After making sure that the basic sales system works (or its shortcomings aren’t critical), the next step is to assess how effectively the leader manages available resources. Here you need to focus on indicators that truly depend on the Sales Director, not those determined by external factors.
Evaluating leader effectiveness becomes a key analysis stage: it includes measurements of conversions, average check, employee discipline, and ability to develop the team.
A good sales leader should manage several key metrics. The first is conversion at different funnel stages. If leads exist but aren’t “closing” into deals, this may indicate weak control over the quality of managers’ work. The Sales Director should understand at which funnel stages losses occur and why.
The second important metric is average check and deal margins. If managers constantly give excessive discounts, don’t offer additional services or products, this is often a consequence of insufficient training or control by the leader.
Team discipline is equally important. Do managers fulfill their call plans? Do they send commercial proposals on time? Do they correctly enter information into the CRM? These are basic things for which the Sales Director is responsible.
Pay attention to signs indicating leader weakness:
The Sales Director doesn’t control managers’ work, doesn’t hold regular meetings about deal status, doesn’t give feedback.
The department lacks planning and sales forecasting; the leader lives “one day at a time.”
There’s no analytics on the effectiveness of different channels, customer segments, or products.
The team chronically fails to meet plans, while the Sales Director always finds external reasons and never takes responsibility.
The department has high staff turnover, especially among experienced managers.
The Sales Director doesn’t develop the team: there’s no training, mentoring, or career growth.
The leader works as a “player-coach” – personally handling key clients instead of developing the team.
If you find most of these signs, the problem is likely with the leader. But before making a decision about firing, it’s worth considering the third important question.