Many of our property management business owner clients are focused on hiring or restructuring their teams right now.
In this episode of the #DoorGrowShow, property management growth experts Jason and Sarah Hull discuss the most important parts of the hiring process and offer a little bit of “tough love.”
You’ll Learn
[04:39] 1. Finding the right person for the role
[11:04] 2. The importance of training your new hire
[24:41] 3. Implementing accountability for your team
[30:20] Review: what does the initial training period look like?
Tweetables
“We need to be clear on what results we’re expecting.”
“Any ambiguity or fuzziness, then you’re going to get fuzzy outcomes.”
“You cannot ever hire somebody and just say, “now my problems are solved.” They’re not solved yet.”
“If you skip onboarding or if you don’t have a very solid onboarding and training process, it’s going to cause just so much friction.”
Resources
Transcript
[00:00:00] Sarah: You cannot ever hire somebody and just say, ânow my problems are solved.â Theyâre not solved yet.Â
[00:00:09] Jason: Welcome DoorGrow property managers to the DoorGrow show. If you are a property management entrepreneur that wants to add doors, make a difference, increase revenue, help others, impact lives, and you are interested in growing in business and life, and youâre open to doing things a bit differently than you are a DoorGrow property manager. DoorGrow property managers love the opportunities, daily variety, unique challenges, and freedom that property management brings. Many in real estate think youâre crazy for doing it. You think theyâre crazy for not because you realize that property management is the ultimate, high trust gateway to real estate deals, relationships, and residual income. At DoorGrow, we are on a mission to transform property management business owners, and their businesses.
[00:00:53] We want to transform the industry, eliminate the BS, build awareness, change perception, expand the market, and help the best property management entrepreneurs win. Weâre your hosts, property management growth experts, Jason and Sarah Hull, the owners of DoorGrow. Now letâs get into the show.Â
[00:01:11] Sarah: All right.
[00:01:11] Letâs do it. Before we do anything, we have an announcement for those of you that have not yet heard. Our foster dog Hans has been officially adopted. So we didnât do a podcast since he was adopted. So this is our first podcast that we donât have Hans kind of hanging out in the background. And I miss his little face, but he has an amazing family.
[00:01:32] Jason: I miss Hans. I donât-
[00:01:35] Sarah: love him so much.Â
[00:01:37] Jason: I donât miss him chewing my stuff in my office, but I do miss his little face as well. All right. Yes. Yeah, so heâs adopted All right So the topic today and if you want to check that out, you can go to doorgrow.Com right at the top. Thereâs dogs click on that see all our stories. Maynard got adopted.
[00:01:55] Sarah: Maynard is adopted. Yeah, he now lives in California.Â
[00:01:59] Jason: This dog was like on deathâs door multiple times. Well, many times. Now heâs living it up with a wealthy dude.Â
[00:02:06] Sarah: Who just fell in love with him.Â
[00:02:07] Jason: Guy in California.Â
[00:02:08] Sarah: Maynard just captured his heart, loved him so much and wanted to provide him an amazing life, so.
[00:02:15] Jason: Heâs got a new name.Â
[00:02:16] Sarah: Heâs Bodhi.Â
[00:02:17] Jason: Bodhi.Â
[00:02:18] Sarah: Bodhi. So heâs now driving around in a convertible in California. Thatâs one of the pictures they put on there. Oh!Â
[00:02:25] Jason: All right. SoÂ
[00:02:25] Sarah: Maynard has a great life now, too.Â
[00:02:27] Jason: So you can check that out at doorgrow.com/dogs. All right. So our topic today that weâre going to be chatting about you said that it came up a few times in You know this week with some of our clients dealing with some new team members Weâve got weâre doing helping a lot of people with hiring right now.
[00:02:45] Sarah: Oh my goodness so many. I built so many DoorGrow Hiring accounts in the last week.Â
[00:02:49] Jason: Yeah, so weâre setting up this hiring mechanism and machine and system so that people can have some consistently good hires. But that brings us to kind of the next challenge. So what have you been hearing?Â
[00:03:00] Sarah: Okay, so one client asked me, heâs about to hire.
[00:03:05] Heâs going through the hiring process. So he doesnât have anybody lined up yet, but heâs Itâs about to start this whole process. And he had asked me, âHey, what about expectations for when they start when they come on?â And specifically this is a BDM. The second instance of this happening this week is a client who has already hired and his BDM is now about 60 days in.
[00:03:31] And he sent me a message yesterday and he said, âHey, listen, I really need to talk with you before the end of the month. I need to make a decision on my team.â So I said, okay, letâs. Letâs figure out whatâs going on? And he said âyeah, Iâm kind of pissed because my BDM is like 60 days in, and last month he didnât do anything at all. And then this month he started like he hasnât closed anything yet,â and by he didnât do anything at all, what he means is he didnât close anything.Â
[00:04:00] Jason: Okay. Not that he wasnât working. No deals yet.Â
[00:04:01] Sarah: Yeah. Okay. Not that he wasnât working. He was working. And this month now is his 60 day mark and he hasnât closed anything, but heâs, you know, making calls and heâs starting to, you know, get some things kind of ready and warmed up in the pipeline.
