Beyond Retention: Turning The Great Stay into Growth

Not long ago, I partnered with a mid-sized manufacturer whose sales team had remained stable for years. On paper, that looked like success. Revenue was consistent, turnover was low, and the team had been together for a long time. In reality, the company had plateaued. The existing sales team was comfortable but lacked urgency. Territories that should have been growing were flat. Competitors were starting to gain ground in markets this company had owned for a decade.

Through Precision Sales Recruiting, we identified and placed two sales professionals who not only had strong technical knowledge of the product but also the drive to grow into leadership roles. Within six months, they had broken into two new regional markets. Even more important, their energy inspired the existing team to raise their own performance. The company did not just retain employees. They transformed stability into forward momentum.

That story captures the real opportunity and the real risk of what is happening in the manufacturing workforce right now.

Stability does not always equal strength. A sales team that is stable but uninspired is not a true asset. Retention is a baseline, not a strategy. Marshall Scabet, Founder and CEO, Precision Sales Recruiting

What Is The Great Stay?

The manufacturing industry is no stranger to disruption. Over the past decade, leaders have navigated skilled labor shortages, supply chain issues, and rising costs. After the turbulence of the Great Resignation, a new trend has taken shape: The Great Stay.

Definition: The Great Stay

The Great Stay refers to the current workforce trend where employees are staying in their roles, often due to economic uncertainty and a desire for security. Quit rates have dropped significantly from the 2022 peaks that fueled widespread job-hopping. Research describes this as "low turnover combined with low mobility," where workers remain in place but are not necessarily fulfilled or growing.

Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary (JOLTS); Forbes, "The Great Stay Is Not Over: What Is Next for the U.S. Workforce in 2025," April 23, 2025.

At first glance, this sounds like welcome news for manufacturers. Employees are sticking around. Voluntary turnover has slowed. The constant churn of the Great Resignation appears to be over. But stability does not always equal strength.

In manufacturing sales, where deal cycles run six to eighteen months and territory relationships take years to build, a team that is simply present but not growing will quietly erode your competitive position. They will protect existing accounts but stop prospecting. They will maintain relationships but stop expanding them. They will hit baseline expectations but stop pushing for more.

For manufacturers who have spent the last three years fighting to retain talent, the instinct is to be grateful that people are staying. The real question is whether staying is the same thing as thriving.

Why Retention Alone Falls Short

Retention has always been important in manufacturing sales. Replacing a skilled territory manager or regional sales manager can cost up to 150 percent of their annual salary when you factor in recruiting fees, onboarding, ramp time, and lost pipeline during the transition. But retention alone is not enough. Here is why.

150%
Estimated cost of replacing a sales rep as a percentage of annual salary
6–12
Months for a new manufacturing sales hire to build meaningful pipeline
6–18
Month deal cycles common in manufacturing and capital equipment sales
01

Stagnation Risk Is Real

Employees who stay without growth stop innovating. A territory manager who has been in the same role for seven years and has not been challenged, trained, or developed is not a top performer. They are a maintenance worker. They will protect what they have, but they will not build anything new. In manufacturing, where competitors are investing in new markets and new technology, a stagnant sales team is a shrinking sales team.

02

Disengagement Is the Silent Killer

Many workers during The Great Stay are remaining in their roles not because they are thriving, but because leaving feels risky. This is what drives "quiet quitting," where employees do the minimum required without investing discretionary effort. In manufacturing sales, where prospecting into new accounts requires sustained initiative, quiet quitting is devastating. The rep looks productive on the surface because they are managing existing accounts, but the pipeline is drying up underneath.

03

Competitive Disadvantage Compounds Over Time

Manufacturers who cling to retention as a strategy will lose ground to competitors who invest in engaged, growth-oriented sales teams. If your competitor is hiring hungry reps who are building new relationships at the same facilities your team calls on, and your team is coasting, you will not see the damage until it is too late. By the time a key account shifts to a competitor, the relationship erosion happened months or years earlier.

Retention is a baseline, not a strategy. Manufacturers need approaches that convert stability into momentum.

Turning The Great Stay into Long-Term Growth

1

Hire for Growth Potential, Not Just Skills

In manufacturing sales, product knowledge is essential, but it is not enough. The best performers are adaptable, coachable, and eager to develop. When we evaluate candidates at Precision Sales Recruiting, we do not just measure what they can do today. We assess whether they have the drive to grow into a bigger role over the next two to three years.

