Part 6 of 7:
The 90-Day Onboarding System for New Salespeople
Hiring a great salesperson is only the beginning. Without proper onboarding, even strong performers can struggle.
Many companies hire a rep, give them a product overview, and expect them to start producing immediately.
That approach rarely works. Salespeople need structure, training, and time to learn the company’s system.
A well-designed onboarding process typically spans about ninety days.
During this period, the salesperson learns:
Even complex industries, such as aerospace or chemical manufacturing, can train salespeople within that timeframe when the process is structured correctly.
By month four, the salesperson should be actively selling.
The key is turning onboarding into a repeatable system.
Each new salesperson follows the same steps, learns the same materials, and progresses through the same milestones.
That consistency makes scaling much easier.
Instead of reinventing training each time someone is hired, the company runs a proven program.
When onboarding works well, something important happens. Salespeople begin producing revenue consistently.
That allows the company to confidently grow the sales team. But as the team expands, another challenge emerges.
Salespeople require a different management approach than most other employees.
In the final article of this series, we’ll look at the leadership systems required to manage a growing sales team.