales people and buyers have.

They are human to human discussions, with all the same characteristics–disagreements, disinterest, differing points of view, alternative views on potential solutions, fear, confusion, confusion, convincing, negotiation, reaching consensus, trust building, and so forth.  These discussions also have many of the negative aspects that people associate with selling, including feelings of manipulation, politics, self interest over organizational interest, exercise of power and influence, betrayals of trust, and so forth..

Similar pressures exist within organizations.  People driven to achieve their personal goals/objectives, their department’s, their organization’s.  They are driven to do it as efficiently and effectively as possible.  People are measured. compensated, promoted, and terminated based on their effectiveness in achieving their goals.  In many cases, these people have a bonus element, such as achieving certain new product goals, manufacturing deadlines, and so forth.  (Hmmm, this isn’t sounding much different than sales…..)

In fact the phrase, “everyone in the organization is selling…”  The concept has several contexts.  If you take the quality/continuous/agile principles, everyone in the organization has customers they need to support.  Most are internal, some may be external.  Another concept is around change management–sales people are basically change agents and help customers understand and implement change.  But within our own organizations, we have similar needs to drive change and many others act as change agents–only internally.

It seems to me, the skills to effectively/efficiently drive change, learning, innovation and progress within an organization are the same that great sales people leverage in working with customers.

Somehow, it seems there are more similarities in driving internal changes/organizational performance, than differences.  Yet for some reason, we have always treated skills that sales people need as very different than those that are required for success within our own organizations.

It has been argued, the difference in context–that is we are dealing with colleagues internally, versus, sales people dealing with people external to the organization.  But increasingly, that seems less relevant.  Every function in modern organizations have people/organizations external to the company they must deal with and manage.  Procurement, customer service, HR are all easily understood.  But finance has to deal within the financial community, with investors/shareholders, bankers, auditors and others.  Engineering/design/development rely, increasingly, on partnerships and alliances with other organizations.  Manufacturing has complex supply chain management, outsourcing and other relationships.  The more organizations leverage subcontractors and contract employees, the more all functions in the organization leverage social channels in doing their work, the inside/outside differentiation become meaningless.

Perhaps a better approach to skills development for sales people is to focus less on the differences in sales people’s jobs/roles, and look at the similarities with leaders who drive change initiatives, projects within our organizations.  Perhaps, training them together, having them learn from each other can create huge benefit.

Many of the skills critical to sales people are just as critical to our internal leaders.  Skills critical to internal people are just as critical to sales people.

There’s another important side benefit.  By doing integrating much of the skills development we conduct internally with sales skills development, sales people will be learning side by side with the same type of people they will be working with in their customers.  Understanding them, their perspectives, how they get things done, can provide huge understanding for sales people as they work to apply those same skills with customers.

Let me be clear, there will be some programs that need to be very specific for sales, just like there are some that are finance, engineering, manufacturing specific.  But I suspect there are more similarities in skills than differences.

I, also, recognize that internal change/problem solving discussions might be a little easier to initiate  because everyone is in the same organization, there is greater access/visibility, understanding within the organization.  There may be better alignment in goals, culture, values (at least in theory); so there are some important differences with working with customers.

Almost since the inception of sales training and skills development, we have treated it as something different from all the other skills development programs in the organization.  It’s time to look at the similarities and develop the skill sales people need to help customers become more successful.

 



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In Examining 27,357 Wins, 95% Of Sales People Did This One Thing!

Over the years, we’ve seen a lot of research, and collected our own data and analytics on what causes sales professionals to win.  We’ve seen certain patterns emerge.  Things like engaging the customer early in their process, ideally being the organization driving their thinking drives higher win rates.  Other areas that one would expect is demonstrating superior value in both the solution and how we engage the customer in their buying process drive higher win rates.  Giving customers new ideas, helping them improve their business drives both win rates and customer loyalty (derived from Gartner Research).

But we’ve found one unusual, compelling piece of data that frankly surprised us.  Over the last 18 years we’ve analyzed 27357 wins.  We found that 95% of the sales people did this one thing before going into the closing call.   They went into the bathroom and pee’d!  (This isn’t Gartner Research, but I’m reasonably certain they wouldn’t disagree.)

That conclusion shocked all of us involved in the research, but clearly, the secret to winning is peeing before the final presentation!  (We are interviewing the other 5 percent to see if they have stronger bladder control or just avoided coffee in the morning.)

Let me pause while you absorb this insight……..

OK, I’m on the rampage about sloppy data analysis, somehow it seems to be in vogue, often cloaked in an AI/ML message from some sales/marketing tools vendor.

Today, I read, “The ideal introductory sales pitch needs to be 9.1 minutes long.  And it can’t be 11.4 minutes long!”  The author went on to describe the analysis of over 127K conversations, discovering if your introductory pitch was 9.1 minutes long you tended to win.  If it was 11.4 minutes long you  tended to lose.

I started wondering, “What if my customer interrupts my carefully crafted 9.1 minute pitch with a question.  If it takes 2.3 minutes for them to ask it and me to answer it, I’ve lost!!!!!”

I continued to struggle with conflicting ideas.  I always thought great sales calls were dialogs, two way, value based conversations.  I thought the more engaged a customer is, the more likely we could navigate their buying process building trust, value, and collaboratively learning.

But the data is clear, we have to do a 9.1 minute pitch!  And we can’t cross that time gap to 11.4 minutes.

I’m certain this sales enablement vendor is doing the math right.  But I’m confused about the conclusions.  Is the 9.1 minute introductory sales pitch causation?  Is it because of that 9.1 minutes we won?  Ironically, the article didn’t focus on the content of that 9.1 minutes, what was presented, and so forth.  The implication in the article was that the win was because of the 9,1 minutes.

Alternatively, it could just be correlation.  Correlation can be very powerful, but it is different than causation.  Understanding causation gives you the secret decoder ring to winning more deals.

We see faux analytics leveraged all the time.  There’s something authoritative about quoting a very large data set, tossing in the word Analytics, getting bonus points for AI/ML, and presenting the single “silver bullet.”  “Do this and you will win.”

In fairness to the vendors leveraging faux analytics, they are responding to the buyers.  Sale/marketing leaders and sales/marketing people want to believe there is a miracle cure or a silver bullet.  If we just do this one thing, we win.

The reality is winning and success is never about just one thing.  It’s about doing the whole job and getting more right than wrong.  And what’s right changes customer by customer and even within their buying process.  And we have to do this deal after deal after deal, consistently, relentlessly.

Which gets us back to Analytics, AI/ML.  The great thing about the emerging technologies is they help us figure out more of what’s right and avoid what’s wrong.  They don’t give us the answers, but they give us greater insights into discovering the answers for the specific situation we are addressing.

High performance selling is tough, it is the thinking person’s profession.  We need to leverage the data as much as we can in guiding our strategies and conversations with customers.  Selling is about doing the whole job–from inciting a customer to change, put order to their chaotic buying process, creating value along the way to helping them solve their problems.  And we can’t do that with just one customer, but with enough that enable us to achieve our goals while we help them achieve theirs.

In short, we have to do everything, leveraging every tool we can, all of the time.  We have execute the whole job relentlessly.

And peeing before your closing call helps….

