You’re the Speechwriter. Not the Speaker.
Reframing Ideas about the Role of Sales Leadership

I recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jose Aleman on Everstage’s Go To Masters podcast. We talked about everything from sales comp processes in multi-regional organizations to implementing change and shifting culture to understanding your place in your organization. But the overarching idea was that of sales comp’s role in your organization.
What (Besides Cash) Motivates People?
We generally understand that people, salespeople especially, are driven by that reward at the end of their sale. For sellers, cash really is the clearest form of remuneration for good work and aligns with employee expectations, but there are intangibles that leaders can develop that go a long way towards creating the kind of positive cultural environment with strong client retention and even better business results.
Recognition is one of those things. Many sales leaders manage through money, letting the comp plan do all the heavy lifting of motivation, but this isn’t going to lead to long-term success if you consider success to be a happy, prosperous sales team with staying power. Instead, it’s important to encourage sales and executive leadership to coach the sales team, invest in learning and development, provide clarity and transparency in decision-making, and demonstrate what good work looks like.
Taking the time to recognize the sales population comes in the form of verbal or written statements, but it needs to be purposeful and consistent. For example, in one of the organizations I worked for several years ago, our leaders established a weekly cadence of recognizing success. Every Friday, they would send out a message about all the wins for that week, taking care to call out everyone on the team, from the sales rep to legal, to the admin team, contracting, pricing, demo team, etc. It was an amazing thing to listen to, as a young employee, and really feel good about what the company was accomplishing, but it also went a long way in recognizing the contributions of numerous employees.
How to Shift Culture
While recognition goes a long way toward strengthening an organization’s culture, you can take even more deliberate action to create the kind of environment that produces strong teams and powerful results.
We all deal with change all the time, but it is also the very same thing that upsets people and impacts culture. Maintaining that personal touch with the sales employee experience will help keep the culture strong through trying times. Little things like a written thank you note, or an extra phone call can keep the team connected.
What can sometimes get in our way are the biases that creep into the workplace without us even noticing them. It’s important to maintain and document intent surrounding decisions and processes when faced with adversity, change, and business challenges. To recognize a bias in action, some reverse engineering may need to be exercised. You may have to look at the results or outcomes and work your way back to see what’s actually happening. I actually spend a lot of time on this topic in my book on fairness.
Your Role as the Speech Writer
Throughout all the change and cultural evolution of an organization, your role in sales comp is fundamentally in a support capacity. You aren’t at the top, laying out the vision for the company. You’re not developing innovative products or services for your customers. And you aren’t out in the field delivering the message.
While you may have a seat at the table for all of those things, as a successful sales comp professional, what you’re doing is acting as the speech writer. You’re helping organizational leaders communicate their vision and goals to the team. You’re helping the team understand how their success with the customer translates back to their individual financial success within the company. So, whenever you notice behaviors changing (e.g., failures to hit quotas, discontent in the ranks, etc.), your role is to identify where in the chain of communication the message got lost. What changed? How was that change communicated (or not communicated)?
Sales Comp is the conduit between the business strategy, executive decisions, and the front-line sales employees at the ground level in front of customers and prospects. You are an advocate and steward of the organization’s culture, strategy, and message. It’s a powerful position, and it takes a lot of attention to detail and adaptability in order to navigate those waters effectively. But remember, it isn’t your message. It’s the business’s message and must be owned and delivered by the sales leadership in order for it to be received and put to use effectively.
Action Items for the Speech Writer
Become a student of your business. In your role, it’s vital to understand what your company does, what you sell, how you sell it, etc. Implement a cadence for feedback. Ask decision-makers what is lacking, what has changed, and how they believe the current plan is supporting their goals. Ask as many people as possible - both to give others a voice but also to collect a wide range of perspectives for a clearer picture of what’s going on in the organization.
By framing yourself as a supporter and as a steward of the organization’s message, you’ll be positioned to shape culture and individual experiences in a positive way.
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