[00:04:16] He, he said, âman, should I just let him go? Like, is he just not the right person? I feel like itâs 60 days, like, I should see some results at this point.âÂ
[00:04:26] Jason: Okay.Â
[00:04:26] Sarah: So Iâd like to, Iâd really like to talk about that. And this is going to be, whatever episode this is âSarahâs Tough Love episode.â So here it is.
[00:04:35] Jason: Got it. Okay, I mean, letâs get the basic stuff out of the way, right? First, we need to know that we have the right person. So, we need to know what those expectations are. So, thatâs where we define that. Usually, we call them R docs, but in this ultimate job description. So, we need to be clear on what weâre looking for.
[00:04:51] We need to be clear on what results weâre expecting. We need to be clear on, you know, what outcomes weâre hoping for and they need to be clear on this, right? Like if weâre bringing somebody in, they need that clarity. So if thereâs anyone listening and thereâs any ambiguity or fuzziness, then youâre going to get fuzzy outcomes.
[00:05:09] And those arenât good, right? And so there needs to be at least, and you need to be on the same page. Literally, the way we do that is with a page called an RDoc. And so you make sure youâre on the same page. And all those young Gen Z people, notice how I used the word literally, correctly like itâs an actual page.
[00:05:28] Sarah: I was just thinking that.Â
[00:05:29] Jason: Stop saying the word literally. It drives me fucking nuts. So, all right.Â
[00:05:33] Sarah: Literally.Â
[00:05:34] Jason: I literally, like if, yeah, nobodyâs confused about it being figurative, then donât, you donât need to say the word.Â
[00:05:41] Sarah: I literally died yesterday when I read that text.Â
[00:05:43] Jason: No, you would be dead.
[00:05:45] You would actually be dead. All right. So, Now the next piece is we need to make sure weâve got a person that fits that job description, right? They actually are the right personality. Well, letâs talk about the three fits real quick. They have to match all three or theyâre not going to be a good BDM.
[00:06:01] Sarah: Or itâs never going to work out. And it doesnât matter if itâs a BDM, an operator, a property manager, an assistant, a maintenance coordinator. It doesnât, name the role, doesnât matter.Â
[00:06:10] Jason: So, first, they have to be the right personality for the job or theyâll never be great at it. Theyâll never be motivated to do it.
[00:06:18] You bring in somebody to be a BDM, for example, and theyâre not the right personality to go out and want to talk to people and connect with people and network and thatâs not fun for them, theyâre always going to resist it. Theyâre going to avoid it. Theyâre going to do a bunch of time wasting stupid activities Theyâre going to train everything else other than what really should be done, which is to go connect with people and have conversations. So theyâre going to be like âwell Iâm trying some marketing thing and iâm trying this thing and like and-âÂ
[00:06:47] Sarah: âI sent 5,000 emails I donât know why none of them came back.â
[00:06:51] Jason: âWe did direct mail to, like, 7,000 owners.â
[00:06:56] Sarah: Iâve heard that and itâs because this is a true example. âI sent 5,000 emails.â
[00:07:00] Jason: Yeah.Â
[00:07:01] Sarah: So essentially you did nothing. Thatâs great. Right. Good to know.Â
[00:07:05] Jason: Yeah.Â
[00:07:05] Sarah: Thank you.Â
[00:07:06] Jason: Lots of emails, right? So. So,Â
[00:07:09] Sarah: you know how many junk emails we get in a day? What happens when you get junk email?
[00:07:13] Do you open it? Do you read it? Do you respond to it? No. Thatâs what you just did to somebody else.Â
[00:07:19] Jason: Yeah. It lacks depth. All right. So we can get into tactics later, but they need to match the personality for the role. Which means they would love succeeding at this. They would love doing it. They would enjoy it.
[00:07:32] They get some fulfillment out of it. And so thatâs personality fit. They need to be the right the right culture fit, which means they need to actually believe in your business and in you and in the product. They have to believe in this. You cannot sell effectively if you lack belief. And that goes for everybody on the team.
[00:07:53] Like, if your operator isnât a believer in you or the business, theyâre not going to want or care to make sure that it runs well for you. If your executive assistant isnât, you know, a believer in you or shares your values, theyâre never going to do things in a way that makes you feel safe or that you trust them.
[00:08:09] Cultural fit means they do it the way that you would want it done, that they share your values. The big clue we talked about this at our last jumpstart event where we had clients and somebody had a team member. And I just asked, I said, well, do you feel better when theyâre around?