 

Afterword:  Matt, you owe me another beer

 

 



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Betting on the Future

The Padres sign Garrett Richards to a two-year contract despite his Tommy John surgery likely causing him to miss the 2019 season.

Jon Heyman reported an agreement has been reached. Jeff Passan reported the two-year deal is worth about $15 million in guaranteed money with a maximum value of about $18 million.

So the Padres expect Richards to give him about two WAR in 2019. Given that he produced two WAR in 104 innings over 2017-2018, it’s seems like a good bet for San Diego. It also might mean the team is looking to win that year, and are hoping for much more than that from Richards.



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Terraces 3 in the heart of Langley

Terraces 3 by Brydon Projects Ltd. is a new luxury townhome development in the heart of the city of Langley. The 56 three-bedroom townhouses bring modern living to the family home, featuring personal roof top patios and 9’ ceilings. These homes come equipped with forced air heating, rough-ins for air conditioning, quartz countertops and stainless steel whirlpool appliances. Just steps away from schools, recreation, shopping, dining and entertainment, these homes are built with the family in mind. 

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How Much for Arenado

The Rockies face a decision with Nolan Arenado as he heads into his final year of arbitration. He developed into a 5.5 WAR player, and at seasonal age 28 in 2019, he is still in his prime. If the cost of one WAR is $8 million to $9 million, he worth somewhere between $44 million and $50 million a season as a free agent. Even without the leverage of free agency, I find it difficult to believe that Arenado would settle for less than an average value of $35 million a year on a long-term deal with Colorado.

I would offer him $40 million a year for four years. That captures his prime plus a bit over. The $160 million give him security for life. If he plays well, he has another big payday in his early 30s. Even if he drops to a two or three WAR player, he could likely sign a five-year, $100 million deal.

We know the free agent landscape has changed, and clubs would like to go for higher average value for fewer years. This is an opportunity for the Rockies to move the game in that direction.



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Orioles Hiring

Roch Kubatko talks to Sig Mejdal, and it sounds like the Orioles will be hiring some number people:

As you look at the department, would you say that there are multiple hires pending to increase the staff?

“Yeah. Our goal is to create a state-of-the-art analytics department and they’ve lost … a couple good analysts have left the Orioles recently. But thankfully we have a very skilled developer and that’s the backbone of any analytics department and so we’re going to build on that and we’re going to build aggressively.”

Get your resumes ready!



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“We Chose The Vendor With The Most Complete Solution”

I just read a report, “The Mood Of The B2B Buyer.”  The results weren’t surprising, reinforcing most of the other research I see.

There was one piece that provoked me to reflect.  It was the response to the question, “In what circumstance might you opt for a more expensive solution to address a specific business need or pain point?”  53% of the respondents said, “If the vendor had a more complete solution.”

It’s not at all surprising, but I can imagine thousands of marketers, sales enablement, and sales professionals salivating at that statement.  I can just see how the majority will respond, “Let’s inundate them with features, functions, feeds, and speeds….”

I can see websites with the feature comparison charts–you know the ones that I’m talking about.  Usually, it’s a long laundry list of features the vendor thinks are important (the stuff that’s in their products) with columns comparing “our solution,” to the alternatives.  These are always constructed in a manner that our solution has twice as many boxes checked as the alternatives/competition.

Often, I go to the websites of those competitors, they have a similar checklist—some of the same features, but a lot different.  And their solution always has twice as many boxes checked as the competitors.

Sales people love these comparisons.  They take them to the customers claiming, “Our solution is much more complete than the alternatives.  After all, we check off twice as many boxes….”

Inevitably, there are the demos, which most likely end up being “death by feature overwhelm” experiences for the customers.

Somehow, all of us “pushing” a particular product interpret completeness of solution as the product with the most features, functions, bells, whistles, feeds, and speeds wins.

And they inevitably miss the point, pissing customers off, causing them to turn off or go somewhere else.

The issue is, completeness of solution has nothing to do with the number of features, functions, etc., that we can overwhelm the customer with.  It only has to do with the customer’s problem and what they are trying to achieve.

Customers evaluate the completeness of a solution by how well it helps them solve their problem.  They assess value based on the ability to solve the problem, along with the risk, ease of implementation, and a number of other things.

Too often, sales and marketing are oblivious to this.  Instead of focusing on understanding the customer problem and the “completeness” of the solution in solving the problem, they inundate the customer with more–often arguing, because we offer more, we create greater value and we can charge more.

Too often, sales and marketing, forgets that “more” is not helping solve the problem, in fact it might be hindering the customer in solving their problem.  It may make the solution more confusing, more difficult to implement/use, create more risk or exposure.

I’ve told the story before, but in a prior role, I was evaluating a software solution for my sales team.  The sales people for the vendors we were considering kept inundating my team and me with their laundry lists of features and functions, using the comprehensiveness as an indicator of completeness of solution.  After many pitches/demos where sales people went through endless functions that were meaningless to me, I finally said, in frustration, “We don’t need, we don’t want all that ‘extra stuff!’  It’s overhead and adds to the complexity and cost of implementing your solution.  Please remove it, or in the very least don’t charge us for them, we don’t need those functions, so we won’t pay for them…..”

You can imagine how the sales people reacted.  Interestingly, rather than focus on our organization’s needs and demonstrating the completeness of their solution in the context of what we needed–ignoring all the other capabilities we didn’t care about; they started coming back with deep discounts—which I gladly took advantage of.

What they missed was, I wasn’t concerned about their pricing, I was concerned about the completeness of the solution in addressing the needs of our organization.  I would have payed full price (OK, I would have negotiated some discount), but I wanted to understand that their solution would more completely address what we were trying to achieve than the alternatives.

Completeness of solution is critical to the customer!  The survey shows 53% of respondents are willing to pay more for completeness of solution.

But we get this wrong, it’s all about what completeness of solution means to the customer, not how many features, functions, bells, whistles, feeds and speeds we can inundate the customer with.  As is usually the case, sometimes, less is more.

 



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Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Reds Staff Complete

The Reds finished filling out their coaching staff, including two promotions:

Freddie Benavides would take over as bench coach, among other moves.

Benavides, 52, was an infielder for the Reds in both 1991 and 1992, and has been the team’s first base coach for each of the last three seasons. He also interviewed for the vacant managerial position with the Reds after the season, and his promotion to bench coach pretty well signals that the previous interview must have gone pretty well.

In addition to naming the bench coach, the Reds also promoted Delino DeShields to be their first base coach after he had spent several years managing in the minor leagues for the franchise.

Now the hard work begins of turning the Reds into winners.



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A’snother Day, A’snother Stadium

The Oakland Athletics once again found a site for a new stadium:

The Oakland Athletics have found a waterfront location for their ballpark, with picturesque views toward San Francisco, the Bay Bridge and Port of Oakland. Plans were announced Wednesday, with the goal to open in 2023. There is no announced price at this stage, and Kaval didn’t want to even share an estimate. A California Environmental Quality Act assessment will begin immediately.

Kaval, the enthusiastic, high-energy team president who oversaw a successful new stadium for Major League Soccer’s San Jose Earthquakes, had hoped to finalize a site by the end of the year, and he said the team settled on the Howard Terminal site near Jack London Square after meeting with 500 members of the community and nearly 80 organizations. He plans to host an open house Thursday for community members and fans to learn more.

