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Sales strategies of
six-figure-income salespeople
by Tim Connor
It is unfortunate that many salespeople
are still following the old standard of planning their calls on their
clients and prospects.
Rather than rehash these trite and
outdated approaches, I would like to share the philosophies and
attitudes with you that are being used by the successful salespeople
of today and will be used by the superstars of tomorrow.
One. Who are you? What are your
opinions, prejudices, judgments, attitudes, values and beliefs,
philosophies and old baggage that may be sabotaging your sales
success. Do you know who you really are? Do you know who you take into
your sales calls? Are you sending a non-verbal message that is
consistent with your verbal behavior? How would your prospects and
clients describe your behavior and attitudes?
A thorough, honest self-appraisal and
subsequent modification of incorrect attitudes and behavior is
critical for autonomy and success in selling in the new business
climate.
Two. What is your basic
fundamental purpose and mission in selling? Is it to make money? Serve
your clients? Grow your company? Contribute to society? Provide for
your families current and future needs? What aspect of selling do you
really feel passionate about?
Your reasons, more than your goals for
staying in this demanding, challenging and rewarding career will
determine your peace, balance and fulfillment as you walk the highway
into your future sales career.
Three. What type of people do
you like to be around? How do you like to spend your career time? What
else is important to you in your life besides your career?
Selling today is about building
successful, positive, ongoing relationships. All types of
relationships. Your overall success will be greatly impacted by your
willingness and ability to establish and maintain positive
relationships.
Four. How much time are you
devoting to your personal and spiritual growth? Do you regularly read
good books, listen to great audio tapes, attend seminars and network
with people who can help you?
A successful selling career requires
lots of stamina, energy and passion. You can't have these if you abuse
your mind and body.
Five. Solving your prospects or
clients problems is no longer an effective sales strategy. The
successful salespeople in today's marketplace and the marketplace of
tomorrow will be creative problem creators. Effective salespeople will
be ruthless in their pursuit of uncovering or creating an awareness of
client problems that they weren't even aware they had. They will think
far ahead of their clients not just along with them.
If you want to guarantee your success
in the coming years it will only take one approach. Find out what is
preventing your prospects from getting a good night sleep. Determine
what is keeping them up at night worrying and you won't have to worry
about customer loyalty, reducing prices or over-aggressive
competition.
Even poor salespeople can solve a
client's problem with the right product, service, feature or approach.
It will take creative, forward-looking and imaginative thinking to
excel as the new world order emerges.
Six. People buy from people they
trust, not people they like. The key to building trust is simple.
Promise a lot and deliver more. Do what you say you will do and then
some. Honor your commitments, communicate with integrity and be a
resource for your client, not just a salesperson selling a product or
service.
I am a trainer, a speaker and a
consultant but I don't actively sell myself as any of these. I do
however sell myself as a client resource. What can you offer your
client other than your products or services? You can provide a
continuous flow of ideas. You can be an idea gold-mine. But in order
to be able to provide this level of information, you must first take a
great deal of new information into your consciousness with regularity.
Information about the marketplace, your clients businesses, human
behavior, and a wide variety of current events that impact your
business and the business of your clients and prospects.
I am not talking here about devouring
the local newspaper or evening news. Constant reminders of what is
wrong in the world or your hometown isn't going to help you one bit in
your selling or your ability to maintain a positive attitude or
consciousness. I am referring here to subscribing to publications that
feed your mind positive and worthwhile information that helps you keep
in touch with how you can improve your selling behavior or the
changing circumstances or trends in your target or niche industries.
Peak performance salespeople study
their clients business, their industry, their competition and are
walking encyclopedias of information on their own products and
services. Anything less, and you are fair game for anyone and everyone
to take your business away from you.
Seven. Successful salespeople
don't sell price. They sell value. Price will always seem high if
value is perceived as low. When you focus on price either because of
poor product knowledge, poor client knowledge or poor sales skills,
you will always lose in the long run. Clients don't want cheap. They
want the best value for their dollar. If you are focusing on price you
will never make it big in this dynamic profession. However, if you
always sell value you will never have to worry about losing business
to price competition. Oh yes, on the short term you might lose a sale
here or there. But If you are in this business for the long haul for
both your company and your client, sooner or later your prospects or
clients will come back to you and the value they need and desire.
Poor salespeople believe that prospects
buy for price alone or as their major motivator. I don't have space to
try and convince you otherwise. I am not going to even try. I'll let
you learn this one in the marketplace.