[00:08:25] Do you feel calmer when theyâre around? And they were like, no, Iâm like, yeah, then they got to go.Â
[00:08:30] Sarah: He said, oh, well, a lot of our communication we do over the phone because thatâs better.Â
[00:08:36] Jason: Because thereâs such a high degree of conflict.Â
[00:08:37] Sarah: Jason says, better than what? Awful?Â
[00:08:40] Jason: Yeah, and then he laughed.
[00:08:41] Everybody laughed in the group and he was like, well, yeah.Â
[00:08:44] Sarah: Well, I canât talk to this person in person. I canât be around them. Because when weâre around each other, thereâs too much conflict. Itâs just too, it gets, yeah, it gets too feisty. Well, thatâs not good.Â
[00:08:55] Jason: Yeah, that means that personâs not a good fit for that person for that particular client.
[00:09:00] Sarah: And letâs be clear. It doesnât mean that thereâs anything wrong with this particular person. No, it doesnât make them a bad person It doesnât mean, you know, all the theyâll never succeed No, it just means that they are better suited in a different environment Thatâs all. It means not everybody like when youâre dating, you donât want to date everybody. You want to date people that you like generally and there are certain people that you like and there are certain people that you just donât mesh well. The businesses work the same way.Â
[00:09:31] Jason: Yeah. Theyâve got to match your values. Because regardless you get somebody thatâs amazing BDM, for example, or an amazing operator for your business, they donât share your values, youâll never trust them. Like you just canât. And then the third fit is skill fit. So they have to have the skill or the ability or the intellectual capacity to learn and develop this skill quickly. And so if they donât, then youâll invest a bunch of energy into trying to train them and theyâre just too stupid to get it.
[00:10:01] Or they just canât figure it out or maybe you hire somebody and theyâve got bad habits or they canât adapt. So they need to have that skill fit. They got to be all three or theyâre not going to be a good fit. So letâs assume if weâve helped them with DoorGrow Hiring, we focus on these three fits.
[00:10:18] We have a whole hiring mechanism. Make sure these generally go well.Â
[00:10:22] Sarah: Yeah. So I can tell you, I donât think thatâs any of those are the problem.Â
[00:10:26] Jason: This person. Yeah. So in these situations, the person is the right fit. Yeah, usually thatâs the problem is theyâre not even getting the right person.
[00:10:33] Most of yâall doing hiring, youâre playing Russian roulette hiring and you donât have good fits.Â
[00:10:38] Sarah: Or itâs, oh, this person had the experience and they came from such and such a Yeah, we hear that all the time.Â
[00:10:43] Jason: Yeah. Well, theyâre so experienced, and you feel uncomfortable around them and you donât trust them.
[00:10:50] Yeah. So letâs assume that, you know, with our clients, weâve helped them find people that match the three fits. So now weâre past that hurdle, thatâs very typical for most people, well, now, if itâs not them, then who is it?Â
[00:11:04] Sarah: Okay. So hereâs where the tough love comes is. This is always my question.
[00:11:08] And Iâm very, very particular about what happens when you hire someone. You cannot ever hire somebody and just say, ânow my problems are solved.â Theyâre not solved yet. I know it feels like youâve gotten through it and now things are better and you should just be able to rely on that person. Youâre not there yet.
[00:11:33] You will be. But youâre just not, youâre getting closer. Youâre just not fully there yet. And this is what happens a lot of times and they go, âOh, okay, so I know I need to train this person and then Iâll probably train them for like a week or two and then theyâll just be good.â
[00:11:48] Absolutely not. So especially with a new person and it doesnât matter. Hereâs the other thing that I hear all the time, especially when somebody has the experience. Oh, well, you know, they have a sales background. They know how to sell. Great. They donât know how to sell for you. They donât know how to sell what youâve got.
[00:12:05] They donât know how to sell your values and your mission. They donât know how to sell that yet. They donât quite know. So you can take any salesperson in the universe and plug them into your business. Do they have the skill? Yes. Do they have the experience? Of course, but they still have to be trained. So having the experience does not mean âOh, I donât have to train them,â or, âoh, I donât have to train them as much.â
[00:12:32] You still have to train them a lot. There is a lot of training. And I hate to break it to you, but your life when you hire gets worse. So your life is bad, you know you need to hire, then you hire somebody, your life is now worse for a short period of time. The reason being is everything that you were doing, you still have to do it, and in addition, you now have to train somebody. So nothing has changed except that you just added another responsibility for yourself for the next 30 to 90 days. And there is no way around that with hiring. So if you hire and you fail the train, it is probably not going to work out. They will not get the results.
[00:13:16] They will be frustrated. You will be frustrated. And at some point, you will get back into the cycle of, âOh, well, now I guess I have to hire again.â And then you live in hell forever. And itâs not a good place to be.Â
[00:13:31] Jason: Yeah, so unless you hire somebody that is an amazing âwho,â right? Thereâs a book called Who Not How itâs a great book.