“We did a tremendous amount of community engagement where we listened to people in West Oakland, in East Oakland and I think what we found is this project is bigger than baseball,” Kaval said. “It’s not just a ballpark it’s something that could have a lasting impact in a positive way on our community here in Oakland to ensure the A’s are here for another 50 or 100 years or really basically forever.”

There’s no mass transportation to the site, but there will be a gondola!

The A’s and city said they plan to build a gondola that would go from the waterfront area of ballpark over Interstate 880 to downtown.

I guess they will need to import people from Venice Beach to pilot the crafts.

The A’s had a number of sites over the last decade, all falling by the wayside. We will see if this one works any better.



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Norquay Nine

Norquay Nine by Bosworth Ventures is a new boutique townhouse development located at 2396 East 34th Avenue in East Vancouver. This project brings 9 exclusive townhouses to Norquay Village for the modern family, featuring large windows and modern finishes. All units include carefully considered floor plans, contemporary designs, spacious balconies and luxurious kitchens. Norquay Nine offers stellar location, just a short walking distance to shops, schools, services, transit, and community centers.

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BRILLIA

Brillia by Benest is a new condo development located at 2628 Duke Street in Vancouver. The 29 unit project features 1, 2 and 3 bedroom homes, fully equipped with smart living features such as voice controlled Google Home throughout, Nest thermostats and smart LED lights. The units include refined finishes including various colour schemes and floor-to-ceiling windows, along with European-inspired modern kitchens. Brillia amenities include a landscaped rooftop featuring BBQ areas, a children’s playground, and communal space, a fitness studio, secured underground parking and storage, electric vehicle parking, and car share stalls. This project brings peace of mind and convenience through warranty coverage, 24-hour security, and wheelchair accessibility.

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Comeback Kemp

Matt Kemp wins the comeback player of the year award:

Less than a year ago, the Dodgers reacquired Matt Kemp from the Atlanta Braves, but it was not heralded as a romantic homecoming. The move’s primary objective was to create financial flexibility. A productive season from the fan favorite — if the Dodgers didn’t deal him before it started — was secondary.

Kemp wound up becoming more valuable than expected and Tuesday he was selected as the National League comeback player of the year, as voted on by players in the National League.

The veteran outfielder was an All-Star for the first time since 2012 after batting .310 with 15 home runs and an .874 on-base-plus-slugging percentage.

The Dodgers are very good in general at finding hitters that appear to have little value and getting more offense out of them. While they spend tons of money, they balance that with their ability to exploit inefficiencies in the market. They did that with Kemp, the main difference is that Kemp had a level to which he could return.



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Are “Traditional” Selling Skills Even Relevant Anymore?

Categorize this post as “thinking out loud.”  I’m not sure what I think about this issue, so I’m using the post to help me think through it and to get your input and ideas.

We all know the story—buying has changed profoundly, complex buying is chaotic, we need to be customer focused/driven, we need to create value in every interaction…..

At the same time, customers have many more sources/channels for information to help in their buying decisions, AI/ML technologies will make many transactional sales roles less necessary (tough this isn’t new news).

And we have the convergence of information overwhelm, increased sources of distraction, accelerating change, and skyrocketing complexity–in our customers markets, in their own organizations, with competition/partners, and within our own organization.

In the face of all this, for the most part we are training our sales people in the same skills I learned many decades ago, and my predecessors learned decades before that.

To be fair, the training programs have advanced somewhat in their current implementation, though much of it seems cosmetic.  Many are leveraging technology for delivery or to provide implementation support tools, but when I speak with both vendors and customers, I find them describing the same skills I learned:  prospecting, qualifying, questioning/probing/listening, objection handling, closing, effective demos, competitive selling, territory management, account management, deal strategy development, pipeline management, understanding customer decision-making, understanding buying processes, financial selling, negotiating, developing relationships, trust based selling, and so forth.  Even concepts of insight based selling are repackaging of consultative, solution, customer focused selling programs of the 60s, 70s, 90s.  And, there’s always endless product training (actually most of sales training ends up not being selling skills, but instead product training.)

At the risk of repeating myself, these programs have been upgraded in how they are being presented.  Rather than heavily product selling focused, they leverage more customer focused language, but under the covers, they haven’t changed substantively.  Otherwise, why do customers constantly complain about being pitched, sales people not understanding their problems, and so forth.

At the same time, sales performance continues to stagnate or even decline.  The gap between what customers consider helpful and sales people’s ability to be helpful is increasing.

At the same time, sales execs and sales enablement execs are trying to fill the rapidly increasing gap between what customers want/need and sales’ ability/skills to execute.

Where possible, products/solutions are being repackaged to making buying/selling easier–in essence “transactionalizing” what had been a complex sale.  Rather than making an enterprise sale, we are making individual or departmental sales.  This has a number of advantages, skill levels don’t need to be as high, we can leverage role specialization more effectively (creating sales assembly lines with customer widgets passing through each station), and we can effectively leverage all the traditional selling skills.  Also, these are the easiest applications of AI/ML technologies.  The more “predictable” the process is, the more it can/will be managed by technology, bots, and automated agents.

Where this can be done, it should be–but the more it can be done, the more we and customers will leverage technologies to reduce/eliminate the need for sales people.  Stated differently, I’d hate to be a SDR (the way we currently define the role) in the 2020’s.  Even many AEs will be unnecessary in the transactional environment.

But there are limitations to this.  Many of the original SaaS companies have found they cannot effectively scale this approach  (costs, staffing, and other issues).  Many complex buying/selling processes simply cannot and should not be “transactionalized.”

As we look at the changes that are happening with our customers, their markets, their competition, their growth strategies, the internal complexities they have in getting things done/achieving their goals, and the challenges they face in buying.  The question arises, “Do traditional selling skills help us more effectively and impactfully engage our customers, helping them get things done?”

Of course, there are skills we call “selling skills,” that are critical to everyone in an organization.  The ability to listen, question, probe and communicate effectively is important to every professional, whether they sell, or whether they work on teams internally.  Internal teams don’t think in terms of “objection handling,” but they have skills at resolving differences of opinions, contention/conflict within their own organizations.  But one wonders, “do we need sales specific training,” or might we be more effective if sales people wen through the same skills training as the people they would be working with?

There are a lot of skills we don’t focus on in selling, but are critical to our customer success and our own internal success.  Critical thinking, problem solving, collaboration, project management, curiosity, facilitation, business management/analysis, dealing with risk/uncertainty/ambiguity and so forth.

What if we started training our sales people in the same skills that are critical to our customers and within our own organizations?  Would they be able to engage the customer and our own people much more effectively, enabling both they and sales make more progress?

Maybe there’s a further step, why do we need to make these programs specific to selling?  What if we mixed different disciplines/functions/points of view in the same training programs.  Rather than a sales focused training workshop on problem solving, what if sales people train with finance, engineering, operations, and manufacturing people?

For example, one of the best training programs I’ve been through was a 6 week program on Commercial Banking at Wharton.  It wasn’t “How do you sell to commercial bankers,” rather it was on critical issues in commercial banking, all the participants except for 3 of us were commercial bankers.  In that workshop, I was learning with them, understanding their perspective, how they thought about things.  It paid huge dividends in my ability to have discussions with commercial bankers in how they could leverage the solutions I sold.

