推销员Grit的实证分析:探索毅力、一致性和心态

IF 2 4区 管理学 Q3 BUSINESS
Matthew M. Lastner, Michael C. Peasley, Mark J. Pelletier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要目的:销售中砂砾研究的日益增长的兴趣代表了一个机会,因为依赖销售的组织可以从对砂砾如何产生以及它如何影响销售绩效的加深理解中显著受益。销售的本质是高压力和高拒绝,在这种情况下,拥有高毅力的人应该比那些没有毅力的同龄人获得更大的成功。然而,三个主要问题限制了先前在销售和营销背景下对毅力的研究结果:学者们选择(1)在人格特征完全建立之前对青少年进行测量,(2)在非销售背景下进行测量,或者(3)只使用毅力的两个维度中的一个,通常评估毅力而不是一致性。因此,由于研究人员对毅力提出的子维度、毅力和兴趣的一致性的有用性有不同的看法,在组织背景下研究毅力的研究很少,因此对毅力在销售领域的潜在效用的研究呈现出一幅混乱的画面。因此,本研究通过调查成人销售人员在B2B销售环境中的勇气,以及勇气的两个维度,来解决这三个问题。调查数据来自473名B2B销售人员(即全职从事企业对企业销售的销售人员),代表了各行各业,包括广告、汽车零部件、商业解决方案、计算机和技术相关销售、保险、促销产品、电信、运输和物流。模型设计允许探索坚毅、成长心态和自我效能的两个前因,以及兴趣、销售人员绩效和组织承诺的两个结果。进一步,我们通过扩展销售人员的控制点,将管理者在成长心态和自我效能与努力的毅力和兴趣的一致性之间的关系中可能发挥的偶然作用纳入其中。所有这些关系都使用Mplus v8进行了测试,使用具有鲁棒标准误差的最大似然估计器。我们的发现建立在之前的销售研究的基础上,研究了毅力对销售结果的影响,证明了毅力的每个维度都与业绩有积极的关系,并确定了毅力的积极影响延伸到销售人员对组织的承诺。此外,我们确定成长心态和自我效能感对销售人员勇气有预测作用,而控制点在这些关系中起调节作用。然而,我们证明毅力的毅力和一致性维度并不是均匀地受到成长心态和控制点的影响,这表明可以通过使用这两个维度评估和分析毅力结构来收集更多的见解。特别是,结果显示销售人员的成长型思维模式与坚持不懈的努力呈正相关,与兴趣的一致性呈负相关。因此,拥有成长型思维模式的销售人员可能会在漫长的销售周期中坚持下去,但随着时间的推移,他们可能会发现自己的兴趣被新的机会所吸引(例如,在另一家公司担任销售角色,管理机会)。然而,当销售人员具有较高的感知控制点时,成长心态和兴趣一致性之间的负相关关系减弱。具有成长型思维模式的销售人员需要在不断为他们提供新机会的环境中工作,否则兴趣一致性的降低可能会对他们的表现和对组织的承诺产生负面影响。因此,具有成长型思维模式的候选人可能是销售组织中选择机会的理想人选,这些机会可以让他们更快地进步,比如加速培训项目,从初级职位到高级职位的相对快速的晋升项目,或者将他们置于管理轨道上的项目。此外,考虑到控制点的偶然作用,销售经理可以监控和发展销售人员的控制点,通过允许灵活性和自主性,提供工具和反馈,并赋予销售人员成功执行销售过程所需的能力和机会,来缓解兴趣一致性的下降。本研究通过对成年销售人员的B2B销售环境中勇气的两个维度进行探索,加强了最近以勇气为基础的研究趋势。本研究还介绍了成长和固定思维模式在销售环境中的研究。此外,尽管销售领域对毅力的研究越来越多,但迄今为止,关于毅力如何影响销售结果的研究还很少。 因此,本研究通过强调可以提高销售人员绩效和组织承诺的因素,为销售和营销文献提供了一些关于勇气和成长心态两个维度的初步发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Nuanced Analysis of Salesperson Grit: Exploring Perseverance, Consistency, and Mind-set
ABSTRACT Purpose The increasing interest of grit research in sales represents an opportunity as sales-dependent organizations stand to benefit significantly from an enhanced understanding of how grit arises and how it affects sales performance. The nature of sales, with high levels of stress and rejection, presents conditions in which individuals possessing high levels of grit should find greater success than their less gritty peers. However, three predominant issues limit the findings of previous research on grit in a sales and marketing context: scholars have elected to measure grit (1) with adolescents before personality traits are fully established, (2) in non-sales contexts, or (3) using only one of the two dimensions of grit, generally assessing perseverance but not consistency. Thus, due to differing opinions among researchers regarding the usefulness of grit’s proposed subdimensions, perseverance and consistency of interests, the scant research in that has examined grit within organizational contexts presents a muddled picture of grit’s potential utility for the field of sales. Therefore, this study addresses all three concerns by investigating grit in a B2B sales setting, with adult salespeople, and on both dimensions of grit. Methodology Survey data were collected from 473 B2B salespeople (i.e. employed full-time in business-to-business sales as a salesperson) representing a cross-section of industries, including advertising, auto parts, business solutions, computer and technology-related sales, insurance, promotional products, telecommunications, and transportation and logistics. The model design allowed for exploration of two antecedents to grit, growth mind-set and self-efficacy, and two outcomes of interest, salesperson performance and organizational commitment. Further, we incorporate the contingent role managers can have on the relationships between growth mind-set and self-efficacy with perseverance of effort and consistency of interest by expanding a salesperson’s locus of control. All of these relationships were tested with Mplus v8, using a