Executive Director, Sales at athenahealth
Enterprise Sales Director at Greenway Medical TechnologiesExecutive Director, Sales at athenahealth
Enterprise Sales Director at Greenway Medical TechnologiesUndergraduate, University of Minnesota-Duluth
Jason’s career has been defined by taking the path less traveled. He has consistently accepted challenging positions that did not have a clear path to success, taking his companies and teams into new markets and opening up new sales channels. Jason enjoys the thrill of navigating new and emerging opportunities where success is not guaranteed, and teams and processes must evolve over time. He compares it to being an entrepreneur within a large company. His entrepreneurial spirit and refusal to accept the status quo have been key to his growth and success throughout his career.
Jason admittedly has had more failures than successes. He believes that the best learnings come from failure. Jason shared a story of one such failure that was highly visible and quite painful.
He had just started with athenahealth and was working on a multimillion-dollar community health center account that would have been athenahealth’s largest at the time. He was new to the role and had not yet established himself or his reputation. The deal evolved over a 12-15 month sales cycle and involved leadership at the highest levels of the organization. The co-founder of the company traveled with Jason onsite to meet with the prospect’s executives. Both Jason and the co-founder listened carefully to the prospects’ needs, interviewed decision-makers and influencers throughout the organization, and ultimately put together a thoughtful, creative, and aggressive proposal to secure their business.
Despite these efforts, they lost the deal to a competitor. There was an uncomfortable moment at a sales meeting where one of the sales leaders prematurely congratulated Jason in front of the entire sales organization because it looked like they were going to win. Not two weeks later they received the “Dear John” letter.
Jason felt like he let the company down and began to doubt his ability and sales approach. How could a deal that seemed so likely to fall his way have been lost to a competitor?
Upon reflection, Jason identified several “blind spots” that ultimately caused him to lose the deal. This included key influencers that were not identified earlier in the process, pressure from the local health system was much more influential than expressed from the prospect, and political factors at the state and regional level all came into play. Additionally, Jason realized that he had involved key resources throughout his organization and they had collectively missed some of these factors. That did not change the outcome, but it allowed Jason an opportunity to debrief with the team – without embarrassment – and to learn from this loss. Jason continues to use these learnings in deals to this day. Losing as a team will always provide more meaningful learning than losing alone.
Quota attainment 17 of 23 years
Director of the Year - athenahealth
Rookie of the Year - Greenway
Sales Executive of the Year - Greenway
Don’t be afraid to fail. Learn from it. Take challenging opportunities and do not settle for the status quo. You cannot be afraid to take risks.
A successful career in Sales must be about more than just the transaction. If you are only focused on money and individual wins you will burn out fast. Intrinsic motivators can be a strong team dynamic and desire to help the team win, believing in your company’s mission, or being focused on your customers’ long-term success. You need something beyond personal wins to be able to sustain a long career in a high-turnover industry.
Bottom line, you are going to lose more than you are going to win, so you need to look at each situation honestly and with a lens towards learning. What could I have done differently? Where were my blind spots? What questions do I wish I had asked? From this reflection, you can adapt, evolve, and be better next time.
Leverage your internal and external networks to the fullest. Seek insights and feedback from Finance, Operations, Support, and Implementation, as well as your existing customers. It is critical to understand their perspective, what motivates them, how they are compensated, or how they are evaluated so that you can understand how to craft a win/win scenario. Solicit feedback from them.
Healthcare is a small world. Create relationships with your customers and build your network. Check-in with your contacts from time to time and see how they are doing. Let them know you are still interested in what is going on in their lives. That matters more to people than you realize. Most importantly, it must be genuine.
Angela knew she wanted to work in healthcare and at one time even entertained becoming a doctor. While that may have not been the path she took, Angela was able to stay connected to the healthcare field in a different capacity.