Increasingly, we both conduct and observe workshops that aren’t focused on sales people, but bring people from various disciplines together to learn.  How better to learn collaboration than to work with people you need to collaborate with, or curiosity by learning about different functions, or project management with people that will actually be on the projects we will be helping our customers manage?

Undoubtedly, there are training programs that need to be specific to sales people, just as there are for other functions.  But:

  • Are the old time, traditional sales training programs even necessary given the challenges our buyers and we face today?
  • Do we need to design those programs to be specific to sales, or could we get more value by conducting them for a multifunctional audience?

I could argue both ways–really I’m not sure, but leaning away from the traditional sales skills training.  What do you think?

 

 



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Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Betting on Baseball

MGM and MLB reached a deal that will eventually put baseball betting money in the pockets of the game:

What is MLB getting out of the deal?
Money, presumably lots of it. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed but Maury Brown of Forbes reports the deal is “substantial” for MLB. MLB took a hard line against casinos for years and years, decades even, though things started to change within the last year or two, once MLB realized they could make a lot of money out of such an arrangement. Fans have been betting on baseball for as long as the sport existed. Now MLB will get a cut of that gambling money.

What is MGM getting out of the deal?
According to the press release, MGM will “domestically promote its brand and gaming options across MLB’s digital and broadcast platforms, including MLB Network, MLB.com, the MLB At Bat app and additional fan engagement offerings to be jointly developed.” They’re also getting access to some exclusive “enhancing statistics,” which they will then use to set betting lines. MGM will have a presence at MLB Jewel Events, such as the All-Star Game and World Series, and in overseas grassroots events.

MGM recently opened a casino in downtown Springfield, MA, a few miles from my house. Sports betting is not yet legal in Massachusetts, but I suspect with this deal it will be soon, as the state will want a cut of the revenue as well.



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The Thurlow in Downtown Vancouver

The Thurlow by Intracorp is a new project bringing natural luxury and sophistication to the West End of Downtown Vancouver. This 32 storey tower features 96 1, 2, and 3 bedroom units, with plenty of indoor and outdoor amenity space. Homes will have stellar views of English Bay, Stanley Park, Downtown Skyline and the North Shore mountains. The Thurlow is just steps from the water, seawall, high-end fashion district, cultural centres and the Vancouver business district.

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Elevate at Sunstone

Elevate at Sunstone by is a new project in the village of Pemberton, just 20 minutes North of Whistler Blackcomb ski resort. Elevate will feature modern and open-concept townhomes,  integrating into the natural setting, including green space, community gardens, bike paths and nature trails. The 52 homes, ranging from 2 to 3 bedrooms brings West Coast contemporary design to outdoor living, with expansive decks with unobstructed views of Mount Currie.

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Still Training with Furniture Sliders

Training with Furniture Sliders

It was almost 10 years ago when I first demonstrated how an inexpensive pair of furniture sliders could be used as an effective exercise tool. Long time readers of the site may remember that old YouTube video. It was just me, a low-resolution camcorder, and a 4-pack of sliders that cost around $10. Looking back, plenty has changed since that video, but one thing that remains the same are my sliders. I still own the same set and they still work as good as new.

Furniture Slider Exercise Demo

Below, you’ll see a recent demonstration of the sliders in action, and then I’ll answer questions that I’ve seen on social media since sharing the video this week.

Commonly Asked Questions

Where can I purchase furniture sliders?

Furniture sliders are typically easy to find at general merchandise stores such as Walmart or Target. You can also find them at home improvement retailers such as Home Depot or Lowe’s.

If you prefer shopping online, here’s a link to a 4-pack on Amazon.

What size are your sliders?

The ideal dimensions for sliders to be used for exercise are 9-1/2 x 5-3/4 inches.

Do the sliders work on surfaces other than carpet?

There are sliders designed for other surfaces (ex. wood flooring), but I recommend those that can be used on carpet. I’ve refinished wood floors before and I wouldn’t want to be constantly sliding back and forth on nice wood. There’s no need to wear away the finish of your wood floors when you could roll out a thin strip of carpet instead.

Can’t I do the same thing with socks on a wood floor?

Whenever I demonstrate sliders, someone asks if the same exercises can be replicated by with a pair socks on wood floors. My response to these inquiries is always the same. Socks will work to an extent.

The difference between a sock and slider is significant however. I have used both and sliders are infinitely more versatile and durable. Socks aren’t nearly as useful for many of the faster paced exercises. You also won’t find a $10 pair of socks that will last 10 years. I’m lucky to get six months out of a pair of socks and that’s just wearing them in shoes.

My sliders don’t seem to slide as fast as yours. What can I do?

One of the easiest ways to get more speed out of your sliders is to apply a few drops of a water glass repellent. Rain-X is one such product that can be found in the automotive section of most general merchandise stores.

Working from a thin carpet is also preferable. Thicker carpets will reduce the speed of the sliders.

How do sliders compare to the ab wheel?

I’m often asked how sliders compare to the ab wheel, but the two are actually quite different. Although you can perform rollouts with each, that’s where the similarities end. Sliders allow for a much wider range of exercises.

I also find sliders to be more convenient when traveling. As a boxing coach, I’m often working at fights around the world. I never leave home without my sliders. They are easily tucked into a suitcase without taking up extra space or adding any significant weight to your bag. You’ll be hard pressed to find a better tool for hotel training.

Final Thoughts

In summary, I created the revised video above for two reasons. One was to introduce new readers of the site to an old idea. Perhaps more importantly though, I enjoy demonstrating how effective ideas from the past don’t need to expire. As a professional coach, I don’t care if an exercise is old or new. I’m only concerned with whether it works.

One of the biggest myths of the fitness industry is that new always equals better. That couldn’t be further from the truth. The age of an exercise or tool is irrelevant when considering its value. Some of the best ideas you’ll find come from the past. My old sliders are a perfect example. They work just as good today as they did 10 years ago, and my athletes and I still benefit from their use.

I hope to get another 10 years out of them.

Related Entry:

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“The fool wonders, the wise man asks.” – Benjamin Disraeli

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First Light by Westbank in Seattle

First Light by Westbank is a new 48 storey residential project in the heart of downtown Seattle, Washington. The elegant tower will integrate architecture and art, using light and glass to modernize and liven all aspects of the building. The 459 units, equipped with a cool and natural design will include floor to ceiling, triple-paned windows with stellar Olympic Peninsula mountain and ocean views. Amenities include a private luxury car share program for residents, 24 BMW electric and conventional bikes, 3000 sqft wellness center on the 46th floor, pet services and a 47th floor residents salon for gatherings, celebrations and meetings. First Light features a floating rooftop pool with one of the best sunrise and sunset watching vantage points on the West Coast.

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The Eyes Have It

Wes Jenkins offers a lengthy article on why the slider devastates hitters. In the article, he drops this gem:

While soft focus to hard focus simplifies how players can keep their eye on the ball, most of the work of hitting actually has to do with genetics. According to Dr. Daniel Laby, an optometrist specializing in sports vision who has worked with eight major league teams, major league players have 20/12 eyesight on average, meaning they can see two lines further on an eye chart than your standard 20/20 vision human.

