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Setting the Stage

Setting the Stage

Before I go too much further I must first set the stage for you.  I feel that I need to explain a few things about the culture here.  If you have never worked in a sales organization much of what I will write will seem foreign.  The individual salespeople in this organization are very entrepreneurial.  They are paid on a 100% commission basis.  With limited exceptions there are no full-time salaries to be had, so these individuals are focused on doing one thing and one thing only — selling.

Keep this in mind as it will be yet another dominant theme in my writing.  If you were only paid to sell, what would you spend your time doing?

Team or Solo – Which Agents Produce More?

How Network Range Affects a New Agent’s Success Rate

There is a fair amount of drama involved In the age-old debate on team production versus individual producers.  Clients reportedly prefer the feeling and security of a team of advisors.  It gives the client the feeling that the advisors are specialists who know more and are able to help offer the best care.  The home office has long held the opposite view.  Teams are more expensive and less productive — 10 individual producers will out sell a team of 10 any day.

Developing nations are a hotbed for research these days.  There are masses of people in India and China who are coming into the middle class and now have disposable income.  Life insurance sales are on the rise and this is a ripe stage to study in these developing markets.

Many of the lessons learned may be useful here in the US.

Chen, Zhang and Fey (2011) recently published significant findings that may alter the course of the team/solo debate.

Take the example of an agent joining a team.  Simply being in a team environment does not mean that the individual stands any better chance of surviving in the business.  Common thought holds that a team will rally around an individual to provide training and mentoring.  This isn’t always the case. The researchers found that teamwork by itself does not do the trick.  It has far more to do with the social capital — the new agents network.  The counter-intuitive piece to their observation hinges on what type of natural market this individual brings.

The key distinction is what is known as network range.  Just because a person brings a large network to the practice does not mean that the new advisor will be successful.  The new advisor is more successful if the range of his or her network spans different types of people.  The researchers explained that range deals with groups of people who are heterogeneous.  Range is defined as “the number of occupations in which more than one contact existed for the insurance agents” (Chen, et. al., 2011, p. 445).  By this definition a person with a network of 2 lawyers, 2 carpenters and 6 brick masons has a greater range than a person who knows 1 lawyer and 9 teachers.  Same network size, far different network range.

The reasoning is that dealing with a homogenous population, no matter how high or how low their associated income, the agent learns only the products that they need for that one population; therefore, they grow less reliant on team members.  A heterogeneous network requires knowledge of many different types of products, which lends to the agent’s seeking help from team members.

Reference

Chen, Y. Y., Zhang, Y., & Fey, C. F. (2011). When collaborative HR practices may not work well: The moderating role of social capital in the Chinese life insurance industry. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(2), 433–456. doi:10.1080/09585192.2011.540164.

Finding Your Voice – The Introduction

Finding Your Voice – The Introduction

The Key to Your Life – In Three Chapters

There those few lucky ones among us who are born knowing what they want to do in life.  For the rest of us, we get to work out this puzzle like doing longhand division — it takes time.

  • Chapter 1 – Discover Who You Are
  • Chapter 2 – Discover the range of work that calls to you
  • Chapter 3 – Pick something in the range and go for it

But First, An Introduction

All good books have an introduction.  For the faith-based among us this introduction is your getting connected to your Creator.  Ask Him why you are here.  Ask Him why He created you.  Don’t stop asking until you have an answer.  Some people stick with this question for only a few hours until they get an answer.  For others it may take years before they get an answer.  Keep pressing.  This is the best time you could possibly spend.

You can hear an answer in a number of ways.  See if any of the following pertain to you:

  • A particular magazine, book, or TV show “speaks” to you.
  • Your friends say that you are good at a particular skill or particular range of skills.
  • You get a great sensation in your “heart” when thinking about a certain job or career.
  • You feel that you identify with the main characters in a movie.

For more on a faith-based approach to learning who you are, see It’s Your Call by Gary Barkalow.  This is perhaps the single best book I have ever read on the topic of calling.  You will also want to take a look at Wild At Heart by John Eldredge, in particular, chapters 1 through 3.

In upcoming articles I will unpack key milestones in chapters 1, 2 and 3.

