
 Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
 Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount Be Indispensable to Protect Your Job in a Volatile Economy
 Aug 27, 2022 
 07:27 
If you want to succeed at any job, make yourself invaluable. Go the extra mile; make them never be able to imagine what life without you there would be like. - Ross Mathews
Selling in a crisis is tough. Losing your job during an economic downturn is worse. Now more than ever, you need your income. If you lose your job, there is a much higher probability that you will take a pay cut when you land your next one or end up in a role or company that you dislike. 
No Mercy for Anchors
The good news for you and sales professionals everywhere is that most organizations and their leaders are smart. They understand that in volatile times like this, they need productive salespeople more than ever. Businesses cannot survive without a steady stream of new sales and loyal customers. 
The optimum word here is productive. In a recession, everything and everyone will be examined for its value. If you drain resources rather than generating sales and profits, you are gone. There is no mercy for anchors when the ship is sinking. 
How to Get Fired in a Crisis:
 	Failure to prospect
 	Low activity and productivity
 	Lose customers
 	Mediocre performance 
 	Poor time management and organization
 	Wasting resources
 	Coasting along
 	Quiet quitting
 	Making excuses
 	Surprising the boss with bad news
 	Complaining
 	Being difficult to work with
The bottom line is, when your leadership team is faced with making decisions about sales force reductions, the dead wood gets cut first. Therefore you need to be indispensable to your boss and organization. 
Excellence is a Choice
Mediocrity, just like excellence, is a choice. Therefore, the most effective way to protect your job is to make the decision to be excellent. Here’s how you become indispensable and advance your career in a crisis:
 	Get back to the basics
 	Be fanatical about prospecting and fill your pipeline
 	Sell better
 	Retain your customers
 	Contribute and be a team player
 	Volunteer for projects and always offer to lend a hand
 	Look for ways to add value
 	Consistently ask the boss how you can help
 	Come in early and stay late
 	Give more effort
 	Mentor struggling team members 
 	Contribute in team meetings
 	Attack the day with drive and optimism
 	Be a beacon of light with your positive attitude
 	Go the extra mile
Change your way of thinking about work. Devote yourself to your company’s survival. Make a commitment to prove your worth to your boss, company, prospects, and customers every day. Be and become a person that your organization cannot live without.
Going the Extra Mile 
Going the extra mile is powerful in a world where mediocrity is the norm and most people won’t. These things may seem small, but in today’s world the majority of your competition fails in these obvious areas: 
 	Showing up early for meetings and being prepared 
 	Following up 
 	Checking spelling and grammar on your emails and written documents
 	Always looking, acting, and dressing like a professional
 	Volunteering for special projects
 	Coming in early and staying late
 	Keeping your word 
 	Doing more than is required
 	Really listening to your prospects and looking for ways to solve their problems–regardless of the impact on your commission check 
 	Taking personal responsibility to ensure that your support team follows through on their obligations 
 	Telling the truth when you’ve made a mistake or cannot come through on a promise
 	Constantly looking for ways to add value and do more
 	A commitment to excellence in everything you do–even when no one is looking
 	Being persistent and relentless
 	Blocking your time and wading through a massive amount of rejection to find people who will buy from you
 	At the end of the day, when you are exhausted, frustrated, and ready to quit, willing yourself to make one more call
There are no traffic jams on the extra mile. When you are there, you will stand out and your career will flourish.