[00:13:40] Unless you hire an amazing âwho,â like you bring in somebody, theyâre a sales trainer and an expert closer, and theyâve had tons of success and they can teach other peopleâs sales, then I think, in any role, you have to assume you need an assumption that theyâre going to do it wrong. You have to start with that foundational assumption that theyâre going to do everything wrong.
[00:14:01] If I hired an operator cold, theyâre doing it wrong, that I need them to install my operational system. If they are coming in as a salesperson in the business, I know theyâve been trained poorly because most sales training out there doesnât work anymore. Thereâs a new model and a new way of selling and all the old stuff.
[00:14:20] All the salesy guys that are sales trainers and sales coaches largely out there that push. Doesnât work anymore. Itâs outdated. And we donât push that stuff at DoorGrow. Weâve had to shift how we sell and we teach clients differently, even in the last year. And so my assumption is that theyâre going to do it wrong, but.
[00:14:40] What I do assume is if theyâve done it well before, they have the ability to learn it. They have the ability to be a good operator. They have the ability to be a good BDM. But there needs to, you canât assume because they have done it before, that youâre just going to rely on them to do it.Â
[00:14:56] Sarah: Itâs not plug and play.
[00:14:58] âI hired them now theyâre just going to go do it and theyâre going to sell a bunch of stuff for me.â No.Â
[00:15:02] Jason: Right. Youâre always going to be disappointed with most everybody if you come in with this assumption and theyâre going to feel unsupported and untrained and frustrated.Â
[00:15:13] Sarah: And they will inevitably either quit or get fired.Â
[00:15:16] Jason: Yeah, theyâll go find a better situation.Â
[00:15:18] Sarah: No matter what, it will not work out. So hereâs a good moment to talk about Vendoroo.Â
[00:15:25] Jason: Weâll talk in just a minute. Weâre going to talk about the onboarding and then some of the next steps that are really important. But quick word from our sponsor. If youâre tired of the constant stress and hassle of maintenance coordination, meet Vendoroo, your AI driven in house maintenance expert that handles work orders from start to finish. Triaging, troubleshooting, vendor selection, and coordination built by property managers for property managers to provide cost effective and accountable maintenance operations, where every dollar is accounted for, and every task is handled with unmatched reliability Vendoroo takes care of the details so you can focus on growth. Schedule a demo today at vendoroo.ai/doorgrow and experience maintenance done right. Okay. So check them out.Â
[00:16:10] Sarah: Speaking of doing things right, letâs talk about what happens after you hire somebody.Â
[00:16:15] Jason: So the next step after you hire it, it has to be onboarding. There needs to be a good transition of bringing somebody out from the wild, this untrained wild creature, getting them to be something that is going to work inside of your business and fit you and fit what you want.
[00:16:33] Itâs onboarding.Â
[00:16:34] Sarah: And if you skip onboarding or if you donât have a very solid onboarding and training process, itâs going to cause just so much friction because Iâm sure that you can think back to a previous job that youâve had back when we all had job jobs, right? Have you ever just been hired and then kind of just, itâs almost like train yourself or figure it out or, well, âIâm going to train you a little bit and then the rest is up to you. Well, what do you mean? I trained you for a whole day. Now Iâm done.â
[00:17:06] âOh, okay. So thatâs it. Thatâs all the support Iâm going to get. All right.âÂ
[00:17:10] have you ever been hired and then you donât even truly know what youâre supposed to do? I donât know. Iâm supposed to sell stuff.Â
[00:17:16] Jason: So hereâs the challenge. Hereâs the challenge with this with entrepreneurs, Iâve been thrown into job situations where there was terrible onboarding, terrible training, but Iâm an entrepreneur personality type.
[00:17:27] I then innovated, figured it out. And in some situations where at a job I then quickly was put into leadership and sort of managing others. But I had initiative. I had drive, like I had adaptability and I find entrepreneurs are incredibly adaptable and they make the mistake of assuming that everybody else is like them and theyâre not, theyâre like, âwell, I would just figure it out and I would just ask enough questions. And if I didnât know something, I would just like, and so you canât assume that everybody is like you, if they were like you, they wouldnât work for you. How many of you would go work for somebody now? Like, youâre unemployable. Like, letâs be real. You would suck as an employee, probably, right? Iâm unemployable at this point.
[00:18:10] Iâm not going to like sit around and let somebody just tell me what to do all the time and whatever. Right. But theyâre not the same as you. And if they were, then they might just, you know, start a business and leave your business. Right. So theyâre willing, if theyâre willing to work for you, you need to assume that they are not the same as you and that they need to be guided. They need support. Now that doesnât mean they canât learn or theyâre not adaptable. Thatâs the skill fit Donât make the assumption that theyâll just wing it and figure it all out unless theyâre just incredibly driven and incredibly patient And theyâre really a strong believer in you.
