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Crush The Tomato!
Lee Salz
One of my favorite hobbies is playing baseball with my kids. I’m very involved with their Little League teams and volunteer to help teach baseball skills to the kids. My 7-year old son, Steven, is playing his first year of coach-pitch baseball. Prior to that, he played T-ball which is a very different game.
One day at practice, I was pitching to the team of 7-year olds. Boy after boy came up to home plate and swung the bat as if it were a wet noodle. They picked up the bat, barely swung, and, as soon as they made contact with the ball, stopped swinging altogether. The ball dribbled a few feet in front of home plate and then the process began all over again. It wasn’t fun for the kids to play, and even more painful for parents to watch.
Having watched a few kids swing the bat like a piece of cooked linguini, I got an idea. I picked up the ball, walked over to the hitter, and asked what I was holding in my hand. The boy, looking puzzled, said, “It’s a ball, Coach!” He resisted all temptation to finish that statement with, “you dummy.” I contradicted, “No, it’s not! It’s a tomato. And the next time I throw the tomato over home plate, I want you to crush it with the bat. Crush the tomato!” A dastardly smile appeared on the boy’s face. He went back to home plate to hit again. Ball after ball sailed into the outfield as the boy crushed the tomato. And it wasn’t one boy. It was hitter after hitter crushing the tomato with a big grin on their face.
What changed? We didn’t teach hitting technique so they were not better-skilled hitters. We didn’t change their stance, nor did we alter their swing. It was the same group of kids with the same skill-level using the same old bat and ball. All of these factors were the same, but the results were drastically different.
What changed was a shift in the player’s mindset. That shift changed their performance. For one, the kids had a visual in mind when they were hitting. And, that visual was something fun. It also had a little naughty in it. Wouldn’t these kids get into trouble if they were crushing real tomatoes? Mom wouldn’t like the mess! This real-life story was really Motivation 101 at its core.
This same issue happens on sales teams every day. Sales people show up to work without really being there. They are there in body, but not in mind or spirit. They work the hours, collect a paycheck, and begin the process all over again. Whose fault is it that this culture exists in your company? In my mind, a leader is responsible for inspiring their team to perform. Their job is to inspire success! How many sales people on your team stop their swing as soon as they make contact with the ball? How many balls are sitting in the dirt a few feet from home plate?
There are three reasons why the strategy with the Little Leaguers worked.
1. The motivation was fun. Sure, technique is important, but that’s not the only ingredient of the success recipe. Successful teams have leaders that motivate the group to want to excel. The team relies on its leader to make work fun. Perspiration without inspiration leads to frustration. Inspired teams don’t even notice that they perspire.
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RikAMo
about 1 year ago
2 comments
I like the main story for motivational purposes. But, if anyone on my sales staff 'works the hours to collect a paycheck' then I did a poor job in hiring them in the first place. A poor performing sales rep is a direct reflection on the boss.
HarrietAlison
about 1 year ago
470 comments
Everybody needs motivation and encouragement. Good ideas. Metaphors are always good. use something the people you ae speaking to can relate to.
lmandel
about 1 year ago
24 comments
Great article, Lee
clsngcsnva
about 1 year ago
2 comments
excellent! more sports analogies! if i would have used that during little league, it would have changed my whole outlook on hitting. now, more importantly, this jogs my brain to use the same idea for the other parts of sales i hate. thnx.