Audio By Carbonatix
A sales management consultant, Mawuli Ocloo, has urged sales organisations not to allow their gut feelings, stress and ego lead in recruiting sales personnel.
According to him, these factors are likely to lead to employing the wrong people for the job, considering the unprofessional process of recruiting the employee.
Speaking on Joy Business Master Class show, Mawuli Ocloo indicated that sales companies must organize a structured interview and invest in assessment tools to enable a proper definition of the job.
He mentioned three common mistakes many do. First, he said “never use your gut feelings to decide on who you should recruit for a sales role. Very often, business owners or head of sales just hit it up with somebody at the interview they build, rapport they seem to like the person and they think that at the end of the session what do you think about this person. And oh I think that, and very often that’s guts feelings and it will hurt you ultimately.”
Secondly, “recruiting under stress should be avoided. You see, advertising for positions and you see sales person needed urgently…immediately that is a problem because in sales, in other to sell fast you need to slow down; it is simply because sales is a process and you need to go through each process without skipping and that takes time, and it slows you down. But ultimately, once you have it done then you are good to go.”
Thirdly “no one can sell as better as me, so at times sales managers, business owners think they can do so much and they tend to want to see the same attitude or skill set or aptitude from the people the intend to recruit and that’s wrong.
Mr. Ocloo also urged sales organizations to adopt a more innovative way of recruiting sales personnel.
“If I were going to meet a potential customer and I needed closing skills or how to overcome objections, now mobile applications can give us the opportunity to tap into that data, tap into that training model, five minutes, ten minutes and I’m ready to go. What to look out for. So that’s how sales training has become agile,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
UK social media campaigners among five denied US visas
5 hours -
BP sells stake in motor oil arm Castrol for $6bn
5 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Asante Kotoko beat Eleven Wonders to go third
7 hours -
Algerian law declares France’s colonisation a crime
7 hours -
Soldiers remove rival Mamprusi Chief Seidu Abagre from Bawku following Otumfuo mediation
8 hours -
Analysis: How GoldBod’s operations led to a $214 million loss at the BoG
8 hours -
Why Extending Ghana’s Presidential Term from Four to Five Years Is Not in the Interest of Ghanaians
8 hours -
Young sanitation diplomat urges children to lead cleanliness drive
8 hours -
Energy sector shortfall persists; to balloon to US$1.10bn in 2026 – IMF
8 hours -
Gov’t secures $30m Chinese grant for new university of science and technology in Damongo
8 hours -
Education Minister commends St. Peter’s SHS for exiting double-track, pledges infrastructure support
8 hours -
ECG to be privatised – IMF reveals in Staff Report
8 hours -
Accra Unbuntu Lions Club impacts 500,000 Ghanaians in 5 years of social service
8 hours -
VALCO Board holds maiden strategic meeting with management
9 hours -
African Festival: Nollywood star Tony Umez joins Nkrumah musical in Accra
9 hours