PRECISION Scorecard Connection Initiative, Ownership, and Execution are three of the nine dimensions in our PRECISION Scorecard. They separate a hire who fills a seat from a hire who builds a territory. The two reps we placed for that mid-sized manufacturer were not the most experienced candidates in the pool. They were the most driven. Their drive lifted the entire team.
2

Redefine the Value Proposition for Sales Talent

During The Great Stay, top manufacturing sales professionals are not rushing to change jobs. They are employed, performing well, and cautious about risk. To attract them, manufacturers must offer more than competitive compensation, although compensation must be competitive as a baseline.

The candidates we recruit want to see a clear career advancement path. Can they grow from a territory manager to a regional manager to a director? They want to know the company invests in training and development. They want a culture that connects their work to meaningful outcomes. And they want to understand the sales process before they join, because the best sales professionals evaluate whether the company has a system for success, not just a headcount need. Manufacturers who communicate these elements clearly during the hiring process stand out in a cautious labor market.

3

Invest in Training That Drives Performance

Manufacturing sales is consultative and complex. It often involves long cycles, technical presentations, multi-stakeholder buying committees, and procurement processes that stretch across quarters. The skills that worked five years ago are not sufficient for the market today. Buyers are more informed, competition is more aggressive, and the manufacturing technology landscape is changing rapidly.

Ongoing training in consultative selling, customer engagement, discovery methodology, and negotiation gives your existing sales team the tools they need to compete. It also signals to your best people that you are invested in their development, which is one of the strongest retention drivers that exists. The manufacturers with the lowest turnover and the highest performance are almost always the ones who train consistently, not just during onboarding but throughout the rep's tenure.

4

Focus on Engagement, Not Just Retention

Retention is a number. Engagement is an experience. To turn The Great Stay into growth, manufacturers must align retention with active engagement. That means celebrating wins publicly so the team knows what good looks like. It means gathering feedback from your sales team and acting on it. It means recognizing achievement beyond just quota attainment, including prospecting effort, account expansion, and mentoring of newer reps.

The difference between a retained employee and an engaged employee is the difference between a rep who manages their accounts and a rep who grows their territory. Both show up. Only one produces.

5

Partner With a Recruiter Who Knows the Manufacturing Landscape

In this environment, fewer manufacturing sales professionals are actively looking for roles. The best candidates are employed, performing well, and not browsing job boards. Reaching them requires targeted outbound campaigns that speak their language, competitive intelligence about who is selling for your competitors, and an evaluation process that goes far beyond a phone screen.

Every candidate we present has been sourced from competing manufacturers, evaluated through The PRECISION Method, and confirmed to have the skills, mindset, and behavioral traits that predict long-term success in your specific sales environment. We help manufacturers build teams that are not just stable but capable of driving growth.

Final Thought

The Great Stay offers manufacturers both a challenge and an opportunity. Stability is valuable, but if it is not paired with growth strategies, it creates complacency that compounds over time. The manufacturers who will thrive are those who hire for potential and culture fit, offer compelling career pathways, invest in training and development, build engaged and motivated sales teams, and partner with a recruiter who understands the manufacturing landscape deeply enough to find the candidates who will push the organization forward.

Retention is not the end goal. It is the starting line. The companies that win during The Great Stay will be those who turn stability into sustainable growth.

References

Bureau of Labor Statistics. Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary (JOLTS). U.S. Department of Labor.

Forbes. The Great Stay Is Not Over: What Is Next for the U.S. Workforce in 2025. April 23, 2025.

Marshall Scabet, Founder and CEO of Precision Sales Recruiting
About the Author Marshall Scabet is the Founder and CEO of Precision Sales Recruiting, a veteran-owned manufacturing and industrial B2B sales recruiting firm based in Fort Worth, Texas. He has spent more than 13 years in sales and recruiting, placing top-performing sales professionals for manufacturing, capital equipment, and industrial technology companies across the United States. He is the creator of The PRECISION Method™, a proprietary 9-dimension evaluation framework for manufacturing sales professionals, and the author of the forthcoming book, The PRECISION Method™: A Leader's Guide to Hiring Top Sales Talent. Prior to founding Precision Sales Recruiting, Marshall served as Vice President of Recruiting at a national sales recruiting firm.

Ready to Turn Stability Into Growth?

Precision Sales Recruiting helps manufacturing and industrial B2B companies find and place sales talent that does not just stay but performs. Average placement time of 18 days, backed by a 12-month replacement guarantee.

Book a Client Strategy Call

Share this post: