Publication | Closed Access
Sales Role-Plays and Mock Interviews
20
Citations
46
References
2015
Year
Customer ExperienceCustomer SatisfactionSales CompetitionsSales CompetitionEducational PsychologyEducationStudent MotivationProfessional SellingManagementSales ManagementStudent SuccessMotivationSale ResearchMarketingPerformance StudiesSales TrainingMarketing ManagementMock InterviewsEmpirical EvidenceMarketing Strategy
Sales competitions provide students with opportunities to apply their understanding of sales. Despite a long tradition of scholarship on sales role-plays, the answer to what drives student performance in sales competitions remains elusive. In this research, we examine how motivation (work engagement) and ability (cognitive aptitude and selling-related knowledge) affect student performance in sales role-play competitions. We also examine how success in sales role-plays engenders job attainment for the students. Using data from a sales competition held at a large public university in the United States, we provide empirical evidence that both motivation and ability affect sales performance. But, contrary to expectation, they have a substitution effect and not a complementary one. We also find evidence that success in sales role-plays translates into improved success in job interviews and that this effect is stronger for students with greater cognitive aptitude, that is, sales role-play performance complements the cognitive aptitude of the student to improve their mock interview performance.
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