• The Future Of Sales, with Steve Heroux
    Sep 23 2024
    In this episode, Shannon Waller and guest Steve Heroux discuss the importance of sales coaching and understanding Sales DNA profiles. Steve addresses the negative perceptions of sales and the challenges entrepreneurs face in hiring effective salespeople, and offers actionable insights to transform sales culture. Tune in for a fresh perspective on finding and nurturing great sales talent! Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Effective sales coaching is essential for developing a high-performing sales team and should focus on individual strengths and weaknesses. Understanding the Sales DNA profile can help identify the unique strengths of salespeople, allowing for tailored coaching and training strategies. The sales profession often suffers from a negative perception, with many seeing salespeople as pushy or manipulative, which can hinder effective selling. Sales leaders play a crucial role in shaping the culture and practices of their sales teams. Poor leadership can perpetuate negative stereotypes about sales. Finding the right salespeople is challenging, which means entrepreneurs must prioritize hiring individuals who align with the company's values and customer needs. One-size-fits-all training programs are ineffective. Custom training based on the Sales DNA profile can lead to better results. Trust is a critical component in sales. Building genuine relationships with clients can counteract the negative stereotypes associated with sales. Many entrepreneurs struggle with sales because they excel in product development but lack sales expertise, leading to potential business failures. Defining an ideal customer profile helps sales teams focus their efforts on prospects that are more likely to convert and benefit from the product or service. Teaching salespeople to say no to unsuitable prospects is vital; just because someone is willing to buy doesn't mean they should. Salespeople are motivated by personal goals and family needs. Leaders should align company objectives with these motivations to foster engagement. There is a need for a cultural shift in how sales is perceived and practiced, moving away from aggressive tactics to a more consultative approach. Providing sales teams with the right tools and resources, including training and technology, is essential for empowering them to succeed. The sales landscape is constantly evolving; ongoing training and development is necessary to keep sales teams competitive. Focusing on building long-term relationships with clients rather than short-term sales can lead to greater success and customer loyalty. Resources: The Sales Collective Steve Heroux on LinkedIn Book: Sales Is Not a Dirty Word: The Definitive Guide for Success in Sales by Steve Heroux Book: To Sell Is Human: The Surprising Truth About Persuading, Convincing and Influencing Others by Daniel Pink Book: Start With Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action by Simon Sinek Book: The End of Average: How We Succeed in a World That Values Sameness by Todd Rose Book: Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones by James Clear Unique Ability® The Kolbe A™ Index CliftonStrengths®
    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 22 mins
  • From Conflict To Courage, with Marlene Chism
    Sep 5 2024
    In this episode of Team Success, host Shannon Waller is thrilled to talk with special guest Marlene Chism, an expert on workplace drama and how to handle it effectively. Their long discussion is full of great communication and listening strategies to help you have that difficult discussion you’ve been avoiding. Shannon highly recommends all senior leaders read Marlene’s latest book, From Conflict to Courage: How to Stop Avoiding and Start Leading, for more practical wisdom on managing conflict at work. Listen now to find out the three words that heal any conflict. Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: The Karpman Drama Triangle consists of three roles: Victim: Feels powerless and blames others. Persecutor: Lashes out and is hard to get along with. Rescuer: Tries to fix everything for others. Denial: Added by Marlene in the center for Avoiders who say, “I don’t do drama.” People aren’t just one thing; they cycle through each regularly. Getting out of the drama triangle means becoming a Creator. Regulation Before Resolution: Regulating your emotions before approaching conflict allows you greater clarity, empathy, and a solution-oriented mindset. Emotional Awareness And Emotional Integrity: Accept that you have negative feelings. Represent yourself and your own feelings, not anyone else’s. Responsible Language: Ask questions. Speak to the vision. Focus on the outcome you want. Avoid generalization, blame, resentment, lack of choice, and justification. Radical Listening: Acknowledge the other person’s feelings: “It sounds like … ” Similar to Chris Voss’s “Tactical Empathy.” Similar to the Collaborative Way’s “Generous Listening.” Avoid trying to come up with a solution. Avoid telling a related story about yourself. Notice your own emotions without expressing them. “Don’t argue with other people’s feelings.” —Shannon Waller The Inner Game: External conflict starts when there is internal conflict. “Drama: the obstacle to peace or prosperity.” —Marlene Chism Work on your own clarity first because “the one with clarity navigates the ship, and everyone else shovels coal.” Be self-aware without being self-obsessed. Fulcrum Point Of Change: Nothing happens until you are willing to release your resistance to change. The “story” in your head about what is happening is the source of your suffering, not the other person, not the situation. Three-part approach for leaders: Establish a foundation: Examine what’s happening that shouldn’t happen to go into conversation with intention. Achieve leadership and employee clarity: Have the conversation and come to an agreement. Maintain accountability: Follow up two weeks after conversation. Specific strategies for difficult conversations: State intentions up front to reduce anxiety and defensiveness. Keep the discussion focused on constructive outcomes. Focus on the opposite of the issue to create a positive intention. Address observed behaviors and their impact rather than making accusations or generalizations about a person’s character. Use company values and vision to guide the intentions. Share the “story” you’re telling yourself about the situation. Say, “Walk me through what your perspective is.” Ask, “What do you want?” and “Would you be willing … ?” When you get denial or defensiveness: “That may be, but here’s what I need.” Three common responses to conflict are the 3 A’s: Aggression, Avoidance, and Appeasing. Resistance is almost always based on the need to be right. Three magic words that will heal any conflict: “You were right.” The “LABOR” principles for difficult conversations: L Ask for what you want. set B Own your stuff. Represent yourself. Major organizational problems can often be traced back to conversations that should have happened but didn’t. Strategic Coach® Tools For Clarity: Use The Impact Filter™ to get your thoughts do...
