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If you have high expectations of your sales team, here are a few key strategies you can apply to help them deliver.

Pressure-proofing your sales team is crucial in today’s high-pressure sales domain, where the expectations to perform are relentless.

This pressure doesn’t just come from leadership; it’s also driven by the dynamic market environment, technological advancements, fluctuating interest rates and unexpected competition. Customer preferences are in a constant state of flux, demanding more for less and pushing sales professionals to their limits.

Resilient teams that are well-equipped to handle setbacks and change are more engaged and perform better.

However, the magnitude of pressure doesn’t determine a sales team’s success; rather, it is determined by how well they navigate it. Resilience is the key. It allows teams to grow from challenges, reduce stress and maintain job satisfaction.

Without resilience, sales professionals may succumb to rumination, procrastination, avoidance or demotivation. In contrast, resilient teams that are well-equipped to handle setbacks and change are more engaged and perform better.

Let’s delve into the research-based strategies that differentiate pressure-proofed sales teams, who achieve long-term performance and thrive in today’s ever-changing environment.


1. Strengthening Resilience

Resilience isn’t just the ability to bounce back from setbacks; it’s the ability to grow from adversity and emerge stronger. Sales teams can cultivate resilience by fostering an optimistic mindset, which encourages problem-solving, perseverance and action.

This flex in thought isn’t about ignoring challenges but about framing them in a way that allows for growth. It’s about seeing setbacks as opportunities to learn and improve.


2. Learning Optimism

Optimism energizes performance and encourages persistence in the face of setbacks. By being optimistic, salespeople can seize opportunities and better prepare themselves for challenges. It can be about focusing on what can be controlled rather than what can’t.

By being optimistic, salespeople can seize opportunities and better prepare themselves for challenges.

It doesn’t mean being blindly optimistic and ignoring the challenges but rather having a realistic understanding of the situation and a belief in one’s ability to navigate it successfully.


3. Fostering High Quality Networks

High-quality relationships support sales professionals during tough times. Nurturing these relationships, both with colleagues and clients, is important given the impact they have on energy and stress levels. This involves not just building relationships, but also maintaining them.

It’s about being there for one another, providing support and creating a sense of belonging. Additionally, creating a psychologically safe environment among sales teams allows for collaboration, learning, creativity, problem-solving and innovation, which are key to overcoming challenges.


4. Playing to Strengths

Recognizing and leveraging individual strengths allows sales teams to draw upon their own internal resources when faced with hurdles. Despite the challenges, this can deepen engagement and satisfaction and empower peak performance.

By adopting these principles, sales teams will not only survive but thrive in today’s competitive marketplace.

This is not about ignoring weaknesses, but rather focusing on what individuals are good at, what they enjoy and what energizes them. It’s about finding ways to use strengths to not only overcome challenges but achieve success, too.


5. Uncovering Purpose

Understanding the purpose behind their work motivates sales teams to persist and adapt in an increasingly complex sales environment. When aligned on purpose, sales teams tend to support one another more, fostering a sense of unity. Individuals have a need to contribute to something greater than themselves.

So, it’s vital that sales teams can find meaning in the work they do. This is what can pull them through tough times.


6. Setting Clear Goals

Clear goals provide direction for sales teams. Even during difficult times, they know what they are working toward and why it matters. Yet teams need to be motivated to achieve their goals. And motivation can wane when environments are challenged.

Sales teams are motivated when they have some choice in their work, when they become the best they can be or when they collaborate with others. This clarity can help reduce stress and increase motivation, leading to better performance.

Through resilience, optimism, relationships and purpose, sales teams will be more able to navigate the challenges of their roles.

The six factors outlined above provide the strategies to pressure-proof your sales team and set them up to succeed. By adopting these principles, sales teams will not only survive but thrive in today’s competitive marketplace.

Through resilience, optimism, relationships and purpose, sales teams will be more able to navigate the challenges of their roles, cope well with the pressure, and be on the pathway to long-term success.

Anna Glynn

Contributor Collective Member

Anna Glynn is a speaker, author and coach with a deep understanding of sales leadership and positive psychology. Having worked for a decade in the corporate sector, including leading national sales teams, Anna knows what it’s like to be responsible for driving performance in the workplace. She has worked with a number of global organizations in a range of industries supporting them to build sales cultures that thrive. ‘STRONG: How the best sales leaders engage, achieve, and thrive’ is her first book. Discover more at https://annaglynn.com.au/

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