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Digg it UP - Sell Anybody, Anything, Every Time: Increase Sales and Retain Customers
How to Close Larger Deals by Effectively Qualifying Your Sales Prospects ial interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk.Qualifying your prospects is a critical step in the overall sales cycle. Creating situational awareness for your potential client will increase your probability of closing the sale. Having a better understanding of your prospects needs will also allow you to maximize your deal size.In qualifying your prospect, you are determining three basics things:What is your customer’s situation now? What would they like it to be? How can you help them get from where they are to where they want to be? Before initiating a buying process, customers have to:Recognize and understand that they have a need Conclude that the need is significant enough to take action upon When qualifying opportunities, probe to see how you can make truly valuable contributions to their organization. Help your customers to: A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the pe Consulting: A Different World As a young boy my father used to tell me stories about selling cars for the Ford Motor company. He taught me most of the things I know about sales, including a word of advice from a man of iconic stature in the business world. One of the biggest things my father learned at Ford was from one of the greatest industrialist of the 20th century, Lee Iacocca. My father recounted Lee Iacocca explaining to him during a salesman’s training session to – sell your self, the house, and the product. What does that mean – sell your self, the house, and the product? At the conclusion of this article you will know exactly what it means and you will never miss another sale again.I won't say I have a vast array of knowledge as a consultant...collectively I've only been doing it about 8 years. However, there are some things that I have observed that I think will be helpful to those of you who are new to the profession. We will first dispel the myths and address the realities associated with being a Consultant, then we will address the commandments of being a good and valued consultant.CONSULTING: MYTH AND REALITYMythConsultants are outsiders.RealityConsultants are only outsiders if they make themselves so. You don't have to be an outsider, go out to lunch with your co-workers...talk to them, and befriend them. Just know where to draw the line.MythConsultants don't have to answer to anyone and can do whatever they want.RealityConsultants have, not only the client to answer to, but also the company they represent.MythCon There is a key to every sale. Sometimes it’s price. At other times it’s irrefutable value. But most of the time sales are made because of a persons comfort level with the salesperson as they walk away knowing they were treated right. When sales are blown it is often because a person was too pushy. They didn’t offer the person anything they were looking for much less take them into consideration. The person was just a piece of meat in the salespersons eyes, another fast buck. At least, that’s the way the customer felt. In order to succeed in sales, a person must learn to hurdle other people’s built in defense mechanism against being sold something. People have natural defense mechanisms built in to resist being sold things. We all get spam emails trying to sell us one thing or another. You are almost always solicited for credit cards, perfume, cell phones and a host of other items you don’t need every time you step outside the confines of your home. You’ve probably been approached by the child trying to sell candy for their fund raiser or the beggar in the street asking for change. More often than not your natural inclination is to resist giving into these sales pitches and refuse to part with your hard earned cash. Why should you part with your money? Yes, why should you part with your money? If a person bought everything that they were offered then they would be poor in short order. So how do you sell your product when people are always resisting you? Therein lies the rub. Everyone has an Achilles heel. At some point anyone will say yes to anything. As a salesperson it is your job to hunt down that Achilles heel and attack it with all your might. Don’t go attacking your customers just yet. Only fools rush in. You have to know your buyer just as a hunter knows their prey. This brings us to the first point, “SELL YOURSELF.” How do I sell myself? You do it quite easily. You sell yourself the same way you would be a parent, friend, lover, pen-pal or anything else that requires social interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk. A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the per Public Responsibility and Citizenship - Values and Concepts of the Malcolm Baldrige Criteria Part 9 >There is a key to every sale. Sometimes it’s price. At other times it’s irrefutable value. But most of the time sales are made because of a persons comfort level with the salesperson as they walk away knowing they were treated right. When sales are blown it is often because a person was too pushy. They didn’t offer the person anything they were looking for much less take them into consideration. The person was just a piece of meat in the salespersons eyes, another fast buck. At least, that’s the way the customer felt. In order to succeed in sales, a person must learn to hurdle other people’s