    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Building Winning Global Teams, with Sunny Kaila
    Aug 22 2024
    In this episode, Shannon interviews IT By Design founder Sunny Kaila, who shares his inspiring journey from taxi driver to successful entrepreneur and offers insights on leveraging talent markets and expanding businesses internationally. Tune in to discover his proven strategies for multicultural collaboration, and learn how to access global talent to drive your business forward. Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Sunny shares his story of moving from India to New Jersey at 17, working various jobs to support his family, and eventually putting himself through college to study computer engineering. His entrepreneurial journey began in 2003 when he started IT By Design, which has now grown into a global company. Sunny also discusses his book The Secret To Building Winning Global Teams, sharing insights into how his company successfully integrates global talent to provide 24/7 IT services. His tips include: The rise of remote work has created opportunities for borderless hiring, allowing businesses to tap into a global talent pool. Building a global team can lead to significant labor cost savings of 30-70%, leading to greater profitability and overall business valuation. Effective multicultural collaboration is essential for managing diverse teams and can improve both cash flow and company culture. Investing in a strong learning and development division is key to equipping team members with the necessary soft skills and cultural understanding to work remotely effectively. Transitioning from direct sales to collaborating with competitors can expand your reach and create mutually beneficial partnerships. Understanding the unique needs of different markets is crucial for tailoring your approach to team management and service delivery. Implementing a 24/7 operational model allows for continuous service and support, which is vital for technology-driven businesses. Leaders must adapt their management styles to effectively lead remote teams, focusing on communication and cultural alignment. Maintaining a balance between cost efficiency and employee well-being is essential to sustaining a positive company culture. Using innovative strategies to manage rising operational costs can help businesses remain competitive in an evolving market. Regularly assessing and adjusting your team structure can lead to improved performance and adaptability in a changing business landscape. Sharing best practices and experiences can help other leaders navigate the complexities of building and managing global teams. Resources: Book: The Secret To Building Winning Global Teams by Sunny Kaila Unique Ability® CliftonStrengths® The Impact Filter™
    Show more Show less
    48 mins
  • The Strategic Value Of Reinforcing Your Team’s Strengths
    Aug 8 2024
    Do you take the time to reinforce your team’s strengths, or do you simply take their strengths and talents for granted? In this episode, Shannon Waller explains the benefits of reinforcing team strengths rather than fixing weaknesses. Learn why this counterintuitive approach can boost morale, productivity, and even your bottom line. Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Growing Strengths People often take their natural abilities for granted. When people realize their capabilities are valuable to others, they will invest more time and effort into developing them further. Gallup’s Framework For Understanding Strengths Talent: A natural way of thinking, feeling, or behaving. Investment: Time spent practicing, developing skills, and building knowledge. Strength: The ability to consistently provide near-perfect performance in a specific task. Raw talent alone is not enough; it must be combined with investment to become a true strength. Mindset For Talent Development To recognize individuality and uniqueness in others, leaders must first acknowledge and develop their own Unique Ability®. This mindset may be challenging for leaders who believe: They need to be all things to all people, or People are basically all the same Dan Sullivan has said a key aspect of running a Self-Managing Company® is the willingness