[00:18:45] Some of them may do that, but you donât want to lose a good person simply because they feel like you donât care or youâre not invested.Â
[00:18:52] Sarah: So this is Thereâs so much time that goes into hiring and this is why I say donât waste the time that youâve spent trying to find the right person and screening applications and interviewing and you put a whole bunch of time and probably effort into this and now you found the person, donât waste that opportunity.
[00:19:18] So you need to onboard them properly. And what does that mean? We need to make sure that they have access to all of the systems that theyâre going to need. And that they know all of the systems that theyâre going to need. So, oh, what are the tools that I use? And then, do I know how to access it? And, do I know how to use it?
[00:19:36] Right? Donât just assume that theyâll figure out, Oh, well, this is how I use this phone system. Train them on it. Just show them that. So, thereâs got to be training for those sorts of things. If theyâre in sales, then, well, How do I sell? How do I reach people? What am I doing? Am I just doing the fit call, figuring that out?
[00:20:00] Am I doing the full pitch? Am I closing? Am I setting them up for you and then youâre going to close? What exactly am I doing? So train them on every single thing that they need to know. And I know this sounds so silly, but most people do not do this. So, what do I say? What do I do? Do I have a script? Do I just make it up?
[00:20:22] Where do I find people? Am I in the office? Am I driving around? Am I, like, meeting people at events? What am I supposed to be doing all day? Because Iâm brand new and I know nothing. So Iâm completely reliant upon you to tell me what to do. So if they donât know, donât assume that theyâre just going to go and figure it out for you.
[00:20:44] You have to show them and they have to shadow you. So for the first 90 days, this is all training. So when you hire any person, now some of them will pick it up a little bit quicker and some of them will take the full 90 days and either way itâs all right. But just in your head, tell yourself itâs going to take the full 90 days, right?
[00:21:07] So in that 90 days. With any position, but especially in sales, donât expect them to come in and then just start selling. Oh, wow, they closed a bunch of deals. That was awesome. Thatâs so cool. So thereâs kind of a ramp up period in every position, but certainly in sales. So shadowing is very important here.
[00:21:31] They need to be all over you. All the time. So you need to meet with them every day.Â
[00:21:40] Jason: Or whoever is the person theyâre learning from. Sometimes itâs not going to be you, eventually. In the beginning, itâs always you, right? Which leads us to, like, availability and access is huge in the beginning. Like, if a team member doesnât have access to you, or you are unavailable because youâre so busy.
[00:21:58] Theyâre going to feel stuck. Theyâre going to feel unsupported. Theyâre going to feel fearful in what theyâre doing. And so they need to have availability. This morning, I got a phone call. Like a call came in through Telegram. She called me and sheâs like, âHey, Iâm supposed to do a triage call right now? I have a scheduled appointment, and Iâm trying to load Zoom and itâs saying, itâs waiting for the host. And Iâm supposed to be the host.â And I said, Then just call them, like pick up the phone, just call them. Itâs a quick call anyway, but it probably has to do with maybe youâre not logged in or you click the link somewhere else and it doesnât realize youâre logged in.
[00:22:31] It happens to me sometimes. And she said, okay, yeah, Iâll just call them. You know, if she were in that situation, this is her first triage call and sheâs like totally stuck and Iâm like unavailable and sheâs freaking out, then sheâs going to feel, you know, people go through all sorts of emotions like anger, shame, guilt, fear, like, you know, stuff like this. And so we donât want to put our team members on this emotional rollercoaster of discomfort when everythingâs uncertain in the beginning. So thatâs important. Once we get through and the onboarding period, my general rule for onboarding is 90 days, like you said, then the first the first 30, Iâm usually meeting with them maybe for an hour a day and Iâm highly available.Â
[00:23:12] Sarah: Every day.
[00:23:13] Jason: Yeah.
[00:23:14] Sarah: Every day.Â
[00:23:15] Jason: Thatâs usually the goal. And then after that, I might the next month, maybe itâs a shorter time period every day if Iâm over like consistently training them like a BDM especially. But otherwise, it might be that we start backing it off to maybe meeting weekly. And then depending on the role of whether or not Iâm their supervisor directly, or if theyâre kind of owning a piece of the business, I then might back it off in the last month or eventually for the future to meet with them monthly to support them or whatnot. Like you kind of gradually step it down and itâll be obvious because youâll be getting on calls with them and like, Hey, what else should we talk about? What else do you need to know? What other questions you have or hey, I want to make sure you know this and youâre going to start to run out of ideas. And theyâre going to start to not need you as much. And so then itâs pretty obvious. Well, okay, then I guess weâll end this early. And thatâs a clue. Well, maybe we donât need to meet as often now. And theyâll let you know. You know, do you think we need to keep meeting all the time like this? Like, well, it is helpful, but I donât know that we need an hour, maybe 30 minutes. Okay, cool. If we could just meet 15 minutes each day so I can get unstuck on a few things. Awesome. Right. So I meet with my assistant every day for a short amount of time.
