Thereâs a simple explanation for this. Â Making proactive sales calls is a high risk effort that requires initiative, motivation and self-discipline. Â In other words, itâs hard to do. Â Thatâs one of the reasons why most people arenât sales people. Â On the other hand, taking care of âother stuffâ is usually low-risk, easier and somewhat fulfilling. Â And, it keeps you
busy.
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Thatâs why, âWhen you give a proactive sales person âother stuffâ to do, the other stuff will always expand, taking more in time and energy than you anticipated, and rendering the proactive sales efforts to an unacceptable smaller part of the personâs labors.â Â Itâs the law of OSE.
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In a bigger picture, OSE for sales personnel is just the specific application of a deeper rule. Â That rule is this: Â When you give someone something to do, you are, by that act, preventing him/her from doing something else. Â
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Or, to be more personal, when we accept the responsibility for doing something, we, by that action, eliminate the possibility of our doing something else.Â
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What sounds blatantly obvious is open reflection, so often violated that it has become one of the major productivity killers, and one of the most common mistakes made today by managers and self-managers of all kinds. Â
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Here are two solutions:
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a. If you have given, or are tempted to give, anyone who has proactive sales responsibilities, other things to do â donât! Â There is always a greater cost than meets the eye. Â If you are a salesperson who has other stuff to do, try to hand it back to your manager or pass it on to someone else. Â
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Be very careful about giving responsibilities, or accepting responsibilities, that detract from your core focus. Â In todayâs hectic, multi-tasking world, it is more powerful to say ânoâ than it is to say âyes.â
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b. OK, you canât do that. Â For whatever reason, your sales personnel must also do other stuff. Â Plan B. Â Keep the division between the two sets of competing responsibilities as clean and sharp as you can. Â So, the other stuff should be well defined, have clear guidelines for completion, and be limited to a specific period of time. Â
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So, for example, donât say this:  âJohn, we want you to do this other stuff.â  Instead say, âJohn, Iâd like you to spend œ day every other week doing this other stuff.â
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By keeping the divisions clear between the competing responsibilities, you limit the damage done by other stuff expansion.Â
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In the long run, itâs those organizations and individuals who focus on the core tasks and donât diffuse their efforts who succeed.