built in defense mechanism against being sold something.In this issue, I will share my experience acquired from the conglomerate and its operating companies. For the purpose of this article, I will articulate the Public Responsibility and Citizenship which is one of the Eleven Values and Concepts in Malcolm Baldrige Criteria. As before, I will use case studies to show how some of the companies implement them.To recap, below are the Eleven Core Values and Concepts of Baldrige Criteria:-Visionary Leadership | Customer-Driven Excellence | Organizational and Personal Learning | Valuing Employees and Partners | Agility | Focus on the Future | Managing for Innovation | Management by Fact | Public Responsibility and Citizenship | Focus on Results and Creating Value | Systems PerspectiveI will deal with the one of the Value in bold letters in this article as below:-Articulated Public Responsibility and Citizenship An organization’s People have natural defense mechanisms built in to resist being sold things. We all get spam emails trying to sell us one thing or another. You are almost always solicited for credit cards, perfume, cell phones and a host of other items you don’t need every time you step outside the confines of your home. You’ve probably been approached by the child trying to sell candy for their fund raiser or the beggar in the street asking for change. More often than not your natural inclination is to resist giving into these sales pitches and refuse to part with your hard earned cash. Why should you part with your money? Yes, why should you part with your money? If a person bought everything that they were offered then they would be poor in short order. So how do you sell your product when people are always resisting you? Therein lies the rub. Everyone has an Achilles heel. At some point anyone will say yes to anything. As a salesperson it is your job to hunt down that Achilles heel and attack it with all your might. Don’t go attacking your customers just yet. Only fools rush in. You have to know your buyer just as a hunter knows their prey. This brings us to the first point, “SELL YOURSELF.” How do I sell myself? You do it quite easily. You sell yourself the same way you would be a parent, friend, lover, pen-pal or anything else that requires social interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk. A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the pe Image Crisis - What Do Employers Expect? tural defense mechanisms built in to resist being sold things. We all get spam emails trying to sell us one thing or another. You are almost always solicited for credit cards, perfume, cell phones and a host of other items you don’t need every time you step outside the confines of your home. You’ve probably been approached by the child trying to sell candy for their fund raiser or the beggar in the street asking for change. More often than not your natural inclination is to resist giving into these sales pitches and refuse to part with your hard earned cash. Why should you part with your money? Yes, why should you part with your money? If a person bought everything that they were offered then they would be poor in short order. So how do you sell your product when people are always resisting you? Therein lies the rub.In today's competitive employment world most people are interested in "standing out" from the crowd. But, think again when it comes to the image you present to your prospective employer. What are they looking for? What does their culture support? Will the image you present blend in – or standout, and which is best?The answer is really "both". Yet, how can you possibly standout and blend at the same time? And what does that mean when it comes to your "image" anyway? Simple… research! From the employers point of view the fact that you have taken time to research your fit and taken steps to be sure you blend with the culture is what will help you standout. So, how do you make this trick happen?Research is the single most important thing you can do before gracing the doorway of your prospective employer. Check their website – what's the look? Formal, casual or somewhere in-between? Be sure to view the online photos of Everyone has an Achilles heel. At some point anyone will say yes to anything. As a salesperson it is your job to hunt down that Achilles heel and attack it with all your might. Don’t go attacking your customers just yet. Only fools rush in. You have to know your buyer just as a hunter knows their prey. This brings us to the first point, “SELL YOURSELF.” How do I sell myself? You do it quite easily. You sell yourself the same way you would be a parent, friend, lover, pen-pal or anything else that requires social interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk. A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the pe Can't Get the Staff - Hiring Reliable Employees in a Small Business t they were offered then they would be poor in short order. So how do you sell your product when people are always resisting you? Therein lies the rub.In this article you will find out ideas and techniques to help you get through the minefield of laws and regulations to find the right people to help your business success, not hinder it. Hiring reliable, motivated staff to add to your success is becoming harder for employers. Employment Legislation, Data Protection Laws and EU Directives have all created a web in which the average small business owner can easily feel trapped and ensnared. I