 

Following Your Call Leads To Healing

Following Your Call Leads To Healing

This is the second post in a series that I am writing on how God is redeeming work.  My major premise here is that originally intended for work to be productive, enjoyable and a natural extension of who you are.

In my earlier post where I kicked off the series, I mentioned I came across a presentation by Dr. Denise Daniels of Seattle Pacific University.  One of the biggest insights I gained from Dr. Daniels’s presentation is that redemptive work facilitates

  • Physical healing
  • Emotional healing
  • Spiritual healing (Daniels, 2008)

Likewise I have also found a post from Dennis Sy who wrote a post titled Redeeming Work. Here Dennis makes the point that “No longer is work a necessary evil. It is now a calling.”

Is it possible that by following our respective callings that God will lead us to work that nurtures our souls and heals our bodies?

References

Daniels, D. (2008). Redeeming work: Living out God’s Purpose in our work [PowerPoint slides]. Retrieved from http://www.spu.edu/depts/sbe/cib/documents/CIB_Kiros_Redeeming_Work_Daniels_7-08.ppt

 

Entrepreneur = Sales

To be an entrepreneur is to be involved in sales.

You must sell your work.

It won’t sell itself.

Some of my work deals with entrepreneurs who have chosen to work as captive sales agents for a company.  These individuals are prominent in financial services, real estate and home-based selling organizations.

These individuals typically have unlimited earning potential and have the support of a home office.

Being a salesperson isn’t a bad thing, so don’t let it have a negative connotation.  To be passionate about making a difference in your own life or in the lives of others takes a certain degree of sales skills.

Take control of your future.  Learn how to sell.

New Financial Advisors – Fail, Observe, Recover

How New Financial Advisors Can Recover from Failure

In my previous post on What to do with Failure?, I mentioned that new financial advisors tend either to internalize their failures (it is always my fault) or to externalize their failures (it is always the prospect’s fault).  We move toward one of these two extremes naturally; however, you stand to learn a ton by just taking a moment to carefully examine what led to the failure.

Consider the list below.  At one end is self-blame, and at the other end is blaming everyone else.  The sweet spot is right in the middle.  You stand to gain the most from the failure by pausing for a moment to take stock of what happened — observe and recover.

  • Internalize & overwhelm
  • Observe & recover
  • Blame & avoid

As a New Financial Advisor, How Do I Recover From Failure?

There are several age-old formulas that can be used to take stock of the situation.  Here are just two:

  • Start, Stop, Continue.
  • What went well? What didn’t? What would you change?
  • Phase by Phase postmortem

Start, Stop, Continue

This one is most common in performance evaluations.  For your latest prospect meeting, seminar or other client facing moment, simply write down what actions or behaviors you would like to see yourself starting, stopping or continuing for the next time you perform this activity.

What went well? What didn’t? What would you change?

This is quite similar to start, stop, continue from above, and is most commonly performed with a coach or any person who has an outside perspective.

Phase by phase

The phase by phase postmortem is perhaps the most thorough.  This method is often used when you are critiquing a client facing meeting and you are using at least one step in your sales funnel.  What you do here is simply to document what you learned at every step of your sales process.

  • Did you transition well between your opening small talk and your initial discussion?
  • Did you transition into your fact finding segment well?
  • What would you do differently next time?
  • Did you find enough emotion when drilling down into what the client wants to achieve in their future?

Conclusion

When you encounter your next failure, don’t blame yourself.  Don’t blame others.  Just take a minute to assess what happened.  No matter what path you choose, at least do something to write down and capture what you experienced.  Don’t make the mistake of thinking that you can hold all of this in your head.  You must write it down.  I have known new financial advisors who have a bit of a library of lessons they have learned.  It takes a bit of discipline, but the paybacks are well worth the investment.

1 Way to Get Your Best Performance

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Now that you’ve set the stage (in the past 3 weeks) you are ready to take this final step to results.

This one contains sage wisdom, yet most of us are not ready for it because we have not laid the foundation we did in the last few weeks.

How to Recharge and Rejuvenate

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Starting a new business or launching a new product can really wear you down. In this video you’ll learn why it’s important to take a break.

This one is a short one, so click the image above to check it out.