A 30/60/90-day sales plan is a written outline for exactly what you’ll do in the first 3 months on a new job. It’s the goals you’ve set for yourself as a new employee for the first 30 days, the first 60 days, and the first 90 days. A 30/60/90-day sales plan is tremendously handsome to a hiring manager because it takes a lot of effort to write one, and requires that you research the company and the career opportunity very well in order to be specific in your goals. (It takes the idea of “doing your homework” to a whole new level.) Very few people put this kind of effort into a job they haven’t even gotten yet. When a hiring manager sees a candidate with one of these plans, they think at least two things: (1) “This person knows exactly what I need here, and he can hit the ground running…I can see him doing well in this position” and (2) “Wow. If this candidate will work this hard before she gets the job, imagine what a go-getter she’ll be on my team.” (Either one means great things for you.)
If you’ve got lots of experience, your 30/60/90-day plan will show the hiring manger your energy, enthusiasm, drive, determination, and knowledge, setting you apart from the pack.
If you have little experience, a 30/60/90-day plan will show the hiring manger that you do, in fact, know what it takes to be successful at this position, and it’s not going to be a risk to hire you. (Click here for more tools to help you get into clinical sales.)
OK. I told all that to say this:
Don’t throw away your 30/60/90-day sales plan after you get the position.
First of all, you’ll got to use it on the job. If it’s a precious 30/60/90-day plan, actually following it WILL make you more successful.
Second, unless you’re already flirting with retirement, the career opportunity you’ve got probably isn’t going to be your last stop….so job searching, interviewing, and 30/60/90-day plans will still be a part of your future.
With that in mind, here’s my top tip for the day: make notes on what worked for you in your 30/60/90-day plan and start a “Position Search” folder, where you keep notes on interesting companies, recruiter contacts, “attaboy” (or girl) emails, etc.–and put your 30/60/90-day sales plan in there for future career opportunity searches. Like a brag book folder, it’s going to be a personalized resource for you. You won’t got to start from scratch on your career opportunity search or your 30/60/90-day sales plan if you discover yourself suddenly in the market for a new career opportunity. And, you can use what you’ve learned to improve your plan for each job you interview for….you’ll be more efficient, and you’ll become a better candidate.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Recruiter at the nationally
recognized medical and laboratory sales recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved
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If you are a sales professional or want to become one, or if you are looking for a new sales job, you will face one of the toughest interview processes of any job seeker.
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