Skip to main content

Growth Is A Leadership Issue, Not A Sales Issue

“Only you, as a senior leader, have the power to direct your company to continuous and sustainable success,” says Scott K. Edinger, author of the new book, The Growth Leader.

“Growth is a leadership issue, not a sales issue,” he adds. His book explains why that is true. And why the relationship that executives and leaders have with the sales organization is among the most important elements of growth leadership.

The Growth Leader reveals how top executives create profitable growth through the intersection of strategy, leadership, and sales. With a clear strategy, inspiring leadership, and aligned sales, powerful leaders understand that true competitive advantage doesn't come from innovation alone but belongs to companies that use their sales organization to add and create value.

By reading the book, you'll learn how to ensure growth strategy is aligned at every level of your company, from boardroom initiatives to daily customer interaction. 

More specifically, you’ll learn how to:

Identify points of IFimpact or failure— to find a way to use every circumstance to your advantage.

Transform your leadership communication style to inspire with the 3 Cs: Credibility, Clarity and Connection.

Digging deeper into sales, Edinger explains that:

If your revenues are driven by a sales organization, then the center of that drive—sales—should be at the heart of your company’s strategy. This means your salespeople, who interact directly with your customers as part of their core function, need to fully understand your strategy.

Your sales team needs clear direction about their role in creating value and how they can execute in a way that differentiates your business. They need clarity about what kind of business to pursue within your target markets and, equally as important, what to say away from because it is not a good match, even if they could make a sale.

Edinger also provides invaluable advice and techniques for how to move your sales team from transactional interactions and toward consultative relationships by:

  • Helping your customers with problems they don’t see.
  • Helping your customers with problems they don’t know are problems.
  • Helping your customers see hidden opportunities.
  • Helping your customers find solutions they haven’t considered.
  • Helping your customers connect with additional resources. 

A couple other key takeaways from Edinger’s incredibly helpful book are:

Leading results versus managing tasks is often a matter of distinguishing what to do from how to do it. When you lead results, you avoid the micromanagement trap and instill a sense of trust throughout the organization that helps people accomplish the tasks they own. 

Before others will accept what you have to say, they must perceive you as credible. Therefore, to develop and improve your credibility using these building blocks:

  • Honesty: tell the truth and don’t intentionally mislead.
  • Competence: Understand your business and display good judgement.
  • Vision. Have a clear idea of where you want to take the organization.
  • Inspiration: Demonstrate passion and energy. 

Scott K. Edinger

 

Today, Edinger shares these additional insights with us:  

Question: How do you become a Growth Leader? 

Edinger: It starts with where you focus your time, effort, and energy. With the pressure on profit, many executives get myopically focused on costs and the bottom line. To be a Growth Leader you must pay attention to the top line as well because you can’t cut your way to growth. And so many leaders, particularly those coming to general management roles from finance, technology, or operations, forget that the best way to strengthen the bottom line is with a strong top line and a healthy revenue stream. 

And if your revenue stream comes largely through a sales organization, that means you need to align your strategy with their actions to make sure they are executing in the market in a way that will help you grow. No product or service can sustain a competitive advantage on its own. When it comes to growth aspirations of many organizations, this is the missing link that suboptimizes at best or sabotages at worst. 

Question: Can you list the essential characteristics of an inspirational leader? 

Edinger: There are a lot of ways to inspire others. But in my research on leadership effectiveness one characteristic stands above them all and it’s the ability to make an emotional connection with those you lead. 

I’m always careful when I say that to a business audience and go out of my way to explain that I’m not talking about displaying excessive emotion, oversharing personal information, or getting into therapy sessions with your colleagues. Not being emotional but using the power of emotion to connect with others. This is everything from enthusiasm and energy, to concern or even anger (though too many leaders over-index on the anger,) to developing talent in others, and demonstrating integrity. 

It's the emotions you can evoke in others that enable you to bring out the best in them. After all, you are leading people. Not task focused automatons or robots. Logic makes people think but it’s emotion that makes them act. 

Question: What is the first step a business leader can take to start applying your advice tomorrow? 

Edinger: Get sales into the center of your strategy – not left off to the side. Look at your company strategy and see if the sales experience is in there. Company strategies overwhelmingly focus on competitive advantage in the form of the attractiveness of products and services or operational objectives. 

