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Firing, Hiring & Training Good People

Gen Xers come into a retail environment well-informed. They do research on the Internet, especially on bigger-ticket items. They’ll come in with price-comparison charts that they have printed out. But they still need guidance from a trusted retailer. Customer service can make or break a retailer.

Jennifer Ganshirt, American Demographics (05/04)

You might think that finding the right location, stocking your store and pleasing customers are going to be your most daunting challenges when opening a retail store, but think again. The biggest challenge in retailing today is hiring and training qualified people. No organization is stagnant, and today’s employee turnover is higher than ever. Being the best and selling the most means recruiting and retaining the best.

Practices such as carefully screening new hires, thoroughly testing applicants, personally meeting each one and, of course, ensuring that their services are fairly remunerating lie at the core of recruiting the best employees. Retaining the best includes treating employees with respect, listening to their suggestions, occasionally weeding out the bad apples and rewarding good performance.

The commitment to excellence starts with you, but since you can’t be everywhere at once, quality must filter down through your valued deputies. Hiring less than the best reflects poorly not only on your organization, but also on you. Here are some things to keep in mind that you can tell and demonstrate to your current staff:

Ask Not What Your Employees Can Do for You but What Can You Do for Them

A good listener is not only popular everywhere, but, after a while, he knows something.

Wilson Mizner

Many first-time retailers see the hiring process as little more than a power play. “I’m the boss—you work for me. What can you bring to the organization?” While it’s important to know that the buck stops with you, it’s just as important to know what the person who is sitting across from you is feeling.

People work where they are happy, rewarded and fulfilled. Will your store foster such feelings? As you are getting ready to hire, keep in mind what job applicants are looking for in today’s job market:

Where to Start Looking

So now you know what you want from an employee and, in turn, what an employee wants from you. But where to start looking for them? There are several different ways to find the right people for your store:

What to Start Looking for: 10 Characteristics of the Ideal Recruit

Remember, it is impossible to manage effectively without hiring effectively. As I have said, you can’t be everywhere all the time. You can’t be in the store at all times. Therefore, you must hire good people to represent you to your customers.

The goal, then, is to hire individuals with the personality and service-minded disposition necessary to provide excellent customer service. Here are 10 qualities you should be looking for and the probing questions to ask yourself before offering anyone a job:

Q&A for Your New Talent

The most important quality in a retail job candidate is the ability to communicate effectively, not only with your customers, but also with you and the entire team. Here are some questions you can ask to help identify the traits that would make the applicant a great employee. Remember to follow up on all of these items with open-ended questions, such as “Tell me more about…” or “What does that mean?” The idea is to keep applicants talking, because the interview is not about you—it is about them.

Top 10 Traits of Effective Retail Employees

The top 10 traits you need for successful retail employees are listed below. You may or may not exhibit all of these yourself—nobody’s perfect. Chances are that the majority will ring true. In any case, never be afraid to hire someone who is smarter or more appropriate to the task than you. You’re still the boss, [a]nd your company needs great employees to make your business continue to grow. Your ideal employee will possess:

  1. A positive attitude. Shopping should be fun—so should working in a store. Can your applicant be positive the whole time he or she is on the floor?
  2. Common sense. You can’t train common sense; people either have it or they don’t. Common sense is a vital skill in retail, where instincts as much as rules define a busy sales floor.
  3. People skills. Retail is all about communication and is the ultimate “people business.”
  4. Sales ability. Whether you’re paying on commission or a straight hourly wage, retail is sales and sales is retail. You may not want an employee whose “hard sell” approach comes off as too aggressive and alienates customers, but you do want people who can convince customers to buy without annoying them. Everyone has a different style of selling. For example, one of the best salespeople I ever met had a severe stammer, but he used it to his advantage: people were so keen to finish his sentences, they sold themselves. “Would you p-p-prefer to p-p-pay by c-c-cash or c-c-credit c-c-ca—” “Oh, credit card, certainly. Credit card,” the customer would say, determined to bring things to a close, even if they hadn’t previously been sure they wanted to buy. The point is, however they do it, every employee should have making the sale the overriding goal.
  5. Strong communication skills. If, during the interview, you sense a lack of communication, this may not be the applicant for you.
  6. High level of motivation. A good employee must want the job and must be motivated to succeed.
  7. Product knowledge or the ability to pick up this knowledge quickly. New products are a boon to the retail business, and failed products are its bane. You want someone who treats a dog of an onion slicer with the same enthusiasm as a spiffy new coffee grinder.
  8. Ability to move up in the organization. You want someone committed to achievement, just as you are, and who isn’t above starting at the bottom to get to the top.
  9. Leadership qualities. Can this applicant supervise underlings, or even peers, without abusing his or her power and sounding demeaning?
  10. The ability to be a self-starter. This is a term we hear a lot, but what does it really mean? Basically, this term describes people who won’t let a display sit empty even if you didn’t specifically tell them to fill it.