maximum likelihood estimator with robust standard errors. Findings Our findings build upon previous sales research examining the effects of grit on sales outcomes by demonstrating that each of grit’s dimensions has a positive relationship with performance and determining that the positive effects of grit extend to salesperson commitment to the organization. Moreover, we determine that a growth mind-set and self-efficacy are predictive of salesperson grit and that locus of control plays a moderating role in these relationships. However, we demonstrate that grit’s perseverance and consistency dimensions are not impacted uniformly by a growth mind-set and locus of control, indicating that additional insights may be gleaned from assessing and analyzing the grit construct using both dimensions. In particular, the results show that a salesperson’s growth mind-set is positively associated with perseverance of effort and negatively associated with consistency of interest. Thus, salespeople with a growth mind-set are likely to persevere through long sales cycles but may find their interests gravitate toward new opportunities over time (e.g. sales role with another company, management opportunity). However, the negative relationship between a growth mind-set and consistency of interest is attenuated when the salesperson has a higher perceived locus of control. Implications Salespeople with a growth mind-set need to work in environments that continually provide them with new opportunities, or decreases in consistency of interest may negatively impact their performance and commitment to the organization. Thus, the candidate with the growth mind-set may be an ideal fit for select opportunities within the sales organization that would allow them to progress more quickly, such as accelerated training programs, programs offering relatively rapid progression from junior standing to full-standing, or programs that would place them on a management track. Further, taking into consideration the contingent role of locus of control, sales managers can monitor and develop a salesperson’s locus of control to mitigate a decline in consistency of interest by permitting flexibility and autonomy, providing tools and feedback, and empowering the salesperson with the capabilities and opportunities they need to execute the sales process successfully. Originality This research strengthens the recent trend in grit-based research by exploring both dimensions of grit in a B2B sales setting with adult salespeople. This study also introduces research on growth and fixed mind-sets in a sales setting. Further, even with grit being increasingly studied in the sales domain, very little research had examined how grit affects sales outcomes to date. Therefore, this research delivers some of the first findings on both dimensions of grit and growth mind-sets to the sales and marketing literature by highlighting factors that can enhance salesperson performance and organizational commitment.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
35.70%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The Journal of Business-to-Business Marketing® encourages diversity in approaches to business marketing theory development, research methods, and managerial problem solving. An editorial board comprised of outstanding, internationally recognized scholars and practitioners ensures that the journal maintains impeccable standards of relevance and rigorous scholarship. The Journal of Business-to-Business Marketing features: •basic and applied research that reflects current business marketing theory, methodology, and practice •articles from leading researchers covering topics of mutual interest for the business and academic communities
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