Make sure you answer the question: How does our sales experience create value for customers? It may not be easy at first, but if you work on this you will create an element of differentiation that considerably increases your odds of winning in the market. That’s your first step. Then you’ve got to start working toward making that a reality.

Thank you to the book’s publisher for sending me an advance copy of the book.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Playbook For Authentic Human Leadership

Julie Averill , the CIO behind lululemon’s rapid growth from $2 billion to $10 billion shares in her new book, Chief Impact Officer , a roadmap for executives and technology leaders navigating today's AI revolution and reveals why authentic human leadership is your competitive advantage.   Prior to lululemon, she led omni-channel and digital transformations at Nordstrom and REI, navigating system failures, crises, and the complicated work of integrating technology with business strategy at scale.   “Technology doesn’t transform companies. People do,” says Averill. “AI will amplify whatever leadership exists, strong or weak. The goal isn’t to build better workers. It’s to develop better humans who happen to do extraordinary work because you helped them become more capable, more confident, more fully themselves. That’s what this book is about.”   In the highly personal Chief Impact Officer , Averill pulls back the curtain on what happens when you try to transform a compan...

Business And Life Lessons My Father Taught Me

I post this every year on or near Father's Day because the business and life lessons my father taught me stay with me forever. What he taught me has served me well--even lessons I learned when I didn't at the time necessarily realize I was learning from him. So, I thank my dad for teaching me the following business and life lessons : Listen - Growing up, I thought my Dad was perhaps shy or quiet. Really, he was just a great listener. I believe that's what made him so wise. He would listen to anyone. Young or old. New acquaintance or friend. Provide - My Dad provided for me. Music lessons. Vacations. Summer camp. Boy Scouts.  He gave. He put others' needs first. Today, I find in volunteering likely the same satisfaction he felt when he provided for his family. Educate - My Dad's passion was education. He loved to learn. He loved even more to teach. He lived to help other people learn. In the workplace, providing learning opportunities is one of the most powerful ...

How To Work With Difficult Coworkers

Nearly everyone I know has shared a story about a difficult person they’ve encountered in their workplace. Experiencing difficult individuals in the workplace is common. So common that author Amy Gallo identifies eight archetypes , each representing a common type of “difficult” person likely found in most workplaces.  “We might lie awake at night worrying, withdraw from work, or react in ways we later regret—rolling our eyes in a meeting, snapping at colleagues, or staying silent when we should speak up,” says Gallo.   "Too often we grin and bear it as if we have no choice. Or throw up our hands because one-size-fits-all solutions haven't worked. But you can only endure so much thoughtless, irrational, or malicious behavior—there's your sanity to consider, and your career,” adds Gallo.   Fortunately, Gallo shares in her book, Getting Along , practical insights, tools, and techniques for how to get along with each type of difficult co-worker you’ll likely encounter....

Inspiring Leadership Quotes

           These quotes truly inspire me and hopefully they will inspire you as well : “The three common characteristics of best companies -- they care, they have fun, they have high performance expectations.” -- Brad Hams “The one thing that's common to all successful people: They make a habit of doing things that unsuccessful people don't like to do.” -- Michael Phelps “It is amazing what you can accomplish if you do not care who gets the credit." -- Harry S. Truman “The leader of the past was a person who knew how to tell. The leader of the future will be a person who knows how to ask.” -- Peter Drucker “Leadership: The art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.” -- Dwight D. Eisenhower “Good leadership isn't about advancing yourself.  It's about advancing your team.” -- John C. Maxwell "People buy into the leader, then the vision.” -- John C. Maxwell “Great leaders have courage, tenacity and patience.” -- B...

How To Uncover Your Blindspots To Become A Better Leader

What you don't see about yourself can hold you back as a leader. That's typical for many leaders. What we don't see is what we  can't  see: we have  blindspots . Your blindspots prevent you from achieving your greatest success.  “It turns out that we're often not great judges of ourselves, even when we think we are. Sometimes we're simply unaware of a behavior or trait that's causing problems,” explains  Martin Dubin , author of the new book,  Blindspotting: How To See What’s Holding You Back As A Leader . “Bottom line: until we uncover these blindspots, we can't move forward. The good news is that you can learn to do your own  blindspotting .”   “Most of us understand the idea of blindspots in a general sense—areas we can’t see, to take the term most literally, or places we have gaps that we may not even realize, to be a little more abstract,” says Dubin.  “But in the context of this book, I’m defining blindspots quite specifically: They are...