have trained hundreds of managers to find their way through, and these are some of the ideas I can offer to help you.IT'S NOT ALL DOOM AND GLOOM. In this article I will show you how you can shift the odds in your favour without spending a fortune on recruitment advertising. This is part one of a series, so look out for updates or contact me for more details.1 – Designing and advertising the jobMost managers and business owners have been stuck at some point in our caree Everyone has an Achilles heel. At some point anyone will say yes to anything. As a salesperson it is your job to hunt down that Achilles heel and attack it with all your might. Don’t go attacking your customers just yet. Only fools rush in. You have to know your buyer just as a hunter knows their prey. This brings us to the first point, “SELL YOURSELF.” How do I sell myself? You do it quite easily. You sell yourself the same way you would be a parent, friend, lover, pen-pal or anything else that requires social interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk. A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the pe Infosnacking or Just Plain 'Screwing The Dog' On Company Time ial interaction. Engage the customer in a conversation. Ask them how their day went. What kind of job does your customer have? Where is your customer from? What made them interested in a new ------ fill in the blank? Does your customer watch sports? Do they read? What’s their favorite website? If you prime a person with good questions they will start to talk.Infosnacking was declared word of the year for 2005 by Webster’s New World College Dictionary. If you are reading this article while at work, and it is not research for your company or related to your job in some way, then you are officially infosnacking. Dang, we use to just call it ‘screwing the dog’, but guess that is no longer Politically Correct. Infosnacking is defined as using the internet, on company time, to check your email, read the news, peruse the sports scores or a myriad of other internet related time stealers.Long gone are the days employers have to worry about extended lunch or smoke breaks hurting the bottom line? Companies now have to be worried about employees wasting precious time at any point they are sitting in front of their computer. Just imagine, a few minutes to check Hotmail here, a few minutes to read a joke there and voila…another hour gone to the internet gods and money down the dra A good salesperson is an excellent conversationalist. An excellent conversationalist is a great listener. When your customer begins talking, you shut up and listen. Pay attention to every word they are saying. As the customer talks chime in from time to time and relate to what the person is saying. If the person has gone beyond casual conversation and into relating some type of story then that is a bonus point for you. Let them tell their story. The more time they spend talking with you, the more likely that they are to buy something. When you talk with someone, you feel that you are getting to know them. Why wouldn’t we want buy something from our friend, especially something we want? Everybody wants to support their friend. So become your customer’s friend by talking with them and getting to know them. Thus, you will be well on your way to making many more sales and expanding your network of clients. You can talk till the sun burns out, but if people don’t feel comfortable with everything involved in a deal then they won’t bite. So it’s up to you to let them know everything is on the up and up. You can do that by “selling the house.” What is selling the house? Selling the house is telling people about the company or establishment that you work for. Let people know who owns the place. Tell them how long the place has been operating. Tell them famous people who have bought from the company before. Tell them of the exploits of other workers. Explain to them about how it feels like a big family (you may have to embellish a little here.) and how long you’ve been working there. Tell them about all the great attributes that brought you to work for --- fill in the blank company. When you let someone know everything about who they are buying from it levels the playing field in their eyes. They aren’t buying from BIG GIANT COMPANY anymore. They are buying from you, their friend, at the store/firm they like to go to because they know a lot about it. Lastly you must sell the product. Why do you sell the product last? You sell the product last because it is understood. Often times a person knows all the great features of a product. Usually a product doesn’t need to be sold. It’s your personality that is for sale. People are buying into what you have to offer. So now it’s your turn. Serve up all the information that you know about a product and then some. Selling a product is not just about knowing your own product, but it is also about knowing the competitions product and how the person will benefit from buying your product instead of theirs. Now you don’t have to slander another company or salesperson to do this. Often times, when you slander someone it becomes more damaging to yourself than helpful because it is interpreted by the listener as jealousy. When you display how knowledgeable you are about a subject as why a person is getting something that will impact their lives positively they will always chose you over the next person because of how honest and he
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