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Sales Increase Scary
Good with ProfileXT®
Managers, get out your crystal balls. No time like
the present to peer into them and see what you can do
about that issue of turnover and performance.
What's that, you say? The crystal ball has not worked
for you in the past?
That's not surprising. But, as one retail company
discovered, you CAN predict performance before you
select a candidate. You can do this without casting a
spell or stirring a cauldron. You do need the magic
word, however: ProfileXT®.
In this study, a retail organization wanted to
decrease turnover and improve performance of corporate
account managers. For 22 months, the company studied
these issues with the help of ProfileXT.
Participants
The company used 370 account managers, and gathered
turnover rates throughout the 22-month duration of the
study. At the outset, turnover was approximately 65
percent. Managers used performance ratings and average
annual sales ratios to identify top and bottom
performers, placing 12 in each group.
Job Match
Next, the ProfileXT helped to develop a Job Match
Pattern using the results for current employees – 12 top
and 12 bottom performers. The company discovered that
top performers averaged an overall Job Match Percent of
84 or higher. In recruiting and interviewing, the
company used this percentage to find a level of match
for selecting new employees.
By the Numbers
At the end of 22 months, turnover dropped to 23 percent
and saved the company an estimated $525,000. By using
the job match system to determine potential top and
bottom performers, the company estimated an increase in
sales of more than 1,000 percent.
Other numbers:
- Original turnover was 65 percent (55 employees
gone out of 84 originally hired).
- During the study period, turnover dropped to 23
percent (20 employees gone out of 86 hired).
- Turnover savings, determined by the company-set
average of $15,000 per employee hiring cost:
$525,000.
Summary
Adhering to a well-developed Job Match Pattern helped
the company to cut turnover and save money and training
time. The determination of top and bottom performances
before hiring enhanced sales. No
guesswork, no relying on your gut, no using only a
resume and interview.
Most importantly, no crystal ball was necessary.
Keep your fears to
yourself, but share your inspiration with others.
Robert Louis Stevenson

Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde in Your Office?
Do you sometimes wonder why two employees who both
seemed promising when they were hired do their jobs so
differently now? When you hired them, you might have
thought of them as twins, since they appeared to be
identical in their career aspirations, their training
and their experience. But since the two came on board,
they are like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Let's call them J and H. You could not be happier
with J, as he performs with consistent excellence each
day. As a manager, he is responsible for keeping his
team focused and productive. His meetings always have an
agenda. They begin and end on time. He keeps his door
open to employees – which could mean that he is
socializing instead of working. But that is not the
case. He always meets his project deadlines, and so do
those he supervises. He eagerly learns new skills and
arranges appropriate training for his direct reports.
His work sets the standard you want everyone to meet.
H came into your organization at the same time and
has similar responsibilities to J. But you've heard
frequent reports of uncompleted projects, and your
investigation shows you that virtually every time, they
are H's projects. Meanwhile, the accounting department
is frequently clamoring for paperwork that he has not
completed. He says he does not have it, but you wonder
how he could know. His desk is a mess, covered by piles
of paper. This apparently does not matter, because you
can never find H there anyway. He manages to disappear
whenever you are hunting for him.
Perhaps H has other problems and would not do well at
any job in your organization. But it could be that his
poor performance is just a matter of not fitting well
into the job. Had you used ProfileXT® job match patterns
when hiring J and H, and paid attention to their scores,
you likely would not have hired H. Or perhaps you would
have found a more suitable position for him in some
other part of the business.
ProfileXT uses job patterns to determine the fit of a
candidate for a job. These patterns are designed to
reflect the characteristics of those who have proved
effective in the job.
Here is what the ProfileXT® Job Match Pattern does:
- Provides you with the scores of workers who are
already top performers in their jobs, so you know
the pattern of the employees who are most and least
successful in a particular position.
- Allows you to establish a benchmark score across
a scale of competencies.
- Allows you to match the test-taker's score on
each scale item to a Job Match Pattern of scores for
a specific position. The further the score falls
outside of the pattern (high or low), the greater
the negative impact on the Job Match percentage.
- Lets you find more candidates for J's job who
perform like J.
- Helps you find a more appropriate position for
H.
If you are tired of wondering why you have both
Jekylls and Hydes in the office, end the guesswork. Call
Profiles International at (254) 751-1644.
He who fears being
conquered is sure of defeat.
Napoleon Bonaparte

Death Valley
*
Cut Your Sales Cycle by
Half
Would you like to save time, shorten your sales
cycle, and close a larger percentage of first-time
appointments? This sales technique requires no time or
effort to implement, and it will dramatically improve
your success rate.
First, let us take you back to a sales meeting from
your past. You met a prospective customer for the first
time on a
Tuesday, and absolutely everything went as planned.
You effectively engaged the prospect; everything clicked
personally; your discovery process uncovered her needs
clearly; and you discussed an outline solution that
excited her. All in all, the call could not have gone
better. You agreed with your enthusiastic future
customer that you would summarize the discussion in a
proposal within days, and call to follow up a few days
later. Sounds like a perfect meeting, doesn't it? Sounds
like you got another sale!
You returned to the office, the clock now ticking.
Since you didn't have a busy week, you started on the
proposal on Wednesday, and you mailed it on Thursday. No
point calling Friday – she would not have had a chance
to absorb the proposal yet, so you decided to wait until
the next week.