to be ignorant: Leaders don’t need to know every detail of their operation if they trust their team members to use their unique strengths to excel in their respective roles. The Difference This Can Make Benefits of reinforcing your team’s strengths: Builds habits Improves team dynamics and collaboration Increases productivity Increases creativity Supports more fulfilling careers Reduces workplace problems Supports self-managing team members Recognizing And Nurturing Unique Talents Give people feedback: “Hey I really appreciate it when you do this; it really makes a difference. You do this faster than anyone else on the team does.” Ask the question: “Is this something you really enjoy doing too?” Unique Ability combines excellent skills with passion, joy, endless energy, fascination, and a constant desire for improvement. How To Take Action Pay attention and take action when someone volunteers to do something no one asked them to do, and they are exceptional and energized by it. Speak out about what’s working to reinforce the things you want to see more of. Use The Impact Filter™ tool from Strategic Coach® to clearly communicate expectations for specific tasks and projects. Read the upcoming book in the Ambition Series coming in Fall 2024, Casting Not Hiring, and download the 4 x 4 tool. The 4 x 4 is used to communicate to team members the overall expectations for their role and teamwork. The 4 x 4 tells team members how they can excel in their performance by: Being alert, curious, responsive, and resourceful Focusing on results that are faster, easier, cheaper, and bigger Being a hero to you Avoiding the things that drive you crazy Use The Communication Builder with your team members to understand each other’s work preferences, communication styles, and stress responses. Resources: CliftonStrengths® Unique Ability The Communication Builder The Self-Managing Company by Dan Sullivan The Impact Filter Casting Not Hiring by Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff (coming Fall 2024)
    Show more Show less
    18 mins
  • 7 Strategies For How To Work Effectively With Your EA
    Jul 25 2024
    Are you looking to maximize your teamwork with your executive assistant? In this episode, Shannon Waller dives deep into the key strategies for a successful strategic partnership. From finding the right person to implementing daily habits and strategic planning meetings, you'll discover how to triple your productivity effortlessly and elevate your teamwork to superpower status! Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Finding The Right “Who”: It's crucial to hire someone who thrives in a support role and complements your working style. Use tools like DISC and CliftonStrengths to ensure compatibility. Communication Builder: This tool helps identify communication preferences and patterns, preventing conflicts and fostering better teamwork. It's available for free at yourteamsuccess.com. Daily Meetings: Regular check-ins, ideally daily, help keep both parties aligned and focused. Starting these meetings with a Positive Focus® elevates your energy levels, boosts productivity, and enhances confidence. CC On Emails: Copying your assistant on relevant emails ensures seamless information transfer and task delegation. Access To Email And Calendar: Granting your assistant full access to your email and calendar allows them to manage your schedule effectively, freeing you up to focus on high-priority tasks. Appreciation: Regularly expressing gratitude and acknowledging each other's contributions strengthens the partnership and boosts morale. Strategic Planning Meetings: Holding these meetings every five to six weeks helps you plan and prioritize upcoming tasks and projects, ensuring nothing falls through the cracks. Resources: Books Superpowered: The Secret That Helps Every Entrepreneur Eliminate the Suck, 10x Their Impact, and Have More Fun in Work and Life by Ryan Cassin, Shannon Waller, and Steven Neuner Tools And Concepts The Team Success Toolkit Unique Ability® The Impact Filter™ Profiles The Kolbe A™ Index PRINT® Why of You CliftonStrengths® Working Genius® DISC Profile
    Show more Show less
    17 mins
  • What Happens When Your Talented Team Lacks Direction?
