Sales POP - Purveyors of Propserity
Freedom, Liberty and Sales Teams
Blog / Entrepreneurs / May 23, 2017 / Posted by Nikolaus Kimla / 6124

Freedom, Liberty and Sales Teams

0 comments

Continuing our series on the comparison between the American War of Independence and today’s world of sales and commerce, in this post we’re going to have a look at what was probably at the heart of the American Revolution: freedom and liberty.

“Freedom” in the Colonies

First, let’s have a quick examination of what America looked like just after the revolution, right around 1783. The population was only about 4 million in the just-birthed United States of America. Only about 10 percent of this number lived in its 4 major cities: Philadelphia, Boston, New York, and Charleston. The remainder, and the far majority, lived in rural areas and comprised small communities.

Today the word freedom has a different connotation than it did at the time of the revolution. There was a term common at that time: “public good.” Public good meant the greater good of the community, in these little communities where most people lived.

Individual versus Community Freedom

Why were the colonists fighting the Redcoats? They wanted freedom; they no longer wanted some far-away king ruling them. But it wasn’t the individual that wanted freedom so much as they wanted freedom for their communities–for the “public good.” And of course they wanted freedom for their states, and then the colonies as a whole.

Here is where a different connotation for the word “freedom” shows up. If you simply ask someone on the street today what “freedom” means, they’ll say, “It means I can do whatever I want, whenever I want, and no one will ever tell me what to do.” That isn’t what the word meant back in 1783. It actually had a similar definition as another word used quite a lot back then: “liberty.” It was a freedom for communities to live and thrive. This of course meant that freedom had its companion, responsibility (to others, to the community) without which freedom cannot truly exist.

Interestingly, we can see that in a similar way to “freedom,” the definition of the American Dream has also gone through a radical shift. Today it means to most people, “I get rich and rise above everyone else.” Looking at it through the colonist lens, we can see that it, too, had a group connotation as opposed to an individual one.

As a side note, we must also realize that “freedom” would have meant something else to the colonists, for their thinking was heavily influenced by religion, especially Calvinism. Calvinism taught, “We are not our own. We are God’s.” So they didn’t think first of their own individual freedom.

So we can see that there is quite a difference between freedom as a right (“freedom to…” as dictated by our Constitution) and freedom as license to “do whatever I want.”

Translation to Sales

This same mix-up of meanings can also occur in sales. Many become salespeople because of the lure of freedom: freedom from being tied to a desk, freedom to control your own income, and a relative freedom to make your own decisions. But we can see that in this context, just as in the context of the colonists, freedom does not mean being able to do whatever one wants, whenever one wants. It’s a freedom for the company (like the “community” in the colonists’ example) to succeed and to thrive. And just as the individual colonist did, the salesperson has a responsibility to the company–a salesperson’s “community.”

The sales manager helps steer a salesperson’s freedom in the community, so that the salesperson is progressing for the “greater public good.” And what is the “public good” for a company? It is growing revenue for the purpose of the company, continually establishing it to serve the customers.

Here we come back to management philosopher Fredmund Malik, who tells us that the “public good” for a company is the value of its customers, not shareholder value. Out of the customer value a company is generating real revenue and, at the end, profit.

Not Without a Struggle

No freedom nor liberty comes about without a fight. The United States of America did not come about without a war, a series of hard battles. Anyone seeking to establish a sales team or a company is likewise not going to do so without a struggle. Just as Great Britain was fighting to keep the colonists from having their own country, you’re going to have competitors working hard to keep you from establishing a foothold in your industry, from making a name for your product or service, and creating customer value.

In fact I have previously made a strong case that building a sales team is much like creating battle-ready troops. Check out my ebook Leading from the War Room: Building a Battle-Ready Sales Force.

Principles In Our Product

Interestingly, our product Pipeliner CRM was based on these principles. Certainly a salesperson can use the product by himself or herself, but that is not why it was built. It is produced with the group, the sales team, as its foundation. All of its features–the pipeline view, profiles, reports, and performance insights just to name a few–were designed with a team and sharing firmly in mind.