Motivating Your Staff

Once you’ve assembled your “dream team” of employees, you’ll have to
create a good work environment to keep them. The following are some
strategies to help you motivate your staff:

Motivating Yourself: The Eight Principles of Continuous Improvement

Continuously improving the production of your employees requires constant attention and respect, [a]nd that starts with you. If you follow the
next eight steps, your employees are sure to follow you. Here are eight
principles of continuous self-improvement:

Selling Success

Don’t doubt for a minute that retailing is a business of selling. Contrary to popular opinion, great salespeople do not have a certain look, a certain
style or certain dress code. They don’t drive a certain car or live in a certain part of town, [b]ut what they all do have in common is the desire to
serve the customer.

There are no universal traits of a great salesperson. They come in all shapes and sizes. Some are impeccably dressed, some relatively sloppy, [b]ut, in your store, you want not only someone who can sell, but also a person who can fit with your team and add to your store’s solid reputation. Thus, your salespeople should:

Getting Customers in the Mood to Buy

Training salespeople is as much an art as a science. The salesperson’s challenge is to turn “lookers” into “buyers.” Customers are in the store because the merchandising concept attracted them, [b]ut whether or not they actually buy something is still up to your sales staff.

The days of the pushy salesperson are gone. Customers want easy, no-hassle service from people who are nonthreatening and nonaggressive. To convert people from looking to buying—that is, to first get the customers into the mood to buy and then to close the sale—good salespeople:

The Likability Factor

Customers often have problems. They complain. They are dissatisfied. Whether this is really the store’s problem or the emotional baggage customers brought with them is not always easy to understand. One thing is sure—those problems will be easier to solve if the customer likes the salesperson. Salespeople can get customers to like them by:

What Not to Say to Customers

There’s a TV show called “What Not to Wear.” My version is “What Not to
Say to a Customer.” Knowing what not to say is as important as knowing
what to say. Here is a list of comments that drive customers away and
should never come out of a salesperson’s mouth:

The Five Steps of the Selling Process

It may seem confusing, but, in fact, the retail selling process is made up of five steps: the greeting, bonding and asking questions, making suggestions, overcoming objections, and closing the sale. Here we discuss each of these five in more detail:

The vital thing to remember when asking for the order (closing the sale) is not to ask a question to which a plausible answer is “no.” Do not ask “Would you like to buy this product?” If you do, you are encouraging a “no” answer just as much as a “yes” answer. Rather, ask a question to which either response is the one you want to hear. “Would you prefer to pay by cash or credit card?” is a classic. “Should I wrap up the red or the blue?”, “Would you like this gift-wrapped or as-is?”, “After we make the alterations, should I send it home or would you like to pick it up here?” These are all “closers” because they assume the sale has already been made and now we’re only dealing with the post-purchase details.

Of course, there are other ways to nudge the teetering buyer forward, especially when it is too early to use the either/or closer. “Let’s just do this,” you might say, or “Everyone’s buying it” or “Will you be using it during the day or at night?” And then, whatever the answer, “Well, great. Then would you prefer to pay by cash or credit card?”

When Customers Complain: Five Strategies of Complaint Management

In the wondrous world of retail, there is really only one sure truth: customers will complain. It may be for a variety of reasons and not always due to anything you have done. It could be something from their personal lives or what side of the bed they got up on, a late shipment causing a product delay, a rainy day. No matter the cause, when customers complain, the following five strategies of complaint management will go a long way toward resolving the problem and making sure it never happens again:

The Exit Interview

No matter how well you find, hire and train good people, inevitably, you will lose staff to illness, family issues, relocation and even to other businesses.

The trick is not to fight it—[i]nstead, embrace it. One of the best tools you have for people who leave your store is the all-important exit interview. Here you can learn some valuable lessons. The leaver is no longer inhibited from telling you the truth. “I’m leaving because I can’t stand the assistant manager, Suzy. Whenever you’re away, she spends all her time talking to her boyfriend.” This is information you wouldn’t get nearly as easily from a current employee. Of course, you’ll want to check this charge out before accusing Suzy; the leaver may have been vindictive and untruthful. The point is, what you could learn from a departing employee may help you keep other valuable employees.

Don’t be afraid to ask for and hear the truth. It may be unpleasant, but knowing there are problems you haven’t observed, employee resentment or other issues could lead to improvements that will save your business in the long run—[p]rovided you solve the problems, that is.

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