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Professional Builder

Are Your Newly Hired Sales Agents Really Ready to Sell Your Homes?

John Rymer -- 9/1/2008

Sidebars:
Rymer's Rules

A consequence of the current new home sales environment is high turnover among sales professionals. Whether the turnover is voluntary or involuntary, the outcome is the same: many new sales offices today are staffed by agents who were employed elsewhere just a few weeks or months ago. The more important issue is the readiness of your newly hired sales agents to make every sale possible.

Far too many newly hired sales agents are not prepared to answer basic questions, let alone consummate a sale. Consider actual questions to sales professionals I have witnessed in the last month:

In each case the answer was the same: “I'm new here, and I'll need to get back to you with that answer.”

For an industry that is suffering from a lack of sales, we are behaving today as if the representatives to our customers need to have no more training than the clerk at the local department store!

When you have high sales agent turnover, you need to invest more time in training. Begin with mandatory five-day knowledge and sales skills requirements for sales professionals to complete prior to staffing a sales office. Don't be afraid to close a sales office for training. Break down the course work into the following areas:

Sales turnover can be painful. But there is no excuse for having uninformed and untrained sales professionals representing your company.


Author Information
John Rymer is the founder of New Home Knowledge, which offers sales training for new home builders and real-estate professionals. You can reach him at john@newhomeknowledge.com.

 

Rymer's Rules

Close the sales office until the new agents are trained 
It's a small price to pay for an informed, knowledgeable sales professional.

Train more if you have high turnover rates 
Investing in training today will pay off handsomely tomorrow.

Combine sales skills and knowledge-based training 
Knowing processes and specifications are essential for new hires. But don't delay sales skills training. Both are required for sale success.

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