Browsing by Author "Kerr, Peter D."
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Item Open Access Hiring for sales success: the emerging importance of salesperson analytical skills(Elsevier, 2022-02-05) Peesker, Karen M.; Kerr, Peter D.; Bolander, Willy; Ryals, Lynette J.; Lister, Jonathan A.; Dover, Howard F.Several studies suggest that accelerating technology, increasing product complexity, and an expanding volume of information in the marketplace are changing sales roles, necessitating a review of the current sales skills required for success. Using mixed methods, we examine the skills required of contemporary B2B salespeople. First, we draw on unique data from 3.8 million LinkedIn job postings to examine which skills sales recruiters are seeking in new hires. Whilst confirming the importance of previously researched sales skills, this identified a sales skill largely disregarded by the extant literature: salesperson analytical skills. We triangulated these findings through interviews with 20 sales executives and developed a scale to measure this new analytical skills construct. Then, to test the scale's predictive and nomological validity, we used survey data from 251 business-to-business salespeople. Results reveal that salesperson analytical skills have both a direct and a moderating effect on sales performance across varying selling situations.Item Embargo The impact of performance measurement diversity on customer-oriented selling behavior(Elsevier, 2023-03-04) Kerr, Peter D.; Franco-Santos, MonicaMotivated by recent high-profile cases of salespeople behaving ‘badly’ (i.e., unethically, aggressively, or misleading toward customers), we investigate traditional behavioral controls to examine the specific relationship between performance measurement choices and selling behavior with a survey of 207 business-to-business salespeople. Borrowing from attention-based theory and the theory of planned behavior, our findings suggest that sales management can encourage more pro-customer behavior by using a more diverse performance measurement schema to influence the underlying drivers of customer-oriented selling behavior, including salesperson attitudes and subjective norms. This is particularly important in transactional selling environments where the use of diverse measures has the strongest effect on pro-customer attitudes and customer-oriented selling behavior.