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RainmakerThinking is proud to present edited excerpts from Bruce
Tulgan's new book, Winning the Talent Wars
(coming January 22, 2001 from W.W. Norton).
After enduring an elaborate selection process, Rick was hired as a
territory manager for Ecolab, Inc., a $3 billion-a-year sanitation
products company. He was told his job was to visit customers in his
territory and increase product sales. During his training at a
company-run facility, he received mostly sales-related product
information, but a surprising amount of the training was on equipment
maintenance. Rick continued his training through the next few months,
first alongside another territory manager and then his regional
manager. Ecolab was really making an investment in Rick.
Here's the catch: Rick's job wasn't really a sales job. Whenever
customers had problems with Ecolab equipment, they would contact
Rick to repair it. Despite his training, Rick wasn’t a skilled
mechanic. He was told, "It takes time. You’ll get the hang of it." And
he did. But Rick still wasn’t a mechanic. And his incentives were
tied to increasing sales, not fixing machines. "That’s just part of
the job," he was told. Well, it’s hard to find people skilled at both
sales and mechanics. But at some point, Ecolab decided to combine the
two roles. And it’s harder to convince a skilled mechanic to do
mid-level repairs and sales than it is to get a salesperson who is
willing to learn and perform mid-level mechanical tasks.
Don't let your training investment walk out the door forever.
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In the workplace of the past, Ecolab could expect Rick to stay long
enough to get good at mechanical tasks. Even if Rick felt the job was
a poor fit, he would have paid his dues for a few years anyway. After
all, if he quit before then, it would have been a black mark on his
resume. But in the free market for talent, Rick sold his Ecolab
training, experience and customer relationships to another company:
Sofco, Inc., a $200-million-a-year paper goods company. The hiring
manager at Sofco saw right away that his company could reap the
dividends of Ecolab’s investment in Rick. In his new job at Sofco,
Rick just sells. His rewards are tied to his sales performance and he
is earning good bonuses every quarter. It's a great fit.
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