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Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
In Field Sales Driving is Not an Accomplishment (Money Monday)

In Field Sales Driving is Not an Accomplishment (Money Monday) 1m3n4z

2/6/2025 · 12:33
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Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount

Descripción de In Field Sales Driving is Not an Accomplishment (Money Monday) 2d3t72

If you are spending more time staring at your windshield instead of looking into their customers' eyes, you are doing field sales wrong.  Over the past couple of years, there's been a resurgence in field sales. Businesses everywhere are adding field salespeople and sending reps out into the territory to meet with customers face-to-face.  And for good reason – human beings buy from human beings. The most powerful way to anchor relationships, solve problems, and sell more is to actually get in front of your customers. With AI creating so much noise in the system, it's getting harder to prospect via email and social media. Going out and knocking on doors has become an easier way to connect with people, build relationships, and open up opportunities in your pipeline.  And the good news, at least for now is that prospects are happy to see field sales pros and inviting them in.  But with the resurgence of outside sales comes an age-old problem: Field salespeople have got to travel to get to customers. And here's the brutal reality – the single greatest waste of time for field sales professionals is staring at a windshield. On this Money Monday segment of the Sales Gravy Podcast I'm going to teach you exactly how to minimize windshield time and maximize face time. Because at the end of the day, you don't get paid to drive. You get paid to sell. The Windshield Time Delusion Too many reps delude themselves into believing that driving from one place to another is "working." Let's get something straight – driving is not an accomplishment. I don't care if you put 100 miles on your vehicle in a day. That doesn't mean you accomplished anything meaningful. It just means you drove from one place to the next, burning dinosaurs and wasting time. I see this all the time. Reps will drive to one customer, then drive all the way across their territory to another customer, instead of concentrating their work in a single geographical area.  They'll dead-head out to an appointment, then drive all the way back to the office, pas dozens of prospects they could have walked into along the way. Don’t confuse activity with productivity. They think because they drove all over creation, doesn’t mean you had a productive day.  Your job is to be in front of customers, not behind a steering wheel. Every minute you spend staring at your windshield is a minute you're not building relationships, solving problems, putting new opportunities in the pipe or closing deals. The Mathematics of Effective Field Sales Territory Management  Let me put this in perspective with some simple math that will blow your mind. Let's say you're a typical field sales rep working in a moderate-sized territory. You make five customer visits per day, and between poor route planning and territory management, you spend an average of 45 minutes driving between each appointment. That's 3 hours and 45 minutes of windshield time daily. Over a five-day work week, that's 18 hours and 45 minutes of non-productive driving time. That's nearly half of your work week spent accomplishing absolutely nothing. Now, let's say you tighten up your territory management and reduce that drive time to 20 minutes between appointments through better planning. You're now down to 1 hour and 40 minutes of windshield time daily, or 8 hours and 20 minutes weekly. You just freed up over 10 hours per week. That's enough time for 15-20 additional customer visits or prospect calls. Over a month, that's 60-80 more customer touchpoints. Over a year, that's 720-960 additional opportunities to build relationships and generate revenue. The reps who figure out how to minimize windshield time don't just have better work-life balance – they absolutely dominate their territories and blow past their quotas while their competitors are still driving around aimlessly. Map Your Territory Into Quadrants This is why the first rule of field sales is getting your territory mappe... 2t5r5w

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