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TV Expert Interviews / Human Resources / Mar 22, 2026 / Posted by Steve Radford / 3

Why Most New Sales Hires Fail And How to Fix It (video)

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Hiring salespeople is easy. Hiring the right ones? That’s where most organizations stumble. In a revealing conversation on Sales POP!, John Golden sat down with Steve Radford , a UK-based sales leader with more than 25 years of hands-on experience building and coaching sales teams, to unpack the real reasons new hires flame out and what high-performing companies do differently.

The Resume Trap

According to Radford, the biggest hiring mistake is treating resumes like scorecards. Too many companies fixate on knowledge, skills, and past experience while ignoring the traits that actually predict success: motivation, resilience, emotional intelligence, and cultural alignment. A candidate who crushed quota at one organization might completely stall in a new environment where the sales cycle, customer base, or team dynamics are fundamentally different.

Radford’s advice? Build a success profile for each role, not just a job description. Map out the behaviors, values, and personality traits your top performers share, then screen for those qualities with the same rigor you apply to technical competence. Structured behavioral interviews and psychometric tools can surface what a polished resume hides.

Onboarding That Actually Works

Even when the right person walks through the door, a sloppy onboarding experience can derail them. Radford describes a structured 90-day framework that moves new hires from orientation and shadowing into gradually increasing responsibility, with regular coaching checkpoints along the way. The key differentiator? Personalization. Every new rep arrives with a unique blend of strengths and gaps, and a cookie-cutter program wastes time reinforcing skills they already have while ignoring the areas that need attention.

Radford also champions mentoring specifically from someone outside the direct management chain. A trusted mentor gives new hires a safe space to ask questions, admit struggles, and get candid feedback they might hesitate to seek from the person writing their performance reviews.

Coaching Is Not Training

One of the sharpest distinctions Radford draws is between instruction, teaching, mentoring, and coaching. Instruction hands over information. Teaching adds participation and challenge. Mentoring provides experienced guidance. Coaching the most powerful of the four is a collaborative, question-driven process that helps reps discover solutions on their own. The best sales managers know when to switch gears between these modes depending on where each team member is in their development journey.

Metrics That Drive Behavior, Not Just Results

Radford urges leaders to move beyond lagging indicators like closed revenue and instead track pipeline velocity, stage-by-stage conversion rates, and the quality of conversations reps are having with decision-makers. These leading indicators give managers real-time visibility into performance gaps and enable timely, targeted interventions long before quarterly numbers come in.

Using AI Without Losing the Human Touch

On the topic of technology, Radford sees enormous value in AI for preparing research prospects, rehearsing conversations, and analyzing data, but warns against letting it replace the human connection that drives real sales relationships. The winning formula, he says, is to use AI as a thinking partner that elevates your skills rather than a crutch that does the thinking for you.

The Bottom Line

Building a high-performing sales team isn’t about finding unicorns. It’s about hiring with intention, onboarding with purpose, and developing people with consistency. As Radford puts it, lasting change only happens when learning is reinforced across multiple touchpoints and embedded into the daily workflow, not delivered as a one-and-done event.

Listen to the full interview on Sales POP! for the complete conversation, including Radford’s seven-step model for customer-centric selling and his practical frameworks for sales manager development.

Our Host

John is the Amazon bestselling author of Winning the Battle for Sales: Lessons on Closing Every Deal from the World’s Greatest Military Victories and Social Upheaval: How to Win at Social Selling. A globally acknowledged Sales & Marketing thought leader, speaker, and strategist, he has conducted over 1500 video interviews of thought leaders for Sales POP! online sales magazine & YouTube Channel and for audio podcast channels where Sales POP! is rated in the top 2% of most popular shows out of 3,320,580 podcasts globally, ranked by Listen Score. He is CSMO at Coevera. In his spare time, John is an avid Martial Artist.

About Author

Steve Radford has spent 25+ years helping frontline salespeople master the art of selling so customers love to buy. A leader in sales learning and development, he’s founded award-winning businesses, led sales teams from tens to hundreds, and built sales capability for global brands. Steve co-created one of the UK’s first university-accredited sales programs and helped shape the UK Sales Executive Apprenticeship and Diploma programmes. A Founding Fellow of the Institute of Sales Professionals and founder of the Greater Sales Company, he writes practical, no-nonsense guides for reps, managers, and leaders. He’s the author of “How To Sell: Everything you need to think, know and do to have greater sales conversations”.

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