Written By: Dave Manning
February 19, 2024 – 8 min read
When it comes to building market share and driving sales, leadership is key. Effective leaders inspire their teams by exemplifying organizational values, offering clear guidance, robust support, and nurturing a culture of continuous improvement, thus empowering field reps to excel across territories regardless of industry, market, or personal challenges. However, when it comes time to fill a leadership role, this question always arises: to hire the best, should we promote from within or bring in someone from another organization?
Not everyone is meant to lead, despite their tenure with the company or performance. When filling a sales leader position, it’s crucial to find the best candidate—someone who can inspire and mobilize a team to meet key business objectives while fostering professional growth within the ranks. This calls for a person with a distinct blend of hard and soft skills, sales and leadership experience, and specific personality traits.
While there is no hard-and-fast rule for when one approach is better, a few important factors can help to inform and guide the decision-making process and help to drive the right hire, whether that person is promoted from within the organization or brought in from the outside.
When filling a sales leader position, it’s crucial to find the best candidate…a person with a distinct blend of hard and soft skills, sales and leadership experience, and specific personality traits.
Whether you are looking at internal or external candidates, your organization should be identifying and evaluating individuals who demonstrate the hallmarks of an excellent sales leader. You goal should be to identify candidates who can help chart the course for the entire sales organization, develop individual team members and drive results through the strategic use of mentoring and coaching.
In my experience, the most effective leaders have both the skill sets and personality traits that are needed to bring out the best in their entire sales team.
Among the sought-after attributes, you should be looking for individual who demonstrate:
However, what really sets apart the strongest candidates are some of the less-celebrated traits, such as:
No matter the approach, when hiring the best leader, acknowledge that you are looking to fill gaps that may exist on the team, choose a sales leader who can articulate the vision and chart the course for the field reps, and develop the trust and rapport that is needed to get the team to follow.
If you’re lucky enough to have already one or more field reps who meet the requirements of an emerging leader on your team, congratulations! Hiring from within the ranks means you can bypass some of the inherent onboarding of someone new.
You’re also confident that the internal candidate already has strong product knowledge, is familiar with the culture and systems that are already in place, and is keenly aware of the competitive challenges and intricacies of the various sales territories. This means that the onboarding process associated with the promotion to leadership will be shorter and less costly, allowing you to concentrate on developing their leadership skills.
While there are solid upsides to promoting an internal sales rep to a leadership position, there may also be some downsides. Unless your organization already has a formal management training and succession planning program in place, the individual considered for promotion may not yet have had an opportunity to demonstrate the types of formal and informal leadership skills that are needed to succeed in the new role.
If you are thinking primarily about focusing on promoting just those field reps who are top performers in meeting quotas or growing their territories, think again. Not every top performer is equipped for leadership. If they don’t have the emotional intelligence, coaching abilities, and rapport to build trust and motivate others to be top performers, they won’t necessarily be the best candidates for a leadership role.
One of the strongest cases for hiring an external candidate for a leadership position is the opportunity to re-invigorate the existing sales organization. Given an external candidate meets the basic skill and knowledge requirement to do the job, they often bring a needed “fresh” perspective and insights to break from the status quo.
On the flip side, when filling a leadership position by hiring an external candidate, there will also be a learning gap that needs to be filled relative to the company, product, systems, processes and tools. There is also the risk that the new person won’t fit in with the culture or be accepted by the sales team.
Here are some recommendations to consider when starting the process of filling a leadership position:
Change is difficult for some and exciting for others. Anytime there is a change in leadership, there is bound to be a flood of mixed emotions among your existing field reps.
For instance, when you promote from within, you risk alienating team members who may feel they have been “passed over” for that opportunity. Some reps might feel frustrated or reluctant and need coaching to help improve their understanding of the situation and redirect their attitude. Similarly, others may feel threatened by, or mistrusting of, a new leader who is brought in from the outside. It’s critical to recognize and understand the emotions at play so they can be addressed head-on.
Leadership is half art and science. Business acumen is a must. The more a leader gets to know their team members personally, the better they’ll be, and the more their field reps will unite behind them.
Here are some tips for a smooth transition:
It will take time for the team to embrace a new leader. From the onset, the leader must build trust and rapport by connecting with each sales rep.
Leadership is half art and science. Business acumen is a must — however, there are human elements associated with strong leadership cannot be overlooked. The more any leader gets to know their team members personally — their wants, aspirations, motivations, and ongoing challenges — the better leaders they’ll be and the more their field reps will unite behind them. Sales reps who feel a genuine connection with their leader are more likely to go all in, in terms of supporting and trusting that the most recent hiring decision was the right one.
PDG CEO Insights is a monthly article series that provides a deeper dive into some of the most pressing challenges commercial leaders in the life sciences sector face in developing effective sales teams. The series will discuss strategies and recommendations to help commercial leaders foster and empower a more tightly integrated sales organization—one that is able to create a competitive advantage in the field and deliver a demonstrable return on investment for the company.
January 2024: The Power of Coaching—How to Drive Field Force Performance Excellence
Think about the best leader you’ve ever worked with. Chances are, they weren’t just technically skilled – they were also authentic, relatable, and […]
At its core, coaching in the flow of work is the practice of offering real-time guidance, support, and feedback within the context of daily tasks and […]
Empathy has emerged as a critical leadership skill, especially in today’s fast-changing and complex workplace environments. For leaders, practicing […]