If a player comes in with 20/20 eyesight thinking he has perfect vision, Laby will give him corrective lenses because the standard human vision just won’t cut it.

The scourge of PELs (Performance Enhancing Lenses) is upon us!



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Stopping Our Metrics Obsession!

Metrics are important.  They provide a means of helping us understand whether we are on target to achieving our goals.  They also give us insight into potential changes in the market.

As we “instrument” more of the selling process, whether through CRM, mobile tools, and other means, we have the capability of measuring many more things than we have in the past.

Recently, I was doing some reading on metrics.

One group recommended tracking the following:  Meetings/Opportunity, Time between touches, Opportunity conversion, Untouched opportunities, Contacts per account, Follow up meeting ratio, Opportunity progression, Email engagement rate, Total opportunities engaged, New opportunities, Meetings, Contacts per account, Average opportunity size, Bookings per meeting, Account type, Discounting, Average opportunity age, Follow up meeting ratio, Average time in stage, Stuck opportunities.  Roughly 20 key performance metrics for sales person effectiveness.

Another suggested:  Monthly sales growth, Average profit margin, Monthly sales bookings, Sales opportunities, Sales target, Quote to close ratio, Average purchase value, Monthly calls per person, Monthly emails per person, Sales per rep, Product performance, Sales by contact method, Average new deal size, Average new deal sales cycle, Lead to sale %, Average cost per lead, Retention and churn rates, Customer lifetime value, Average conversion time, New MRR, Expansion MRR, Number of monthly onboarding calls, Number of demo calls.  Roughly 23 metrics, both individual and organizational (which is simply the roll up of individual metrics).

And another suggests:  MRR, CAC, LTV, Churn rate, Burn rate, ARPU, TCV, ACV, Number of active users, Number of registered users, Month on month growth, Total revenue, Gross profit, Gross margin, Produce usage/engagement, Net promoter score, TAM, New vs return customers, Renewals, Number of trial sign ups, Free to paying customers conversion,   Surprisingly, for a SaaS company, they don’t measure Win rates, Sales cycle time, Number of meetings/calls, SQLs, MQLs, etc.

I could go on and on, the point is, the increasing data gives us the ability to analyze that data in any number of ways and to create endless metrics/goals by which we assess performance.  But which of these all these things that we can measure and track do we pay attention to, how do we leverage them most effectively?  Stated differently, just because we can measure a lot of things we have never been able to measure in the past, doesn’t mean we need to measure everything.

For example, for a sales person, while you can track and measure them on any number of the metrics outlined above, doing so on all the metrics can be confusing and misleading.  I’ve seen sales people being measured on as many as 20 metrics.

Sales people will wonder, “Which of these 20 or so metrics should I pay attention to?  Which is most important?”  They can’t manage to all of them, if they try, they end up accomplishing nothing.

In reality, these are all very interrelated.  Positive or negative changes in one area ripple through and impact most of the others.  If we aren’t doing enough prospecting, we won’t have enough qualified opportunities, and we are highly unlikely to make our numbers.  If we have declining win rates or average deal values, or increasing cycle times, then our ability to hit our goals is threatened.

Instead, we have to think about “What are the 3-4 metrics that are most critical to understanding whether the sales people are on the path to achieving their goals?”  For example, it may be as simple as number of weekly prospecting conversations and healthy pipeline metrics.

The fewer metrics enable the sales person to focus on the things most critical to achieving their goals.  If we understand the interrelationships between the metrics, we can see if they are doing the 3-4 things most critical to reaching the goals, all the other metrics are probably going to be in the right range.

Where the other metrics start coming into play is  when we start missing our goals in the 3-4 critical metrics.  We can drill down into the interrelated metrics to try to better understand what’s going on and the potential issues standing in the way of achieving the goals.

Sometimes, the focus on metrics becomes an end in itself.  Focus starts to be on achieving a certain metric, but not understanding the cause-effect or quality relationships between metrics.  For example, we focus on meetings to achieve a meeting goal, forgetting to understand why we need meetings in the first place, whether they are the right meetings, and so forth.

Sometimes our coaching follows the same line, we focus on the metric itself and not what is impacting the ability to achieve the metrics.  For example, the coaching conversation that goes, “You aren’t achieving your meeting goals, you need to up the volume of meetings you have…” is very different than, “Why aren’t you able to achieve your meeting goal, what might you change or do differently to make your meeting goal, how might I help you?”  Or sometimes, we might discover, “The results you are producing with the meetings you are having are far better than we expected in setting a meeting goal.  What you are doing shows you are meeting your overall goals—we probably should adjust the meeting goal….”

Bottom line:

  1.  We have an incredible ability to measure lots of stuff in sales.  Just because we can measure lots of things, doesn’t mean we should.
  2.  Most of the key metrics are interrelated, as a result, if we choose the right 3-4 “cornerstone” metrics, we can make it easier on the sales people to do the job we expect them to do.  The other metrics may be supporting metrics that help us identify and isolate problems if people are missing some of the key metrics.
  3. Metrics don’t solve performance issues, they just help identify potential issues.  We have to get under the numbers, understanding what they mean to identify and address the performance issues.  Metrics and goals are just numbers, they don’t tell us what happened to cause the numbers.
  4. While I didn’t discuss this, we tend to obsess on trailing metrics–the problem is, by their very nature, by the time we see problems, it’s too late to do anything about them.  We need to understand the linkages between the trailing metrics, and those that lead them, so we have the opportunity address performance issues early enough to have an impact.

 

 



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Monday, November 26, 2018

1488 Alberni

1488 Alberni by Landa Global Properties is a new twin tower development in the heart of Vancouver’s Coal Harbour. The towers, at 43 and 48-stories, are designed to reflect the architectural style of Vancouver, with classic brick façades and period embellishments. This project will have approximately 358 luxury condominium units, as well as 133 market rental apartments ranging from one bedroom to four bedroom homes. The Alberni towers’ stellar location is just steps from Stanley Park, beaches, the Seawall, transit and entertainment.

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1818 Alberni

1818 Alberni by Landa Global Properties is a new 21-storey all residential building in the heart of Coal Harbour. The modern design, offering just two homes per floor, brings spacious and luxurious living to downtown. This project features 26 high end residential units, 24 affordable market rental housing units, 3,906 sqft of ground level retail space, and 3 levels of underground parking with 109 spaces. 1818 Alberni has stellar location, just steps from Stanley Park, the Seawall, beaches, restaurants and Robson Street shopping.

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Jansen’s Heart

Here’s wishing Kenley Jansen a quick recovery after a procedure on his heart to fix atrial fibrillation.



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Braves Add Two Veterans

The Atlanta Braves signed veteran third baseman Josh Donaldson and brought back backstop Brian McCann, both on one-year contracts:

Donaldson, who spent four seasons (2010, 2012-14) with the A’s before winning the AL MVP award with Toronto in 2015, agreed to a $23 million deal that matches what he made during a forgettable 2018 season, a person familiar with the agreement said. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal was subject to a successful physical.

The Braves are counting on a return to form from Donaldson, a three-time All-Star who turns 33 next month. He was limited to 52 games by shoulder inflammation and calf issues and hit .246 with eight homers and 23 RBIs. He was dealt to Cleveland by the Blue Jays on Aug. 31.