[00:24:26] But theyâre directly responsible to help and support me on things as an operator, like you run our weekly meeting and our daily huddles. Right? And so thereâs different things like thereâs sort of a cadence of structure, even regardless. So. I think after we get through onboarding and youâve got good access, good availability, they feel supported and theyâre succeeding, they need to be getting results.
[00:24:50] So I think the next step in my mind is there needs to be accountability. So if youâre letting somebody just run and itâs 60 days in and they are not succeeding or getting results, like cool, how many calls has the BDM made? âI donât know.â Okay. How, like, how often have you met with them? âWell, you know, not often.â If thereâs no part of meeting with them is to create accountability.
[00:25:13] Like, Hey, what are you working on today? What do you feel like is next? What are you going to be doing? And to make sure that youâre guiding them towards what they should be working on. So accountability means, you know, metrics if theyâre a bDM.Â
[00:25:26] Sarah: You need to know the metrics.Â
[00:25:28] Jason: How many networking events have they gone to in the last week?
[00:25:31] How many phone calls and outreach have they made to potential referral partners or real estate agents? How many investors have they reached out or called? Are they on top of all of the follow up tasks and deals that are in the CRM? Do you have a CRM, right? Like there needs to be accountability. So thereâs a record.
[00:25:50] Are they keeping notes? Are they, are the calls recorded? Can you listen to their calls to help them improve? Like if thereâs no transparency or accountability, thereâs almost no likelihood that theyâre going to succeed. Like itâs because theyâre not being watched. So, basically, youâre sending the signal, it doesnât matter.
[00:26:08] You might get somebody thatâs an amazing self starter.Â
[00:26:11] Sarah: Go figure it out. Well, shit, I donât know. I guess Iâll just make it up. But then when they make a decision and now their decision is different than your decision, now, you didnât tell them what to do. They just made something up and now youâre not happy with the results.
[00:26:28] Jason: Yeah, and theyâre lacking leadership and if theyâre lacking in your jobs to be the leader and theyâre lacking leadership, then they have no accountability and they have no, thereâs no transparency or visibility in what theyâre doing. You wonât know. If what theyâre doing is working or not working. And so theyâll just keep doing whatâs not working.
[00:26:48] Because if they still get paid either way, thatâs a bad situation for most team members. Most team members will continue to get paid whether or not theyâre really performing at an exceptional level or a decent level. And with a BDM, their compensation should be directly connected to getting results, so they should really want it.
[00:27:06] But if thereâs no accountability or transparency in the beginning, Theyâre probably going to do a lot of stuff that isnât working and theyâre going to be frustrated and theyÂ
[00:27:15] Sarah: know why itâs not workingÂ
[00:27:17] Jason: Yeah,Â
[00:27:18] Sarah: theyâll come to you and say hey like Iâm doing what you told me to do. You told me to make all these calls I mean all these calls. Itâs not working.Â
[00:27:26] Jason: And this is one of the ways in which DoorGrow can assist.
[00:27:29] We can assist with this, right? Like they can show up to our Wednesday coaching call if theyâre a BDM focusing on growth. And the BDM can come to the call and say, Hey, Iâm trying to do this and Iâm getting this result. Itâs not the outcome Iâm looking for. Itâs not working. Cool. Maybe you need to change this.
[00:27:44] Or how are you saying it? Or what are you doing? Or could you send us a call recording? So all of these things that we teach, we know work. They can work. If itâs not working, then itâs obvious that it must be what theyâre doing. Theyâre not doing it correct. Theyâre doing it maybe in the wrong way or maybe theyâre not saying the right things or maybe their tone is off or maybe They are turning people off and they sound like a telemarketer or theyâre creating the sales ick or the sales resistance in people by how theyâre approaching people and these are easy changes These are little things that are very easy to tweak or change.
[00:28:22] I mean just listening to one sales call from somebody, I can give them a lot of feedback and itâs like they grow so much faster and quicker. And thatâs one way to add some visibility or accountability into the equation. But as a business owner, you need to know their metrics. They need to have metrics and be accountable for that, right?
[00:28:40] They need to know what are the leading actions that I need to be taking that are going to get the business development results? What are the daily activities that I need to be doing in order to succeed? So thatâs my takeÂ
[00:28:53] Sarah: for sure. And I love listening to the call recordings because then sometimes when youâre in the moment and this happens to all of us, sometimes when youâre in the moment, you have a certain perception of how things went and then when you go back and you listen to it later, youâll catch something that you werenât aware of in that moment.
