Our son, now 9, watched The Lion King about 250 times between
the ages of 2 and 4, and saw the broadway show an additional 4
times between the ages of 3 and 6.
Then he got away from The Lion King, watching other shows and
movies that captured his attention instead.
This past weekend, for the first time in 5 years, he watched The
Lion King again - six times - and fell in love with it all over
again. Only now, the scenes and dialogue that captured his
attention are completely different than those he focused on years
ago. Could it be that his favorite new scenes and dialogue weren't
in the original movie?
Sales and sales management development is an ongoing process -
multiple sessions over a period of 8-12 months - followed by
periodic "refreshers". The reason for the refresher is that your
salespeople hear strategies, tactics, words and phrases that
weren't in the original training. The first time through, the
salespeople were the 9-year-olds, capturing what they could from
sales training, based on their context, reference points, and
experiences, which were limited and varied. Later, when being
refreshed, their context, reference points and experiences have
changed - for the better - because of the original training.
Now they recognize concepts that went over their head, that
their old beliefs wouldn't accept, and that they couldn't imagine
themselves actually doing months ago. Now they're experiencing
selling scenarios that had never previously occured and they need
strategies and tactics for these new levels they are approaching on
their sales calls and meetings.
You can watch a movie you haven't seen for a while and
appreciate the things you missed before. Your sales force will
experience the exact same benefits from rereading the book, having
refresher training, and focusing on the areas they didn't apply and
execute the first time around.
This
guest-post is by Dave Kurlan of www.omghub.com