McCann’s $2 million contract was announced by the Braves, reuniting the team with a catcher who was a seven-time All-Star from 2005 through ’13.

It’s a good way to solidify a division winner with no long-term commitment. If Donaldson doesn’t bounce back, the Braves are only out one year of a big contract.



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Faux Transformations

The word “transformation,” has become the buzzword for 2018.  Every consultant, guru, prognosticator talks about transformation.  Within organizations, executives proudly present their transformation strategies.  Yeah, I also use the word–possibly too much.

The problem is, when one looks at most of these “transformations,” nothing looks that different from before, certainly the outcomes don’t look any better-much of the research data would suggest sales/marketing performance is getting worse.

Too often, a new technology tool is viewed as transformative, but instead, organizations often end up doing the same things they always have, just assisted by expensive new technology.  In some cases, all the technology enables them to do is make the same mistakes with more people at a dramatically faster rate.

Or it’s the new transformative training program–which is training people in yesterday’s skills.  How can we tranform what our sales people are doing, when the bulk of our training focuses on training/refining the same old skills?  I can count, on one hand, the number of training initiatives I’ve seen that focus on critical thinking, curiosity, collaboration, project management, problem solving, financial acumen/value creation.  Instead most organizations are training on yesterday’s skills–questioning, objection handling, prospecting, qualifying, account management, deal management, closing, and so forth.  Granted, the skill levels in executing these traditional selling skills is not good, but these do little in preparing sales people to effectively engage customers in the coming years.

We don’t see changes in management behavior.  Managers are still not coaching–the majority spending less than 2 hours a week coaching all their people.  Talent is still a huge issue.  Too many are focused on tactical day to day execution, instead of establishing a clear vision, strategy and direction for the organization.  Usually the strategies are less around change and more around volume and velocity—do more of what we have always done, faster.

Instead, we find many “transformations” are really the current program du jour–an initiative management wants sales to focus on for the next few minutes/hours until they lose attention and we move on to the next initiative with fingers crossed, hoping it will produce miracles.  Alternatively, it’s intensely metrics focused, optimizing behavior around achieving certain goals, but not fundamentally changing how we sell.

Don’t get me wrong, some of these things may be helpful.  They may even be sustainable.  But they probably aren’t the things critical to “transformation.”

This begs the question, do we even need to transform?  Or is it just a lot of hype?

I’m not sure the word is that important, but sales and marketing organizations need to be constantly changing–learning, growing improving.  Continuing to do things the way they have always been done is a recipe for failure.

Perhaps, right now, the need to change is more urgent, that’s why the “t” word is so fashionable.

We have a convergence of a number of things at a point in time:  Dramatic changes in how customers buy; dramatic increases in the volume of information available to both customers, marketing, and sales; new technologies that enable us to engage customers differently; increasing pressures on time, increasing distractions–both for customers and sales/marketing…

The rate of change and distraction seems to be accelerating both on the customer side and with how we market/sell.

So transformation is important, but what does that mean?  But to be successful, it must be tied to the changes driving customers and markets.  Absent this, we will not be able to engage customers in the things important to them.

Our transformative efforts must be tied to making our customers more effective and efficient in their buying processes.  Focusing on our own effectiveness and efficiency is meaningless, without first looking at these issues from the customer point of view.

We must sustain these changes over time, by that, we must continuously refine what we do and how we do it, over time.

This is tough work, it requires commitment, courage, openness to learning/change. We will make mistakes in our transformations, but we need to learn and adapt.

The odd thing about transformation is it never ends–we can never say, “We have completed our transformation, it is in the past…”

Transformation is really about continuous obsessive learning and relentless execution.

 



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Opener Material

MassLive looks at the top players who might make their debut for the Red Sox in 2019. Number two, Travis Lakins, appears to be an interesting story.

Boston converted Lakins from a starter to a reliever during late May. He posted a 0.86 ERA (21 innings, two earned runs) and 0.71 WHIP in 20 relief outings for Double-A Portland. He then earned a promotion to Triple-A Pawtucket where he posted a 1.65 ERA (16.1 innings, three earned runs) in 10 relief outings.

He pitched more than one inning in 11 of his 30 relief outings, including eight times in his final nine appearances. He recorded six outs in four different outings.

Teams do not develop long relievers anymore, but he would fit nicely in the opener role. He knows how to prepare for the start of the game. The short outings allow him to de-emphasize his secondary pitches. He does a great job of keeping the ball in the park, so he could neutralize the power part of the opposition lineup. He’ll be playing 2019 as a 25-year-old, so the Red Sox would capture his prime years under team control. We’ll see what happens.



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Sunday, November 25, 2018

Pitcher and Position Use Surprise

In thinking about the Tampa Bays Rays and the use of the opener, I’m concerned about a tend that I assumed was happening in baseball. It was my belief that larger pitching staffs were cutting into position player use. In order to carry 12 and 13 man bullpens, managers had to give up some offensive flexibility. The use of an opener would, in my mind, would exacerbate that trend, since teams would be using more pitchers per game with the strategy.

I was surprised to be wrong on both counts. First, the Rays used 4.41 pitchers per game this season. That tied with the Braves for 12th most pitchers used per game this season, and 5th in the American League. The MLB average was 4.36 pitchers per game, so the Rays use of the opener did not make their overall use of pitchers that different than the average team.

The second thing I found was that use of non-pitchers in games has declined, but not my much. This spreadsheet charts MLB pitchers used per team game and MLB non-pitchers used per team game (PTG) over the last 40 seasons. In 1979, teams used 2.52 pitchers per team game, 10.62 non-pitchers PTG. In 2018, pitcher use had risen to 4.36 PTG, while non-pitchers had fallen to 10.37 PTG. For the regression lines, the slope for pitchers per season is 0.045, while the slope for non-pitchers comes in at -0.014.

Non-pitcher use did bounce up to a high of 10.92 in 1984, but in general it looks like there is about one less substitution every other team game compared to the 1980s. I suspect that teams discovered that they really weren’t using that many position players, which allowed them to keep expanding the bullpens. Teams are now just slightly more judicious in their use of substitutes.

Pitcher use rose fairly steadily until 2007, and then we saw an eight-year stabilization. In 2015, pitcher use rose above 4.0 PTG for the first time, and has risen every year since. The 2014-2015 seasons allowed the Royals to demonstrate to baseball what a three-closer bullpen could do on the game’s biggest stage. That was not lost on the rest of the majors, and we back on a trajectory of more pitchers every game.



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Saturday, November 24, 2018

Finding Offense

The retirement of Adrian Beltre is the least of the Rangers worries this winter. Jurickson Profar stepped into the third base position this year and gave Texas a fine performance at the plate. Unfortunately, the rest of the team positions, with the exception of rightfield, needs a lot of work. None of the other infield positions, including catcher, provided much in the way of getting on base, although first base produced good power. Leftfield and centerfield were black holes of offense. They drew a decent number of walks, but high strikeout rates led to very low batting averages, and very low OBPs. The two positions simply did not put the bat on the ball enough.