Pipeliner also differs from traditional CRM applications in that it isn’t designed so that managers see data that salespeople cannot see. It is totally transparent–the data seen at the top is the same data as seen on a salesperson level.

Pipeliner can be seen as an iceberg, where the obvious features are above water, but the principles (the major part of the iceberg) is underwater, not seen, but are most important. Freedom is one of those principles. Find out more in the ebook Facing Forward: Today’s Sales Mindset.

Pipeliner is sharing, and for learning to live in prosperity and freedom for the community. For a salesperson this means continually creating that customer value.

About Author

CEO and partner of pipelinersales.com and the uptime ITechnologies, which I founded in 1994 and has since played a significant role in the development of the IT-environment. pipeliner is the most innovative sales CRM management solution on the market. Pipeliner was designed by sales professionals for sales professionals and helps close the gap between the requirements of C-level executives for transparency and the day-to-day operational needs of field and inside sales. I am also the founder and Initiator of the independent economic platform GO-AHEAD!, which orientates itself on the principles of a free marketplace in terms of liberal and social responsibility. Connecting people, the trust of business leadership in terms of values such as freedom, self-responsibility, and entrepreneurial spirit, and strengthening their awareness in order to create a dynamic boost within the economy triggered through spontaneity, all stand for the initial ideas surrounding GO-AHEAD! I studied in Los Angeles and Vienna and received my Masters's Degree in 1994. I am married and have 3 children My Specialties are in: Sales Management, Sales CRM Software, CRM Cloud Solutions, SAAS, Business Strategy, Software Development, "Pipeline Management", Social responsibility, outbound sales, b2b sales, inside sales, sales strategy, lead generation, sales process, entrepreneurship, coaching, mentoring, speaker, opportunity management, lead management, Austrian School of Economics

Author's Publications on Amazon

This is a practical manual covering the vital subject of Sales Management. I firmly believe that sales are the most important profession for dealing with today’s turbulent world and Econo my, for salespeople create wealth and produce peace. But salespeople need a competent, stable leader—and…
Buy on Amazon
Inside this eBook, you’ll discover a series of chapters dedicated to some of the most important areas facing sales today. From the sales process definition to measurement, lead generation, and proven sales techniques, this comprehensive eBook will provide you with the information you need to…
Buy on Amazon
A common term in sales today is EQ, which stands for “emotional I.Q.” It means the skill a salesperson has in reading emotions and utilizing them in sales. It means empathy and a number of other abilities. The short version is, it’s an I.Q. when…
Buy on Amazon
People are smart to question the future of automation, for it has become part of everything we do. With the quantity of applications and technology around us, we yet still crave more. We become convinced of its power when our package is delivered from Amazon…
Buy on Amazon
Sales management isn’t a simple subject by any means. But at the same time, it does have some basic and somewhat simple fundamentals—and that is what we are bringing to you with this book. First come pain points of sales management, and how to overcome…
Buy on Amazon
Today the Internet has transformed a seller's market into a buyer's market and author Nikolaus Kimla states that the role of sales has never been more crucial. It is now time to give salespeople the role they factually can play: entrepreneurs within the enterprise. They…
Buy on Amazon
This is our public declaration of the intentions behind Pipeliner, and our objectives and motives for the product and for our company. Behind the development of that CRM application and, in fact, behind everything we do, we have a real cause. The story begins with…
Buy on Amazon
For the future, there must be a perfect balance of humans and technology. You have to have the perfect technology, andthen the perfect human being in application, performance and presentation. Today and into the future, it’s a 50-50 balance. In the past it was perhaps…
Buy on Amazon
The salespreneur is based on the concept of the entrepreneur. Before we can explain the salespreneur, you have to have some understanding of the entrepreneur. The entrepreneur plays a crucial role in any economic system. The entrepreneur seeks out information that can be utilized for…
Buy on Amazon
A seasoned captain would never leave port without a competent navigator. In a similar way, a sales manager might be a total ace at "commanding the ship" – at inspiring and coaching sales reps, pointing out and getting agreement on making quotas, and keeping everyone's…
Buy on Amazon
Comments

..
..
.
Sales Process Automation
.
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. For information on cookies and how you can disable them, visit our privacy and cookie policy.