Looking
to the past while driving a business into tomorrow is like cruising down the
highway using only a rear view mirror. Most business executives can easily generate
a myriad of financial and operational reports that are debated and deliberated
in a series of endless management meetings. As the economy tanks, business leaders
use these reports to trim overhead, shutter stores, and lay off staff in an
effort to stay in business. Then, they continue to study these “bottom-line”
numbers in an attempt to plan changes, grow profits and increase revenue down
the road. But is this data supplying all the fundamental information critical
to the future success of the company?
You
may be surprised to know that the key to success comes from the understanding
that fruitful commerce is driven when and only when people exchange commitments
with one another over the course of business conversations. Because commerce is
generated during these business conversations, any and all financial reports
then become a representation of the effectiveness of these communication skills.
The problem facing most companies is that they rely on the financial reports
without the key component of accurate assessment of conversational competence
amongst staff.
For
example, if a company engages in 1000 sales conversations each month with an
overall closing percentage of 20 percent, the company has successfully
completed 200 sales. The financials are generated by the literal sales numbers,
but this leaves us with a serious question: why did the remaining 800 calls not
produce any sales? The financials cannot assess this, nor can they assess the
competence of the salespersons who were successful. The data is incomplete.
There
are savvy, forward-thinking companies within each industry who record customer service
and sales conversations, yet this is only the first step in generating
effective communication. Critical is a comprehensive understanding of the
distinctions and nuances that enable you to make grounded assessments regarding
the conversations that generate all the numbers. Without this ability to
evaluate the language that creates the very essence of the company, even the
most well-meaning of business managers are inhibited from planning the future
in an effective way.
By
planning only through the study of past data without assessing communication competence
in the future, business leaders are in effect driving their company forward while
looking into the rear view mirror; a dangerous way to drive vehicles and
businesses. Business people need to be able to look into their company - person
by person, branch by branch - and accurately assess the competence of their
staff.
The
simplest assessment should be based on coordinating action successfully. Sales
and customer service staff need to be able to coordinate action with customers
and prospects; while managers and operational staff need to be able to coordinate
action internally. Assessing competence in the domain of communication
necessitates that we develop core distinctions upon which to base our
assessments, and a way to fix the problem areas we encounter. A good starting
point would be to measure a person’s ability and understanding of how to ‘build trust and credibility’, and then to design conversations which ‘produce the
desired action’.
This will
naturally (and should) lead us to questions about designing with language. A
good question to ask is, “What is the language that produces trust?” A few more
would be, “How do you design conversations that produce action between two or
more people?” What are the moves? Each of these questions represents a good
start in understanding the vital role business communications play in a
successful, thriving company. Core distinctions such as ‘what constitutes a
great customer service call’ and ‘what constitutes a great effort with a new
prospect’ during a sales call, are central to being able to project the likelihood
of future success. If leaders, managers, coaches and trainers fail to
articulate the standards, or lack the ability to demonstrate how they need to
be applied in the future, the odds are good that the future will not be what
you want.
Worse
yet, let’s say your company employs over 100 sales and customer service staff throughout
the country. Given this, how many different approaches and sets of standards do
you think exist in your company?
It is
critical to articulate a clear vision about what the future of the company
looks like, not only as it pertains to “bottom-line” financial data, but also
where the rubber meets the road in the sales, customer service and operational
conversations that drive this data.
The Molloy Business Development Group is dedicated to working with clients to improve their customer service and communication skills in a manner that sets them apart from the competition. If your company needs help with steering the course toward a more profitable future, contact the Molloy Team today because we can help you with that!
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