While those two positions were the worst offenders, the whole team was slanted this way. The Rangers drew the fourth most walks in the AL, while striking out second most. That would be fine if it resulted in a high-power offense, but their isolated power (Slug-BA) was league average.

With the good walk rates, one would think the Rangers had good strike zone recognition, but it wasn’t so. They were league average at swinging at pitchers outside of the strike zone, but had the lowest percentage of swings in the zone. On top of that, they were near the bottom of the AL in making contact on pitches in the zone. So they were taking tons of strikes, and missing relatively often when they did swing.

If the hitting philosophy was, “Wait for a pitch you can launch and launch it,” it didn’t work. That’s fine for Joey Gallo, but the others need to work on meeting the ball before they start trying to drive home runs. We’ll see how that philosophy changes with new field management.



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Friday, November 23, 2018

Harrison Helps Homeless

Josh Harrison makes a sizable donation as he leaves Pittsburgh via free agency:

They didn’t see any reason to move everything back home to Cincinnati. They didn’t want to put it in storage and move it wherever Harrison signs this offseason. They didn’t want to sell it or even give it away to someone who would. Finally, they settled on a solution.

“We just wanted to make sure that those who need it had an opportunity to get it,” Harrison said.

That giving spirit ultimately led Harrison and Brittney back to their house last weekend, when they donated a truckload of furniture, supplies and more to Pittsburgh’s Light of Life Rescue Mission, which serves the city’s homeless and hungry.

Before leaving, the Harrisons found one more way to make a difference in the Pittsburgh community.

“That was home for us for the past however-many years,” Harrison said in a phone interview this week. “Considering where we were, we were like, ‘Man, we know there are people in Pittsburgh that can use it.’ It was just a matter of finding somebody.”

I suspect Harrison will always be welcomed warmly when he returns as a visiting player.



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Thursday, November 22, 2018

More on Harper’s Defense

Via Tom Tango, here is a very in-depth, StatCast look at Bryce Harper‘s defensive woes in 2018.



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Happy Thanksgiving!

On this Thanksgiving, I am grateful for my readers, who have supported this site through 17 baseball seasons! May you enjoy a wonderful day with your family and friends!



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In Praise Of Pushy Sales People

I probably should come out of the closet.  I’m a pushy sales person.  Perhaps some will recommend a 12 step program or some other therapy to make me less pushy.  But, to be honest, I like being pushy.

My customers and clients, for the most part, appreciate it too–though at some times my pushiness makes them uncomfortable. (I’ll come to that later.)

By now, some of you may be thoroughly confused.  If you’ve read my blog for some time, this would seem out of character.  Many would say, “No one likes a pushy sales person.”

So it’s important to provide context around my pushiness.

My pushiness is never about “getting the order.”

My pushiness is always focused on the customer/client and their ability to achieve their dreams, goals, and objectives.  If a customer’s buying or problem solving journey stalls, I believe it’s incumbent on me to gently remind and prod them about why they started the journey in the first place.  It’s important to help them understand how they might move forward and to help drive clarity to the choice they are making.  I genuinely feel bad to see a customer not achieve their goals, particularly when I can help them do so.

Clients and customers appreciate, or at least understand the motivation, giving me permission to push them in helping them achieve their goals.  They recognize and appreciate the intent, knowing it’s focused on their success.

At the same time, my pushiness is about achieving my own goals.

Now you are probably scratching your heads, thinking, “What the hell is he talking about?”

To some these may seem incompatible.  How can one be driven by the customer’s attainment of their goals, yet be focused on one’s own goals?  Aren’t those in conflict?

And I think that’s the important point–these can’t be in  conflict!

The only way I achieve my goals is through the customer achieving theirs!  I have no business taking the time of customers/clients trying to help them on problems that I’m not the best in the world at solving.  I’m misleading them, I’m wasting their time and my time.

Being driven by helping the customer achieve their goals can never be in conflict with achieving our own goals.  By definition, when what we sell doesn’t help the customer achieve their goals, then we aren’t being helpful.

By definition, we aren’t being helpful when the customer doesn’t want or need our help.  Trying to be helpful then is wasting both our times.

Too often, I think we fail because we chase the wrong opportunities–or we don’t have clarity about what the right opportunities are.  We are chasing opportunities where we can’t help our customers achieve their goals or they simply don’t care–they may have other priorities.

Sometimes the concept of “pushiness” is discomforting to our customers.  The word, itself, is charged, mostly because we see our experience is always of the most negative contexts of the word.

But the pushiness I am describing, like Productive Conflict, has nothing to do with what we perceive as the negative attributes of pushy behaviors–these have no place in selling or business.  The foundation of the pushiness I am describing is really about caring.

It’s knowing that one can have an impact on the businesses and lives of customers, developing trusted relationships with those who value that help.

We can help them confront their own internal challenges and problems.  We an help them think about what they are doing and to consider the value of changing–of doing things differently.

Effective pushiness is also about being open to differing perspectives and ideas.  It’s about being collaborative in how we engage customers and help them engage each other in solving their problems and achieving their goals.

Effective pushiness is not necessarily about being “comfortable.”  Change is never comfortable.  But perhaps effective pushiness can provide context and meaning to the discomfort people may experience in implementing change.

Unfortunately, too many sales people don’t understand what effective pushiness is–they are just annoying!

 



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Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Helping and Being Helped

Here is the sad and lovely story of Maria Hartmark, the dining room manager of the Dodgers press box. She gave of herself to make people happy, and those people are now giving back in her time of need:

For the many writers, broadcasters and engineers who cover the Dodgers on nights that wildly swing from boredom to hysteria, Maria is the rock, our rock, a woman who keeps the soda machine running, the coffee pot full and our heads from exploding.

All of which made it so chilling when, on the first Thursday in October, before the Dodgers’ first postseason game against the Atlanta Braves, this most valuable of players was not in the lineup.

Maria wasn’t there. A day earlier, she had been plowed over by an SUV while crossing a street near her home. She had a fractured skull, fractured ribs, ruptured spleen, broken arm and fractured leg.

So people are stepping up. Her children started a GoFundMe page:

The family, still unsure of what to expect, randomly asked for $20,000. And suddenly the woman who would help anyone was being helped by everyone, 211 donations and counting, $24,705 and counting — in a month. Along with phone calls of support, the money poured in, from top Dodgers officials to Dodgers organists, from Dodgers broadcasters to visiting announcers, from local writers to visiting scribes.

When Rosales read her the list of names, Maria cried out in appreciation and shock.

“Why? Why? Why?’’ she wondered.

“You have to ask?’’ Rosales asked her.

By the time the money slowed and a count was made, a surprising milestone was reached.

After all these years of creating a home for the Dodgers media, Maria was given a most appropriate gift in return.

The donations allowed her to pay off her house.

With no mortgage, she can now better handle the costs of her recovery.

It’s a wonderful life.



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Snagging Sig

New Orioles GM Mike Elias brings Sig Mejdal to the Orioles.

New Baltimore Orioles general manager Mike Elias called upon a familiar face to help rebuild the club, hiring former NASA engineer Sig Mejdal from the Houston Astros to be assistant general manager for analytics.

Mejdal will report to Elias and will oversee all aspects of the club’s growing analytics effort and serve as an adviser to Elias, the Orioles said Wednesday. Mejdal had been a special assistant for process improvement to Houston GM Jeff Luhnow since October 2015.

