Published:
June 12, 2023
OOH Sales Blog

Want a Strong Return? Invest Your Time Wisely!



As a leader, are you effectively coaching your team? It's intriguing to come across leaders who claim, "I have highly experienced individuals who know how to perform well. I prefer to stay out of their way. If I have to get heavily involved, then I need different people." While this mindset is not uncommon, I've always found it somewhat puzzling. Americans have a strong inclination for sports and often idolize athletes in baseball, football, basketball, golf, and more. Isn't it odd that even the greatest athletes—Babe Ruth, Tom Brady, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods—never went a day in their entire careers without someone coaching them to reach their peak and stay there? Yet, our experienced team members supposedly know what to do and don't require coaching; we should simply stay out of their way.

A leader's most valuable resource is often their time. It never seems to be enough, does it? However, this precious resource is frequently wasted on activities that fail to yield substantial returns. Your greatest asset is your people, yet they are often left to drift without clarity regarding expected behavior or a proven path to success in their roles.

If you were to interview owners or senior executives of OOH companies, or any company for that matter, and ask them about the secret totheir success, you'd likely hear a scripted response: "It's our people. We have the best, most dedicated individuals who genuinely care about delivering outstanding results for our clients and our company." Are they being dishonest? I don't think so. When they express these sentiments, they truly mean them. And I don't disagree with that perspective.

Emerson's words resonate with this topic: "Your actions speak so loudly I cannot hear what you are saying." As leaders, do our actions contradict our words? It is said that to truly understand someone's priorities, you should examine their calendar and their financial transactions.How do they spend their time? What do they invest their resources in?

A common question asked by new OOH clients is: "How much of my time should be dedicated to coaching my team?" While I don't know the specifics of your team, generally, best practices suggest that leaders should allocate approximately one-third of their schedule to coaching theirdirect reports. This figure may vary depending on the number of individuals reporting directly to you.

The next question often raised is: "With whom should I spend my coaching time, and how much time should I dedicate to each individual?" The most frequent mistake leaders make in this area is spending an excessive amount of time working with their "C" players,attempting to coach, incentivize, and lead them toward significantly better performance. Every person may have a different definition of what constitutes an "A," "B," or "C" player on their team. In myview, a "C" player is not solely determined by their current results.Rather, a "C" player is someone with a negative attitude who fails todo what they can to drive performance. Frankly, these individuals are unlikely to rise above a B- grade, regardless of the effort invested in them.

Your coaching time should be viewed as a reward for your team. Reserve the majority of it for those who truly deserve it. Who deserves it? Those individuals who, even if they are not currently achieving outstanding results, demonstrate a willingness to learn, experiment, possess a positive attitude, exhibit high self-awareness, and embrace intellectual humility—acknowledging their potential for improvement and desiring it. Investyour time here and those returns will beat the stock market every time!

Need help with sales skills or coaching to take your out of home company to the next level.  Learn more about OOH Sales Mastery at oohmastery.com  or Contact Dan Nausley at  dan.nausley@sandler.com, 423.702.5579.  

Lisa & Dan Nausley of Sandler Chattanooga have developed the OOH Sales Mastery Program after more than a decade of training/coaching scores of OOH Operators across the country in sales, leadership, and executive coaching.

Read more Outdoor Sales Mastery Blogs

Published:
June 18, 2024
OOH Leadership
Cut New Hire Time to Profitability by 50%
Most OOH leaders spend a large amount of time, effort, and energy looking for an applicant. The interview process is typically relatively short and usually consists of the leader being unprepared. Unprepared to ask pertinent, behavioral based information gathering questions that will allow us to have a greater insight into the individual that we are thinking of investing in by making them a member of our team. What’s the default for most OOH leaders when they are unprepared for the interview? Spend 90% of the interview time talking to the candidate about the company, the job, the kind of person we are looking for, the benefits we offer, how they would get paid, etc. And then the onboarding process is non-existent. Typically, people are welcomed into the company and then asked to spend time with a seasoned OOH veteran who is supposed to show them the ropes. Experience has shown that on its own, this is not an effective onboarding process. Not for salespeople, not for operations people, not for bill posters, not for real estate developers, not for anyone.
Published:
June 7, 2024
OOH Sales
Turn That Frown Upside Down and Avoid the Summer Sales Slump
What choices will you make that will determine your results for the summer of 2024?