How To Harness Your Experiential Intelligence

“Experiential Intelligence provides a new lens from which to view what makes you, you—and what makes your team and organization unique,” says Soren Kaplan , author of the book, Experiential Intelligence . Kaplan explains that over 100 years ago, we established IQ (Intelligence Quotient) to predict success. Then we explored Emotional Intelligence (EQ), the theory of multiple intelligences, and mindsets that broaden the definition of smarts.   “Today, Experiential Intelligence ( XQ ) expands our understanding of what's needed to thrive in a disruptive world. While you can't change the past, your unique experiences and stories contain hidden strengths and untapped potential for the future,” explains Kaplan.   Experiential Intelligence is the combination of mindsets, abilities, and know-how gained from your unique life experiences that empowers you to achieve your goals. It allows you to get in touch with the accumulated wisdom and talents you have gained over time through your ...

How To Do Great Work In A Fast-Changing World

  Today brings the new book, Effective: How To Do Great Work In A Fast-Changing World , by Melissa Swift . “Effectiveness is where employer and employee interests come together—you want to be great at accomplishing the goals of your job, and your employer wants that too,” explains Swift. “It’s also a place where we can bring together different organizational and developmental thinking to help move people to action.”   In the book, Swift, founder of Anthrome Insight , draws on current research and provocative interviews with business and academic leaders to help readers understand how to be amazing in a working world seemingly designed to make us feel incompetent.   Each chapter in Effective delivers actionable approaches, enabling readers to improve their daily work life immediately with a paradigm-shifting framework for thriving rather than merely coping in modern professional environments.   The book serves professionals at every level of seniority, from e...

Classical Wisdom For Modern Leaders

Mark your calendars now to check out the November 2014 release of, The Ten Golden Rules of Leadership:  Classical Wisdom for Modern Leaders . You'll step back in time to learn philosophies of the past and how to apply them today. Authors M. A. Soupios and Panos Mourdoukoutas offer a fresh approach to becoming a great leader by learning from antiquity's great thinkers, such as Aristotle, Hesiod, Sophocles, Heraclitus, and others. Each chapter in the book is devoted to one philosophy of leadership that equate to ten simple rules : Know Thyself Office Shows the Person Nurture Community at the Workplace Do Not Waste Energy on things You Cannot Change Always Embrace the Truth Live Life by a Higher Code Always Evaluate Information with a Critical Eye Never Underestimate the Power of Personal Integrity Character is Destiny You'll learn how to take each idea and apply it to the challenges of the modern workplace. According to the authors, the key disti...

The Fundamentals Of Market Engineering

  “Most companies don’t fail because their product is substandard. They fail because the market doesn’t understand, care, or believe in what they’re selling,” explains Bruce Cleveland , author of the new book, Market Engineering . He adds that this dilemma is “because somewhere between the product development and the customer, the story got lost, the positioning drifted, or their category was defined by somebody else and the market went to another company.” That means, every year, startups and enterprises pour millions into building world-class products--only to watch them disappear into obscurity.  In the book, Silicon Valley veteran Cleveland reveals the discipline behind market-dominating companies like Salesforce, Marketo, and C3 AI. Drawing on decades of experience as an operator, investor, and board member, Cleveland demonstrates how leaders can apply the same rigor to markets that they bring to products. You'll discover how to: Compel markets to come to you instead of c...

How To Achieve Diversity, Equity, Inclusion And Belonging Within Your Company

Today brings the new book, All Are Welcome: How to Build a Real Workplace Culture of Inclusion that Delivers Results , by Cynthia Owyoung . “This playbook is really for any leader of an organization that wants to drive change. This is your playbook for how to approach DEIB (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging) work in a way that will support real progress in your company,” says Owyoung.  Studies prove that companies with more diversity in their ranks are more innovative, expand their markets, and perform better financially. Why, then, has so little progress been made, especially when it comes to corporate leadership? Because most companies have yet to develop and implement effective diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB) initiatives. And the ones that have too often focus mainly on hiring a diversity of staff or rolling out unconscious bias training without improving results.  Owyoung offers these definitions:  Diversity in the context of a work...