A new Revenue Manager joins your team on Monday. By Friday, she is running a parallel forecast that does not match what the rest of the team sees in the system you bought to fix exactly that problem. Here is what GMs miss when they confuse Excel fluency with Revenue Management skill.
The resume listed 10 years of experience in Revenue Management. The interview confirmed strong technical skills. The reference calls were positive. Everything pointed to a strong hire.
What the interview did not test was the candidate's relationship with shared systems. Working inside one person's spreadsheet teaches one set of habits. Working within a system that the whole team reads, edits, and comments on teaches a different set of skills. The two are not interchangeable.
When the new hire opens her laptop on day one and reaches for the file she always reached for, she is not doing anything wrong. She is doing what she was trained to do.
The first cost shows up fast. Sales pulls a forecast from the team's platform. The new Revenue Manager pulls a different forecast from her Excel file. Finance asks which one to use.
There is no good answer to that question. Either Sales is working from a stale number, or Finance is working from a number that no one else can verify. The team starts checking each other's work instead of running the business.
A team's trust in shared numbers takes months to build. One person running their own version breaks it in a week.
Most GMs miss the warning signs because the new hire is polite, busy, and producing work. Watch for these three patterns in the first month:
Any one of these is normal in week one. All three by week four means you have two strategies running in parallel.
The screening question most GMs miss is the simplest one. Ask the candidate to describe the last time they had to give up a tool they were good at. Listen for what comes next.
The strong answer talks about what the new tool lets the team do that the old tool could not. The weak answer argues that the old tool was actually better. Neither answer is technical. Both reveal how the candidate will behave in the first week of a new job.
Curiosity about systems is harder to teach than Excel. Hire for the first, and the second comes free.
Some GMs treat the parallel-Excel problem as the new hire's issue to solve. It is not. The Revenue Manager is doing what worked in her last job, and nobody told her on day one that the rules are different here.
The manager's job in week one is to put the team's system on her screen and walk her through how the team actually uses it. Not as a training session. As the way the work gets done here. Once she sees the whole team building forecasts, adding commentary, and signing off in one place, the Excel file usually closes on its own.
If it does not close, the conversation is about culture, not software. Demand Calendar gives the team one shared view that makes Excel feel small by comparison, so the new hire chooses the system because it shows her more, not because someone made her stop.
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