Originally Posted by
accountinquestion
I'm going to try and not pick on Kewl but it just annoys me to see the sort of stuff he put out there. Just nonsense. I guess maybe I am being a bully.
Fact is if you have a high IQ you're going to have life a lot easier. Look at Mickey Crimm and his life. He has very little formal education but he went into a library popped off some books and has basically written some primers on how to do machine stuff. He clearly has a fairly high IQ. People without a reasonably high IQ would have never been able to do that sort of thing. Yet he isn't "book smart" ..
I read something recently where there was a study about people with high IQs in sales positions. IIRC it was posited that IQ wouldn't matter so much and it was more the social skills. It turned out that there was a huge correlation with IQ. Perhaps IQ mattered even more? (don't recall) Just the fluid intelligence/being able to think on one's feet are all an IQ thing. It isn't just figuring out puzzles on a test.
Even testing the upper bounds of IQ is kinda a joke. You can put a time limit on it, but then that can trigger testing anxiety issue or something. You can give people unlimited time and then people who are willing to put a lot of effort into stuff have higher scores.
It is a fascinating thing though. You just know there are people out there that understand things considerably beyond what you're even aware of....
I can definitely believe that with sales positions, but I think one would do best to have that rare combination of High IQ and rock solid social skills. As you mentioned, you have to be able to think on your feet---which involves getting a quick read on your mark...excuse me, customer...and figuring out what you need to say to manipulate them...excuse me...make clear the features and benefits of the product.
It's so much easier, in my opinion, with telemarketing because you don't have to regulate anything about your body language or facial expressions; it's all voice control, which is easy, if that's the only thing you have to focus on. The marks, I mean, customers, can often tell you're faking it if they can see your eyes.
So, I think the best salesperson has a high IQ, rock solid social skills and is also a sociopath. Being a sociopath would be a huge advantage because they could actually convince the customers that they care about their well-being and aren't just trying to get a commission. They would also tend (in my observations) to be better at warming the customers up with small talk, which I was absolutely never good at. Nothing beyond, "How are you today?", for me, when it comes to in-person sales, just right to business. I could do the small talk thing in telemarketing because, again, you only have to control your voice. With commissions, you could actually make pretty decent money (especially relative to the cost of living in that area) once upon a time if you were good at it.
Small talk was also easy in telemarketing because people LOVE talking about the weather. I never started the sales day without taking a hard look at the national weather map.