    Jul 11 2024
    Do you feel as though you have a really talented team but that not everyone is aligned on the direction you’re going? In this episode, Shannon Waller describes how a lack of leadership can be undoing your team’s potential. By the end, you’ll learn practical strategies to ensure that everyone is on the same page, working toward a common goal. Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Unique Ability® without a clear goal or purpose: Unique Ability® Teamwork thrives when each team member is focused on what they love to do best. However, without a clear goal, intention, or purpose, the strengths and talents of team members can go astray, or worse, sabotage the work of the overall business. This can lead to individuals pursuing their own interests rather than working toward a common goal. Over time, team members accustomed to a lack of direction may develop an entitlement attitude and resistance to being pulled back in. Impact On Team Performance: Without clear leadership and direction, Unique Ability Teamwork may result in individuals contributing their intellect but not their full commitment or passion. Projects may suffer from delays, lack of creativity, and a lack of coordination among team members, akin to a rowing team rowing out of sync. Solution: Shannon suggests a proactive approach. Leaders should: Double-check their own clarity on goals and intentions. Communicate these clearly to the team. Ensure alignment through open conversations. Using tools like The Impact Filter™ can help articulate purpose, importance, ideal outcomes, and success criteria, fostering a shared understanding and commitment among team members. The collaborative approach opens projects up to the collective intelligence, as different team members bring diverse insights and considerations to the table. Resources: The Team Success Handbook by Shannon Waller PRINT® Kolbe Radical Candor Unique Ability Teamwork Wanting What You Want by Dan Sullivan The Impact Filter
    Show more Show less
    16 mins
  • How Profiles Build Trust And Improve Teamwork
    Jun 27 2024
    Ready to level up your teamwork? In this episode of Team Success, Shannon dives deep into her love for profiles and assessments like Kolbe and PRINT and how she uses them to understand team members better. She explains how profiles help build trust, provide a road map for effective teamwork, and streamline the process of getting to know team members' motivational needs and strengths. She also shares tips for how to use profiles to make the hiring process easier, faster, and better. Listen now to learn all about how to use profiles to unlock your own team’s success! Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: Personality profiles and assessments are essential, reliable tools for anyone hoping to understand their own or someone else’s motivations, needs, and natural strengths. They provide a road map for building trust and providing effective support. In a fast-paced work environment where personal interactions are limited, profiles offer a shortcut to quickly gain insights about your team members—like what you can expect from them, their strengths, and their motivators—that would otherwise take significant time and effort to uncover. When used correctly, profiles shouldn’t box people in, but rather generate insightful questions and deepen understanding, fostering teamwork by aligning team members’ motivations and strengths with their roles and responsibilities. By understanding and appreciating the complementary skills of those on their team, individuals can leverage one another's strengths to produce exponential results. Profiles are also a valuable hiring tool, especially for roles in sales or leadership. These profiles include: Kolbe A™ Index: Measures conative strengths or natural tendencies in problem-solving and productivity. Working Genius®: Identifies where individuals naturally excel in a project's lifecycle, from ideation to execution. CliftonStrengths®: Highlights individual talents and potential areas for development. DISC: Provides insights into personality traits related to work style and interactions. PRINT®: Reveals underlying motivators and how they influence behavior in professional settings. Resources: Kolbe A Index Working Genius CliftonStrengths DISC Profile PRINT
    Show more Show less
    25 mins
  • “Staff,” “Employees,” Or “Team Members”: Why Language Matters
    Jun 13 2024
    Are you struggling with a lack of alert, curious, responsive, and resourceful people in your business? Here, Shannon Waller takes a look at the frequently overlooked importance of the language you use when talking about the people operating in your business. By shifting your mindset regarding this one term, you can unlock the full potential of your team and elevate their performance. Tune in to learn how to transform your team into a powerhouse of unique individuals making impactful contributions together. Download Episode Transcript Show Notes: The language you use to refer to the people you’ve hired to work with you (“staff,” “employees,” or “team members”) reflects different mindsets and can impact engagement and performance. The term “staff” suggests bureaucracy, formality, and viewing people as fulfilling roles rather than as unique and creative individuals. “Employee” is more neutral but can still imply a transactional, replaceable view of team members. Referring to people as “team members” emphasizes their unique contributions and the collaborative, team-based nature of the work. How you think about your people is reflected in your actions. “Staff” and “employees” are frequently counted as FTEs and costs. Businesses think of costs as something to minimize, to make as efficient as possible, and to be cut as necessary to improve profits. People who are treated as costs—like the office paper supply—can feel they’re being treated as things and not as people. Treating team members as investments rather than costs leads to better results. With investments, you put a little in to get a lot more in return. When you nourish unique capabilities in people, their contributions expand in ways you could not have predicted. When people don’t work out as investments: Have you made sure you’ve found the right people who are motivated by their work and aligned with your business? Do they have the capacity for their role? Keeping bad investments is not good for your business in the long term. You may need to subtract so you can multiply. Dan Sullivan says, “I’m just a team member here. I just have a unique set of skills, and that’s what I want to do. I need a ton of other people to make the projects that I want to be a part of happen.” Dan’s commitment to his own Unique Ability® contribution to the business reinforces his commitment to supporting the Unique Ability contributions of everyone else on his team. Ask your team how they feel about the language used to describe them. Pay attention to how you refer to people no matter whom you’re speaking with. People want to know they’re valued as individuals and trusted to find opportunities to contribute the best way they know how. Resources: Leadership and Self-Deception by The Arbinger Institute EOS®: Entrepreneurial Operating System® “A Conversation With Kathy Kolbe: Conative Intelligence & The Importance of Caring First,” Team Success Podcast, ep. 259. Multiplication By Subtraction by Shannon Waller Unique Ability
    Show more Show less
    14 mins