The Similarities and Differences Between Men and Women in Sales

Research Overview

Over 1,000 sales professionals participated in an extensive study on various subjects including sales strategy preferences, quota performance history, and a wide variety of questions to better understand their values and personal beliefs. About 78 percent of participants were men, while 22 percent were women. When the research data is analyzed by gender, it provides an interesting frame of reference on the similarities and differences between men and women in sales.

These reference points have been grouped into three subject areas. The first subject is salespeople’s belief systems, ranging from how members of each gender perceive themselves to attitudes about truthfulness, and even how tall a salesperson should be. The second is on sales strategy, which includes topics such as how the members of each gender decide which deals to work and the relationships they have with customers. The final subject is career orientation, including what motivates men and women in sales, as well as performance comparisons.

About 28 percent of the men who participated in this study were field salespeople, 35 percent were inside salespeople, 9 percent were mid-level sales managers, 22 percent were top-level vice presidents of sales, and 6 percent were presales engineers. About 32 percent of women participants were field salespeople, 40 percent were inside salespeople, 8 percent were mid-level sales managers, 16 percent were top-level vice presidents of sales, and 4 percent were presales engineers.

After the data was then aggregated and conclusions were drawn from the results. Finally, the study results were presented to focus groups consisting of thirty men and twenty-eight women to gather feedback and opinions. The focus groups included both sales and non-sales business professionals. The focus group comments served as an important role in understanding the complexity of this research topic. They provided deeper gender-specific insights and contrasting viewpoints on the subject-matter being discussed.Subject areas included in this research include:

Belief Systems
Similarities
Sales Strengths
Truthfulness
Importance of Luck
Differences
Competitiveness
School Subject Preference
Self-Perception
Physical Presence

Sales Strategy
Similarities
 Reasons for Losing Business
Prospective Customer Perception
Customer Decision Making
Differences
Prospecting Habits
Client Relationships
Deal Pursuit Risk
Working on Deals

Career Orientation
Similarities
Life Decisions
Future Orientation
Handling of Failure
Money Motivation
Differences
Career Motivation
Sales Mentor
Previous Year Quota Achievement
Career Advancement Rating

Research details can be found in Steve W. Martin’s latest book titled Sales Strategy Playbook.

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