As a senior sales officer charged with effecting business turnarounds for
bankrupt private and pre-IPO companies, I witnessed firsthand the importance of
core values. A strong set of core values is crucial to driving corporate
performance, and without them, companies suffer.
Core values define company culture, which is a big part of why they’re so
important to driving performance. We can represent the relationship this way:
core values → company culture → actions/performance
For any sales team, the primary objective is to predictably and consistently
produce sales, within budget and in accordance with our forecasts. Core values,
and the company culture they support, are the most important ingredient in
achieving predictability and consistency in the actions that bring about the
results we want.
Defining Core Values
Core values are simple action statements that express the business attributes
management upholds and believes will lead the company to success. They are not
vague proclamations such as “Do the right thing”—these can be interpreted at the
whim of management depending on temporary conditions and motives. Core values
should be specific and measurable. First, management should identify the desired
attribute it wants to support; then, the core value can be determined from that
starting point.
If, for example, management wants to emphasize financial responsibility, it
would have core values that address how employees operate in regard to the
finances of the company. Here are some examples:
“Don’t run out of cash, no matter what.” This core value keeps employees focused
on adhering to the expense budget
“Be
careful: a little success can create a lot of overhead.” This core value keeps
employees focused on not overly expanding their departments in good years when
there is excess income, putting the company at risk in slow years. This often
results in layoffs, which are to be avoided.
“Throwing money at a problem doesn’t work.” This core value forces managers to
think carefully through their plans to ensure a positive outcome within expense
budget guidelines. It reminds them that throwing money at a problem almost never
works, since it usually involves giving more funds to the people who created the
problem in the first place.
If management believes that execution is a key to success, its core values
would emphasize that the company values high performers. These core values might
include the following:
“Surround yourself with only high performers.” This core value keeps managers
focused on excellence in hiring and managing employees.
“Make it a challenge to get on board and difficult to leave.” This core value
defines the way the company hires and manages people. If management hires only
high performers, there will be few openings due to terminations for
underperformance. And if we manage them well, they will not want to leave the
company. The net result is a dedicated group of high performers.
If management values fairness—something every employee wants—this core value
could apply: “Always do the right thing for customers, employees, and
shareholders, and don’t take a position that favors one over the other.” This
sends a strong message that one group will not benefit at the expense of
another. For example, the company with this core value will not reduce sales
commissions to shift dollars to management with higher bonuses or shareholders
with higher dividends. This company will not increase prices to benefit
shareholders at the expense of customers. No single action should be taken to
benefit one group at the expense of another.
I once worked as a sales representative for a company that was not organized
around core values. As a result, management’s decisions varied from topic to
topic and from year to year. Management always said they “did the right thing,”
but the right thing mostly seemed to benefit management. For example, late one
year commissions were dramatically reduced to the sales force, and company
insiders leaked to the sales team that this was done so that senior management
could receive full bonuses that year. The sales force’s morale plummeted, as did
its sales numbers. The malaise continued until the company’s management was
replaced. If this company’s management had embraced a value of fairness for all
employees in published core values, this situation would not have existed.
Communicating Core Values
Once identified, core values should be published and posted throughout a
company. They can be reviewed in state-of-the-business meetings with all
employees or in any other suitable venue. When presenting them, it is important
to make an emotional connection between each core value and all employees.
Simply reading them to the staff or posting them without explanation is not
effective. Just reading the core value “Don’t run out of cash no matter what”
doesn’t mean much, as most employees cannot envision the company going bankrupt.
Instead, follow the presentation of that core value by asking the team, “Have
you ever known someone who didn’t receive a paycheck?” You will see hands shoot
up all through the audience. “If so,” you say, “they worked for a company that
didn’t have this core value.”
Presenting the core value this way makes an emotional connection, and
employees will remember it and be able to internalize it. When core values are
internalized, employees will understand them at a deep level, which in turn
promotes the desired culture. Further, to ensure employee commitment, each
employee should understand that violation of a core value will result in
disciplinary action.
Driving Performance
Companies and departments in companies are guided by mission statements,
which should define culture, drive performance, and be supported by the
company’s core values. The mission statements of departments can be more
specific than those of the whole company and can be used as a blueprint for
action. Here is a mission statement I used in one sales department: “Our mission
is to consistently and predictably support the corporate sales and profit goals
through efficient sales and servicing efforts while providing the highest degree
of customer satisfaction.” Once we had the mission defined, we looked to
identify the actions that would ensure its accomplishment. We identified three
guiding principles:
We will
obtain for the customer what they want, and we’ll do it better than any other
company.
We will
develop and maintain a sales management system that allows our representatives
to maximize selling time while spending the least amount of time in front of the
customer.
We will
develop and maintain a business environment for all sales department personnel
that will enhance pride in the company, confirm the value of long-term
relationships, and allow all employees the opportunity to reach their
professional goals better with us than they could with any other company.
Taking the guiding principles in reverse order, if we could accomplish item
three, we would attract and keep salespeople who were high performers. If we
accomplished number two, we would have an efficient sales process. Number one
addresses taking great care of the customer. In summary, if we could
successfully accomplish these three guiding principles of establishing a team of
high performers, maintaining an effective sales process, and taking great care
of the customer, then we would achieve our mission statement.
It is important to note that the mission statement and guiding principles
were supported by the published core values of this company. In this regard, the
published core values defined the culture and actions needed for success.
Culture, defined by core values, drove our performance. In this publicly traded
company we achieved or exceeded the sales plan for eighteen straight quarters,
which brought initial investors a ten-times return on their original investments
within three years of going public.
There is nothing more important in developing and maintaining powerful
businesses than establishing a winning culture base on published core values.
People want to work for companies that are governed by established principles
and management that supports them. Core values are where powerful businesses
begin, and smart management will diligently work to enhance their effectiveness.
John R. Treace has over 30 years experience as a sales executive in the
medical products industry. He spent over 10 years specializing in the
restructuring of sales departments of companies that were either bankrupt or
failing. Investor groups and venture capital firms hired him to manage
turnarounds of pre-IPO companies. In 2010 he founded JR Treace & Associates, a
sales management consulting business. He is a member of the National Speakers
Association and earned a BS in Psychology from the University of Memphis. Treace
is the author of the new book, Nuts & Bolts of Sales Management: How to Build a
High-Velocity Sales Organization. For more information, please visit
www.treaceconsulting.com.
Follow Us and Share
Get
free marketing, sales, advertising
and management ideas
delivered to your inbox.
Subscribe to the Business
Know-How
Newsletter
Primary Email Address:
Instant
Sales Letters
Stop wondering
what to say in a sales letter! Use these templates to
save hours of time composing your own sales letters. Profit from the
affiliate program, too.
Details >>
The information compiled on this site is Copyright 1999-2012 by Attard Communications, Inc. and by the individual authors.
Business Know-How is a woman-owned business and a registered trademark of Attard Communications, Inc.
Phone: 631-467-8883.