Sales Productivity or Sales Excellence? What can we learn from Pat Riley of the NBA?
Posted on March 18th, 2009I never get why so many of us in business look for easy answers - a black or white declaration of where our business focus should be resting.
“It’s either productivity or excellence - which do you believe is the most important?”
Here’s what I think: it’s both. And the tension of insisting on putting the emphasis on both forces us through the easy answer to find true insight.
Let’s set the parameters of this debate in the areas of:
- Managing results
- Activity management
Numbers or quality? The Two Sides
Managing results: No one is going to argue that results are essential and that it is critical that we set objectives and manage/measure to them.
The argument is that too often results are the only measure that gets focused on. Basically, custodians of these businesses are driving while only looking in the rear view mirror. It’s uncomfortable, you can’t go as fast, control of the car is harder to manage and you can only see where you have been. Who knows what is in front?
Activity management: Business is quantitative, correct? So let’s set numbers goals for activities. The more activity, the more likely we are to get the desired results. And as a general rule, that is the case.
The risk, however, is two-fold:
- The team goes out with results-focused activity… every contact is a nail and they are the hammer. Ouch! Always being the “nail” in a conversation with a “hammer” leads to the risk of conversation-averse clients and potentials.
- Lots of activity…but is it the right activity?
Numbers or quality? The Pat Riley Approach
Pat Riley was a NCAA basketball player who was schooled at the University of Kentucky by Adolph Rupp. Rupp was one of the most successful college coaches ever. He was evangelical about excellence through fundamentals. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolph_Rupp
Pat had a journey man career including playing with the Lakers, winning the NBA championship and finally playing with the Suns. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Riley His coaching career was much more successful. He has coached five NBA champions and is currently president of Miami Heat, who won the championship in 2006.
Pat had several key beliefs that framed his coaching philosophy:
- Players want to play at their highest level
- A good coach can count on players’ pride and their own drive to excel
- Every player knows their results, the league and the sporting press has reams of results data and statistics focused dominantly on results
- An unswerving commitment to focus on the fewest things that make the most difference
So his strategy fell out like this:
- Coach to the playbook
- Measure and reward “on target” performance and attempts
- Let results follow - professionals will succeed more than fail when they make attempts or “effort” at the right activities
He built a philosophy around “effort statistics”. Once a team had the playbook down, he knew that solid, quality attempts would make the difference in end of game results. Results and Activity. Productivity and Excellence.
So to get the most drive out of activity, he measured and rewarded:
- Attempted assists
- Attempted rebounds
- Attempted shots
- Attempted steals
Pat knew that the drive, competitiveness and professionalism of the players would be channeled through quality effort and as a consequence would drive results. If he gave positive feedback on the attempt, quality would eventually win out and results would follow.
Results are essential, but they follow. Excellence is driven through quality effort.
The key is knowing what to measure and not getting hung up on staring backwards at the results.
Smart attempts to steal the ball or bring down the rebound will pay off!
Put good things in and get good results out