The two worked together in St. Louis and Houston.

If Mejdal is successful in Baltimore, he may be the first front office analytics executive to go into the Hall of Fame.



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Never Cease Trying To Be The Best You Can Be–That’s Under Your Control

Every once in a while, I have a truly outstanding week.  These are weeks where my clients and I take on big challenges and tough issues, trying to figure out what courses of actions should be taken.  Last week, I was with several clients, one in luxury real estate, two in high technology.  Each is a top performer, not just within their own industries or regions, but they are viewed as top performers by those in other sectors.

As an example, I was running a planning workshop with one.  Sitting as observers in the workshop were the senior sales executives of another company.  They had asked if they could sit and watch, they were trying to understand what this client did, how they worked, and perhaps, what made them different.

I’m not sure these visitors discovered that “magic,” but it was clear to me–perhaps because I’ve spent some time with these people.

What was clear to me about each of these clients was an insatiable drive to be the very best they could be.

It wasn’t driven by competitive threat–each had outdistanced their competitors and continued to be innovators in their domains.

It wasn’t because of disruptions within their own markets and customers, not surprisingly, they tended to do the disrupting.

As I reflected on the series of meetings on the long plane flight, it seemed each team was driven by an insatiable desire to be the best they could possibly be.

They were obsessed with learning, with thinking about new ideas and approaches, with thinking, not only about how they could improve, but how they could help their customers improve (which was why that one group had been invited as observers.).

The discussions were focused, at some times very tough.  The senior executive of that “observer group,” commented, “It seems to be a very safe environment.  You are being very tough on yourselves and with each other, but you seem to be learning and growing from this.”

I contrasted that experience with what I see in too many organizations and individuals.  Sometimes, I think they may have be complacent–things are OK, sometimes good, they are not “uncomfortable” with current performance and don’t see the need to change.  Sometimes, they are struggling or troubled organizations–tending to be driven by panic, doing more of what wasn’t working–never taking the time to figure out why it isn’t working because they simply don’t know anything else.  Sometimes, they are distracted by miracle cures, silver bullets, or wishful thinking. Sometimes leaders are unsure or swayed by the latest trends, competition and move from initiative to initiative, never sticking with one thing long enough to produce results–all the time confusing and wasting the time of their people.

In all these situations, there is usually some sort of blame game; the competitors have some sort of advantage, the customers aren’t reasonable, our products aren’t competitive, the dog ate our business plan, and on, and on, and on….  The reasons for their challenges are never their ability to recognize and effectively respond to them.

Common to each of these scenarios is the struggle to “be in control.,” yet never being so.

One quickly realizes, as much as we try to or think we can “be in control,” the only thing we can control is ourselves.  We can’t control our customers, our competition, the markets, others in our organization, or our people (if we are managers).

The only thing we can control is ourselves and what we do with our time.

The outstanding organizations outlined in the beginning of this post recognize do thing differently than those outlined in the latter portion of this article.  They are obsessed with learning, focus on what they can control, and relentless in their execution.

 



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Tuesday, November 20, 2018

A Day in the Life – Lighter Training Day

Lighter Training Days

As I’ve mentioned before, successful training requires more than repeated intensity. If you constantly run yourself into the ground, it’s only a matter of time before your body pays the price. Speaking as an active member of the 40+ crowd, I believe it is essential to include lighter days to facilitate recovery and prevent burnout. Such days can still be challenging, but in a different way than what’s experienced when lifting maximal loads or pushing yourself to the brink of exhaustion.

This entry includes a video summary of one such workout that I performed earlier this week.

Lighter Training Day Sample

First, I will share the workout and video demonstration, and afterward I’ll discuss the session.

November 19th – Lighter Session

  1. Warm-up with 10 to 15 minutes of hand-eye coordination
  2. Train 3 to 5 bodyweight exercises for approximately 15 minutes
    • On this day, I did pushups, sit-up stand-ups, and rollouts
  3. Skip rope for 3 rounds (3-minute rounds, 30 seconds rest)
  4. Speed bag for 3 rounds (3-minute rounds, 30 seconds rest)
  5. End session with a brief finisher
    • On this day, I did 5 minutes with a light sledge

Lighter Day Logic

As a former athlete and current coach to professional athletes, I know all about hard work and intensity. I am essentially hardwired to push myself. I don’t know any other way. With that in mind, I must be certain that my lighter sessions don’t include movements that will wear me out. Because regardless of my intent, I always end up pushing myself during the session.

Therefore, my lighter workouts consist of movements and activities such as:

  • Hand-eye coordination training
  • Bodyweight exercise
  • Jump rope
  • Shadow boxing
  • Light bag work (ex. speed bag and double end bag)
  • Light conditioning (ex. light sledgehammer swings)
  • Hiking

Hand-Eye Coordination Warm-up

I begin almost all my light sessions with a hand-eye coordination warm-up. Challenging hand-eye coordination isn’t physically taxing and has obvious benefits for athletes. Such work is also excellent for the brain (see here). That’s all the reason I need to challenge my hand-eye coordination regularly.

During my light workouts, I simply pick a handful of activities (ex. juggling variations, reflex ball, etc.) and perform them randomly for 10 to 15 minutes. I don’t track sets or reps. I just move from one activity to the next based on how I feel. It doesn’t need to be any more complicated than that to be effective.

Lighter Work is Subjective

When looking at my list of bodyweight movements, it’s important to note that what is light for one athlete may be strenuous for another. And that’s why I’ve always been hesitant to share “day in the life” workouts. I don’t want anyone to blindly copy what I’m doing. Instead, it is important to tailor the work to suit your own ability and needs.

For example, my lighter session included standing rollouts. Earlier in my life, that exercise would have been considered intense. Yet, after performing rollouts for 20+ years, I’m no longer at risk of wearing myself out with the movement.

The same logic applies to the sledgehammer. The sledge that I used for this session was only 6 pounds. I regularly swing a hammer that is much heavier so dropping down to the 6 pounder is not going to wear me out. Sure, my heart will be beating, but I can quickly recover from the work.

Volume

In addition to monitoring intensity, I’m also careful to minimize volume. In fact, I don’t even keep track of reps. Instead, I limit myself to small blocks of time, while never pushing myself to failure. For instance, you can see how I limited myself to 15 minutes of calisthenics. Naturally, only so much volume can accumulate during such a short block of time.

The same logic holds true for timed rounds with tools such as a speed bag or jump rope. As you can see, I only performed three rounds of each. Three rounds are not enough to wear me out regardless of my pace and intensity.

Final Thoughts

In summary, as an active coach in my 40s, I need to be fresh for my athletes. Running myself into the ground each time I train will not only break my body down, but also hinder my ability to perform my job. Thus, while I still enjoy hard sessions, I also have days where I intentionally back off the intensity and volume.

I firmly believe that these lighter days have been instrumental in allowing me to feel no different in my 40s as I did in my 20s or 30s. Physically, I don’t feel like I’ve declined at all. So, if you enjoy hard work like me, consider adding some lighter days on occasion to help you continue feeling fresh as the weeks, months, and years pass.

Your future self will thank you.

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“We must always change, renew, rejuvenate ourselves; otherwise, we harden.” – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

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