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How to turn the executive interview from Hell into your advantage

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Today's post is for sales executives and managers and those who wish to become them. A sales executive I know just went through one of the worst interviewing experiences of his life, and asked what he could have done to change the outcome. In today's hiring market, every one of you reading this post could run into the same thing. My solution touches on a closing technique I use in my telesales training courses, too. So let me tell you the story, and what you can do to turn a similar situation that you might face into your advantage.

Robert interviewed for a sales exec position at a medium-sized company that had a sales situation that needed to be turned around. As part of his interview, they asked him to present a sales plan for the upcoming year, based on what he knew about the company. He spent quite a few hours designing it and writing it out. He told me about it, and it was a brilliant plan. The interview took three hours, in front of the company's executive board, and he outlined it all out. They told him they liked the plan, would discuss it, and call back. They did, and invited him for another interview to discuss the plan, as they had questions. He did, addressed all the issues, and they told him they'd call him back. They did, and said they were moving in another direction. He didn't get the job.

All in all, Robert spent many hours designing and interviewing for a job he was probably never going to get. They just needed some free consulting. So I suggested that since this was becoming an all-too-common experience these days, he turn it around to his advantage the next time this happens by following the following steps:

1) When a prospective interviewer asks for a business plan, walk in with an outline, not a whitepaper.
2) Answer any questions, but keep the interview to two hours or fewer.
3) If the interviewer wants a more detailed plan for the next interview, tell the company that the detailed plan is what you'd be implementing at the company. Suggest that the company hire you to build a sales plan for a consulting fee. When you present the plan, the company will have four options:

            a) hiring you (the candidate) to implement the plan
            b) hiring someone else to implement the plan
            c) doing the plan in-house with current personnel 
            d) not doing anything at all

This is an approach I've used successfully when a prospect company wants me to do a lot of front-end work with no guarantee of a contract. About 50% of the time, I get a consulting contract, and eventually get their follow-on business, too.
Prospect companies aren't always disingenuous when they ask for a lot up front. Many times they are disorganized, have political issues, or internal disagreements about candidates and processes. But taking my approach does force them to come to the table with something in return for the time you (the candidate) spend on diagnosing their sales process. My friend and colleague Barry Mainz would refer to this approach as quid pro quo, and it's a closing technique that works just as well with prospective employers as it does for closing sales prospects on business.

It's an employer's market these days, but you'll gain a lot of respect by taking this approach, and you may get paid for your time, too. And it's is a good start to getting hired by that company. If they don't agree that you have a point, you may have what we call a "walk-away." You won't have lost anything, and will have gained some professional respect. Add this technique to your Best Management Practices playbook.

Comments

Providing consulting under the guise of a sales cycle is a huge issue in the professional services business. It never occurred to me that an employer would seek free consulting under the guise of a candidate interview process. Thanks for the enlightenment.  
 
 
 
These situations are very insidious. You start out with a meeting or two, and things escalate and before you know it, you’re delivering a (free) consulting engagement and you don’t know how to shut it down. It happened to me once and Johnson and Johnson. We easily spent $50,000 in consultant’s time on a “fake sales cycle.” We didn't get the deal, because their wasn't one. But of course, shame on us for ignoring our usual qualifying skills. We thought, "Hey, it's Johnson and Johnson .. they're huge" and we got careless about qualifying.  
 
 
 
Geoff, you provide some great advice for keeping one’s radar sensitive. The key is to put boundaries on the situation while finding a way to stay involved. And to keep qualifying. One thing I learned from my days in sales, qualifying the opportunity is never a one-time event. Things change and you have to make sure you don't stand still while the world around you moves on. Great post for people like me that tend to trust that prospects are doing the right thing. I've always been a bit naive when it comes to selling. You can't assume anything. It's exhausting -)  
 
Posted @ Monday, January 18, 2010 2:21 PM by Richard Fouts
I like what you said about qualifying not being a one-time event, Richard. Maybe the old Sales 101 adage about ABC (always be closing) should be changed to ABQ (always be qualifying).
Posted @ Monday, January 18, 2010 3:45 PM by Geoff Alexander
I've kicked myself more than once due to failure to continually ask qualifying question. Now I really appreciate a rep that says, "the last time we spoke, you were looking at making a decision next month. Has anthing changed?" I see good AEs always slipping in questions like this in a very non-offensive way, to keep the qualifying thing going. I really respect what sales people go through. It's the best job and it's the worse job. It's certainly the toughest job. 
 
 
 
As far as always be closing, wow...now there's a debate. My colleague and friend Nigel Edalshain has a rule he calls NBC, "never be closing." He doesn't believe in that old adage. Check him out sometime. His company is Sales 2.0.
Posted @ Monday, January 18, 2010 5:19 PM by Richard Fouts
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