Three Ways Servant Leaders are Building Successful Sales Teams

By Max Cates, Author of Serve, Lead, Succeed!  https://booklocker.com/11051

Servant leadership. The term itself is contradictory. It’s an oxymoron. It’s counter-intuitive and goes against the conventional wisdom of hard-charging, charismatic sales leaders. On the surface it just doesn’t makes sense – how can a leader be a servant? And why would you want to be one? The answer is that dozens of multi-billion-dollar companies have found success in servant leadership. And an increasing number of sales managers are finding the same, turning their sales teams into high performing sales groups through servant leadership.

Servant leadership is not a strategy or management technique. It is an attitude. It is the selfless spirit of supporting, encouraging, coaching and defending your sales people. As a servant leader, you don’t relinquish your leadership authority, rather you amplify it exponentially. Do a Google search on “servant leadership” and you’ll find hundreds of definitions but few, if any, that applies to the sales profession. That’s because sales is, unfortunately, one of the few professions where servant leadership has not taken hold.

One of the oldest known quotes on leadership still applies to today’s sales manager: “A leader is best when people barely know he exists, not so good when people obey and acclaim him, worst when they despise him. Fail to honor people; they fail to honor you. But of a good leader, when his work is done, they will all say, ‘We did it ourselves.’” The speaker was philosopher Lao Tze speaking on servant leadership. The year was 500 BC. More than a passing fad, servant leadership continues to energize leaders around the world – from Southwest Airlines to Starbucks – delivering proven bottom line results. It is a discipline, a tough-love approach requiring character strength and self-confidence from the sales leader as well as accountability from the sales team.

I have interviewed highly-successful servant sales managers across the nation in various companies ranging from Amazon to Pfizer pharmaceuticals. Here are three ways these servant leaders are developing high-performance sales teams:

  • Improved retention rates – Servant leadership improves rep retention, helping keep experienced sales people on the payroll. According to a Baylor University study of 501 full time sales people, “Adopting an employee-oriented approach will improve turn-over intention, a common problem in sales.” By placing sales people’s needs as most important, “leaders serve as role models to their employees and reap the benefit of improved employee attitude and job satisfaction. While it may on the surface appear counter intuitive to place employee needs as a top priority, even above company objectives, this study, as well as supporting research, demonstrates that servant leadership has myriad benefits to the organization and is an effective tool to retain employees.” Servant leaders, according to the study, enhance “person-organization fit,” helping align reps with company values, beliefs and goals by including them in decision-making and collaboratively shaping the company’s value structure. Essentially, servant leaders help sales reps feel that they truly fit the organization and belong there. In addition, servant leadership increases the level of “organizational commitment” the attachment and identification the rep feels for the employer – this sense of employee dedication leads to “a deeper desire to stay with the organization.”
  • Increasing sales productivity – Southwest Airlines, one of the premier servant leader companies, has led the airline industry in profitability and productivity indices for many years. Herb Kelleher helped found the airline on the following premise: “Your employees come first. And if you treat your employees right, guess what? Your customers come back, and that makes your shareholders happy. Start with employees, and the rest follows from that.”A study by authors James Sipe and Don Frick showed 11 companies with servant leadership as a component of management strategy delivered a 17.5% return on stocks compared to 10.8% average return of the 500 largest publicly-held companies. A subsequent study showed companies with servant leadership as the predominant leadership strategy showed a 24.2% return. In addition, this and other studies have shown that servant leadership also improves relations with customers, ostensibly having the effect of improved sales and repeat sales. According to the researchers, “Essentially, employees learn to treat their customers by observing how their managers treat them.” This gives the servant leader a performance advantage that’s particularly important in sales where customer satisfaction is everything.
  • Reciprocity – The Law of Reciprocity, a basic sales practice, says people repay in kind what another person has provided. Just like we feel obligated to repay favors and gifts, subordinates are likely to reciprocate the kind of positive treatment received from a sales manager. The manager who respects sales people will likely receive respect from them – likewise for the following important factors (the more leaders give, the more they receive):

– Responsiveness

– Loyalty

– Encouragement

– Trust

– Honesty

It’s just human nature to want to return the favor of being treated well. The key thing is that it starts with the servant leader as the giver. In effect, reciprocity creates a powerful synergy that drives teamwork, enthusiasm, buy-in and commitment to company goals. However, this law is never a one-to-one ratio, so don’t expect immediate and equal reciprocity from your people. When the payback comes, you’ll probably see more of a two-to-one ratio: You give two times what you receive.

On the other side of the coin, we’ve all experienced the opposite of positive reciprocity which is negative reciprocity – which means your reps are likely to repay discourtesy with discourtesy, and reciprocate in kind as they receive distrust, condescension or ridicule.

Servant leadership isn’t for everyone – it takes sales managers who are bold, self-assured and confident in their abilities – but when applied with sincerity and selflessness, it has the potential to transform a sales group into a high-performance sales team.

Zig Ziglar, legendary speaker and author on sales effectiveness, captured the very essence of servant leadership by saying, “You will get all you want in life if you help enough other people get what they want.”

(For more on servant leadership and continuous sales improvement, see the book Serve, Lead, Succeed at: https://booklocker.com/11051). Connect with Max on LinkedIn.

Max Cates
Max Cates brings his 37+ years of successful sales leadership to help sales managers succeed through proven servant leadership strategies. He is an award-winning author, and nationally recognized sales leader. The author of three sales management books, Cates served in leadership positions with AT&T, United Telecommunications and Associated Electric, as well as being a professor in sales management at Webster University. Cates' educational background includes Executive Development at Wharton Business School, University of Pennsylvania; an M.A. from the University of Missouri School of Journalism; and a B. S. degree from Missouri State University. Max Cates brings his 37+ years of successful sales leadership to help sales managers succeed through proven servant leadership strategies.
Max Cates

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