The next Tuesday, you left your first voice mail.
Several voice mails followed in the next few days. By
Friday, now some 10 days since your meeting, you
breached the voice-mail defenses and actually got your
prospect live. She had a "chance to glance through it
but not really give it the attention it deserves" (you
know she hasn't even looked at it yet but that's OK) and
requested that you call early next week to follow up
again.
Monday would look too desperate so you waited until
Tuesday to call again. Another week went by. You finally
got her on the phone again, and this time your once
enthusiastic prospect sounded anything but enthusiastic.
Nowhere near as excited as when she suggested that you
prepare the proposal! This time she told you she'd
"get back to you" and as time passed by,
your prospect slipped away, never to be heard from
again.
What happened? You fell into the biggest
trap in sales. You wandered unwittingly into Death
Valley – that dry zone that stretches from the first
contact to proposal follow-up. All around are the
bleaching bones of the countless millions of salespeople
who preceded you. Another thin-on-the-ground opportunity
bites the dust.
The conventional wisdom in selling suggests that this
is an unavoidable consequence of selling – one of the
elements in the "numbers game" that you just have to
learn to swallow. Not true!
A Simple Solution
Make one simple change to your sales call right now and
you can fix this problem forever. Every single time you
meet a prospect, make the next appointment before you
leave. That's it – simple but highly effective. Suppose
it's your first appointment and you have agreed to
prepare a proposal. Don't leave without looking for an
appointment to meet with the prospect again to bring the
proposal back in to talk to through, within days if
possible.
There are a couple of possible responses when you try
to set the next appointment for a few days later.
1. The Prospect Agrees
You are already winning. For a start, you've qualified
the prospect's interest. If he is prepared to meet you
again, his interest looks genuine and you have
immediately hacked a few weeks off your sales cycle.
Also, your positive initial meeting won't have time to
slip his mind. When you next meet, he remembers why he
was so enthusiastic about what you had to say, how you
planned to meet his pressing requirements, and why he
asked you to prepare a proposal. What salesperson would
not close more of those deals than the Death Valley
specials above?
2. The Prospect Declines
"You know, the rest of my week is just completely full."
You suggest early the following week, but "next week is
even worse." She suggests that you "simply mail in your
proposal." It seems now as though she does not want to
solve the problem you recently discovered. Maybe you
haven't uncovered her real issues and proposed a
satisfactory solution. Or perhaps she is not the
decision-maker. Or she doesn't have the budget. But even
this is good news, because now you have information you
did not previously have. If you feel you have got the
right person, right requirements, and an existing
budget, then you can flip back into the discovery
process and try to recover. If you've got the wrong
person, then you can probe for the right one and start
over. If it's simply a hopeless case, then slap yourself
on the back – you just saved yourself the time, energy
and effort, and the disappointment of eventually
watching another one bite the dust! Now you can spend
your time on more worthy prospects.
You gain information, clarity and time when you ask
for the next appointment during the current appointment.
Implement this simple change to your sales process right
away and soar over your competitors' bones in Death
Valley.
* From the book 40 Strategies for Winning
in Business by Bud Haney and Jim Sirbasku. © S&H
Publishing Co., 5205 Lake Shore Drive, Waco, Texas
76710-1732. All rights reserved. Contact S&H Publishing
Co., (254) 751-1644, for reprint permission.
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ProfileXT® Helps
Recruit Doctors at Airrosti Center
Editor's Note: Airrosti Center is
nationally known for its sports medicine and
rehabilitation treatment practice. Airrosti
stands for Applied Integration for the
Rapid Recovery of Soft Tissue
Injuries. Its certified providers go
into accredited sports medicine facilities
throughout the country. Airrosti trains, manages
and places these experts, who offer rapid,
consistent patient outcomes. Thus, Airrosti has
a significant effect on costs, helps avoid major
surgeries and aids the patient in a quicker
return to normal activity. The organization's
CEO is Kelly Green.
Here, Brenda Reynolds, director of Human
Resources, talks about the Airrosti-Profiles
relationship.
Q. When Did Airrosti begin using
ProfileXT?
A. Earlier this year, we wanted
additional resources to aid us in the
recruitment of doctors. We invest a significant
amount of money and time in our interview
process and we wanted to determine if the
individuals we were considering had the specific
characteristics to be successful at Airrosti.
Q. What results have you seen?
A. After first identifying the
thinking style and behavioral traits of our most
successful providers, the ProfileXT helps us use
that information to identify specific areas for
us to focus on during the interview process. We
would have otherwise never considered these
areas. We have been extremely pleased with the
results.
Q. Has the PXT changed your thinking
on the issue of job fit?
A. We have had candidates who
appeared to be a suitable match initially, but
after reviewing assessment results and following
up with the detailed interview questions, we
ultimately deemed them not suitable. Conversely,
we have had candidates who initially appeared to
be questionable, but upon review, were
determined to be a good fit. They have proven to
be successful.
Q. What additional features helped
you?
A. The initial training,
on-going customer support and usefulness of the
Profiles on the Web system make this one of the
most user-friendly recruitment tools I have ever
used, and I have been in human resources more
than 17 years. I recommend the ProfileXT and
Profiles International without hesitation and
will continue to include their services as an
important component of our recruitment process.
Two
things scare me. The first is getting hurt. But
that's not nearly as scary as the second, which
is losing.
Lance Armstrong
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