[00:29:14] So maybe itâs something that they said, maybe itâs something that you said, maybe you. Didnât explain something the way that they understood it, but youâll hear things that you may have missed in the moment and Especially with salespeople, this is a training opportunity. So a lot of times people go âwhat am I supposed to train them on? Like they know how to use the CRM? they know how to use the phone system. They know what to do. They got to just go do it.â Okay? Well Are we honing in skills? Are we improving things? Or are we just saying like, âGo do it! Go make a thousand calls this week!: Okay, well, if I make a thousand shitty callsÂ
[00:29:53] Jason: Yeah, youâre just wasting energy and youâre wasting your leads or your opportunities.
[00:29:58] Sarah: So thereâs always this fine tuning that we have to do. And very rarely are people able to do it for themselves. Sometimes they can go back and listen to a call recording and then go, Oh, you know what? Iâm going to improve that. But a lot of times itâs really good to have two people listening to the call recording for that reason.
[00:30:20] And then the last thing that I do want to talk about is what does the 30, 60, 90 day period look like? So I always tell people in their first 30 days, this is nothing but training. This is deep training, you really do need to be meeting with them every day, not when itâs convenient, not when you have time, not, âoh, well, I skipped that day because this happened.â
[00:30:42] Every single day, every day, they need to have the correct resources, the correct knowledge, the right support, the questions need to be answered, you need to be available to them. They need to have all of this because theyâre brand new. So a lot of times what happens is people hire somebody and itâs like a little baby bird and then they push the baby bird out of the nest.
[00:31:08] The bird canât fly yet because you didnât even teach it what its wings are, right? So we canât do that yet. So in the first 30 days, really expect nothing. Really, they just need to be training. If they close something in their first 30 days, thatâs awesome. Great! I mean, they should be doing the activities.
[00:31:27] Jason: I expect work.Â
[00:31:28] Sarah: Yes,Â
[00:31:29] Jason: I expect to actually and work like if itâs to make calls, I expect them in like a BDM should be making some outbound outreach and calls right away.Â
[00:31:39] Sarah: Absolutely.Â
[00:31:40] Jason: Otherwise, how are you going to know thatÂ
[00:31:41] Sarah: if itâs going to, yeah,Â
[00:31:43] Jason: they shouldnât just be like, just learning. So itâs like, I want to get them on the phone and get them making calls.
[00:31:47] Sarah: No, but in sales, letâs be really clear here. Training. This is hands on training. This is like trying to say, âHey, I need to go learn how to drive a car. But Iâm never actually going to get in the car. Iâm going to meet with you on Zoom or Iâm going to sit with you and youâre going to tell me about how to drive a car.â
[00:32:03] No, honey, you gotta go get in the car. So, yes, you have to actually be doing it, doing the activities.Â
[00:32:09] That is training.Â
[00:32:10] Jason: Thereâs no amount of manuals or videos you could read or watch that would teach you how to drive a car. You have to drive the car.Â
[00:32:17] Sarah: Yes. So, if they close something in their first 30 days, thatâs awesome, thatâs gravy, thatâs a bonus.
[00:32:23] But sometimes people go, âoh man, itâs been 30 days and I havenât closed anything. Like, man, they must suck.â Theyâre new. Theyâre learning so much and when you implement a new thing, youâre probably not going to be very good at it. Especially a new strategy or a new way of doing sales because the way that we teach our clients to sell is different.
[00:32:43] Itâs different. Weâre not hardcore closing everybody. Weâre not doing that. So itâs, everything is different. They donât have their bearings yet. They donât even have their footing and their foundations, right? So 30 days, if they close something, thatâs great. But I still, I want them to be training and I want them to be doing some sort of, you know, whatever itâs going to be.
[00:33:04] If you have them doing events or presentations or calls or a mixture of all of them, great.Â
[00:33:10] Jason: There should be progress. Youâll see progress. And if thatâs the thing you donât want to tolerate somebody being in the business for 60 days, 90 days, and youâre not seeing progress or action, and youâre trying to push them.
[00:33:23] If youâre having to push somebody to do something. Probably theyâre not the right personality fit. If you feel unsafe with them doing things, and it makes you uncomfortable, how theyâre doing things, probably not a culture fit. Theyâre not doing it according to your values.
[00:33:36] The âhowâ they go about doing it is different than you. If theyâre just not doing the right things, then thatâs a training issue. Or theyâre just not intelligent enough to learn the skill. So thatâs a skill fit. Okay,Â
[00:33:48] Sarah: so then 60 days I do want to see some progress. They might close something.
[00:33:55] They still might not it depends. I canât say yes or no Oh, they should definitely close. I canât you canât say that because everybody has their own time frame, right? And investors sometimes they work on their own time frames. You canât control that but I do want to see I want to feel like things are happening, and I want to feel like, Hey, weâve got some stuff in the pipeline, weâve got some stuff that I feel like might close.
[00:34:20] If you say, Hey, what do you have thatâs about to close? Do you feel like anybodyâs close? And they go not really. OhâŠ
[00:34:27] Jason: are they getting appointments? Are there relationships being built? Are there deals now kind of get in the pipeline at some of the earlier stages? Like you should start to see the sales pipeline mature and build.
[00:34:37] Sarah: So then 90 days theyâve been doing that. Now they understand everything. They know what to do. They know how to do it. Theyâve gotten their feet wet. Theyâve now tested things and then also made some improvements. Theyâre like, Oh, well, when I say it like this, it doesnât work. It doesnât resonate.
[00:34:53] But if I say it like this, itâs better. Oh I have to switch this and this, right? Now youâre making those little tweaks, those little improvements. So 90 days, they should be able to close something at this point. And same thing with the pipeline. I need to see the pipeline moving forward. I need to see more being added in the pipeline.
[00:35:11] I need to see them further along in different stages in the pipeline. Things need to start kind of really moving forward at this point. And then after the 90 days, Now, you get to push the bird out of the nest, right? Now, youâre a baby bird, go push him. You should now have everything that you need to be able to soar, as long as we did our job.
[00:35:34] But a lot of times, I get it, itâs hard, because youâre running a business, and youâre an entrepreneur, and youâre busy, and itâs crazy. And now you want me to train somebody? Yep. Yeah. Because once they are able to do it for you, now you can relax into it. But if we skip the training, whatâs going to happen is youâre going to go, man, theyâre just not getting me the results.
[00:35:55] Or they might get frustrated and go, man, my boss sucks. Like they donât train me on. Anything, and itâs just not, itâs not a good place here. I know, Iâm going to leave because I know that if I donât, then Iâll eventually get fired. So regardless, theyâre going to leave. And then youâre going to have to go, God, well now I have to go hire somebody.
[00:36:11] And then youâre going to hire somebody. And then youâre going to be in this whole hiring cycle of hell for the rest of eternity. And thatâs not a fun place to be. Itâs not. Itâs really painful.Â
[00:36:21] Jason: Yeah, a lot of people wait until theyâre in pain to hire instead of hiring strategically with a plan or, you know, in advance.
[00:36:29] And so once you get to the place where you need a new team member, and then you hire, and now youâre going to have to, youâre kind of shot in the foot, and youâre going to have to like go backwards time wise, like then youâre in a worse spot, like thatâs not the ideal place to be hiring. And then later youâll create more freedom you know, eventually, but yeah, you want to make sure that you are kind of aware of your capacity and starting to like get your hiring systems, get your new hires in place in advance before you need it.
[00:37:01] And this is why itâs super important to make sure youâre making the right decisions in the business. So we have frameworks for how to decide what you need most in the business and frameworks for how to decide what the business needs most. So youâre making healthy. financial hiring decisions because making wrong decisions that way can really hurt cash flow and can, you know, especially early in the business can really be dangerous.
[00:37:22] So, well, is there anything else youâd say to maybe some of our clients or people that theyâve gotten a new hire. Itâs probably a good hire and they need to make sure theyâre doing their onboarding and taking care of this new hire correctly.Â
[00:37:36] Sarah: Yeah, get it on your calendar. Donât just say youâre going to do it.
[00:37:40] It has to be scheduled time where itâs dedicated. And also, donât half ass it. Donât be like, oh yeah, Iâm going to be on the phone with Joe while Iâm like over here. They know. Thatâs not dedicated. That does not feel good. Weâve all been on the receiving end of something like that. So, donât make people guess.
[00:37:59] Donât make them figure it out. Itâs not going to work out well.Â
[00:38:03] Jason: Alright. Thatâs our episode for today. So I think that this should be pretty helpful for some of our clients that are getting into new hires And hopefully it was helpful for a lot of you listening if youâre struggling with hiring or building your team or systems or profit, all this relates to the people system in your business. You need people, planning, and process and thatâs our super system. If youâre needing some help with this, reach out to DoorGrow and we can take you to a whole nother level by getting helping you get these systems installed and youâll have a business that you actually enjoy being in. So until next time to our mutual growth.
[00:38:42] Bye everyone.
[00:38:43] you just listened to the #DoorGrowShow. We are building a community of the savviest property management entrepreneurs on the planet in the DoorGrowClub. Join your fellow DoorGrow Hackers at doorgrowclub.com. Listen, everyone is doing the same stuff. SEO, PPC, pay-per-lead content, social direct mail, and they still struggle to grow!Â
[00:39:10] At DoorGrow, we solve your biggest challenge: getting deals and growing your business. Find out more at doorgrow.com. Find any show notes or links from todayâs episode on our blog doorgrow.com, and to get notified of future events and news subscribe to our newsletter at doorgrow.com/subscribe. Until next time, take what you learn and start DoorGrow Hacking your business and your life.
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