Eight. Effective prospecting is
the most important sales skill you will ever need to master. It is
more important than good closing techniques, good sales presentations
or the ability to answer client resistance. The best salespeople are
at their best when they are getting information.
If I heard it once, I heard it a
million times, plan your sales presentation. Bull. When you plan your
sales presentation you are making a basic assumption that everyone
that buys from you, is going to buy for the same reason. If you have
been selling for more than 30 days, you know this just isn't true.
I can remember in my first sales
position more than 25 years ago in the insurance industry. I was told
to memorize my presentation, answers to objections and closes, go out
and deliver the company story. I was fired in six months because I
found out no one was interested in my company's story. The prospects
wanted me to learn their story. The job of professional selling is to
discover prospect/client wants, needs, desires, opinions, problems,
prejudices, attitudes and/or judgments.
The most important element of the sales
process for successful salespeople is not the giving of information,
but the getting of information. They don't plan their sales
presentations but have a presentation strategy. If you have been
selling your product or service for more than three months, you should
know what to say and when without planning it. The pro's never go into
a sales situation however, without planning their questions, the
information they are going to get. Remember, your prospect will tell
you what you need to tell them to sell them. But you have to ask. And
please don't forget, the information you don't get soon enough will
cost you sales or sales relationships later.
Nine. An effective sales
presentation is not a presentation but a conversation. A two-way
conversation, not a one-way conversation. Many salespeople have been
trained to deliver their sales message. This message is often a
programmed discussion of the various features and benefits of their
product or service.
This approach to selling has never been
used by the real pros. It is not an effective way to represent the
product or service in the most professional manner and it is certainly
not in the best interests of the prospect or the goal of making
selling a new client relationship. Successful salespeople are more
concerned about getting a client than making a sale.
Every prospect buys for their reasons,
not those of the salesperson or the company. When you deliver your
standard approach or presentation, you are assuming that each prospect
buys for the same reasons, at the same time and in the same way in the
buying cycle. This just isn't true. Nor does it make good sense to
sell this way. The successful salesperson customizes each sales
conversation to the buying style, needs, interests, desires, problems
of each buyer. They don't try to shove their buying reasons or
features down the throat of the customer.
Ten. Sales resistance from the
client or prospect gives you valuable insight into their thinking.
Successful salespeople don't try to maneuver around this resistance
but get it into the open as soon as possible.
Price is a good example. A confident
salesperson who knows the value of their products and services doesn't
run and hide from price objections. They bring up early in the sales
process the value of working with a quality supplier. They are not
afraid of their product or service inadequacies. They know the other
aspects of their organization, personal service or value-added
approach more than makes up for what they don't have or can't provide.
No product or service is ever perfect
for every prospect in every potential situation. Sooner or later every
prospect must go without something. The approach of successful
salespeople is to insure that the prospect understands that what they
are getting more than makes up for what they are missing as well as
how it will satisfy their needs, desires, problems or opportunities.
The myth is that you should be able to
sell everyone sooner or later. I wish this were true. It would make
selling so much easier. But the reality is, that not everyone in the
marketplace is a good prospect for you, now or in the future. They may
be a prospect, but not the best one for the time, energy and resources
you have available at the present time. Timing is critical in
successful selling. But given the tremendous amount of potential new
business in the world today, I believe it is suicide to take the time,
energy, corporate resources to try and turn poor prospects into
customers or clients.
As an aside, if you are able to sell a
poor prospect for whatever reason, you will often find they cause you
the most stress, distress and are generally not worth it. Some
companies have a strategy that to sell successfully in a particular
market or to a certain prospect, you must take business that is not
profitable, does not fit your customer mix or long term objectives. I
have never subscribed to this philosophy.
The key to successful selling is your
ability to always be in front of the most qualified prospects or
clients not just any prospects or clients.
Eleven. Closing the sale is not
a matter of trick closes or manipulation. It is not using fear, guilt
or hard-sell tactics. Closing the sale on a well qualified prospect is
the natural conclusion to everything you have done in the sales
process that is correct and effective. You can make people buy things
they don't need, but you can't make people buy things they don't want.
Poor salespeople try to turn poor prospects into customers or clients.
Good salespeople identify good prospects early in the process and help
them get what they want. They accomplish this with good listening
skills, a lot of client or prospect understanding and a willingness to
be flexible and compromise.
The key to successful closing is
effective prospecting.
Twelve. After-sales service is
the glue that keeps clients loyal, buying more and willing to give you
referrals and positive references. The best salespeople work as hard
to keep their clients as they did to get them. They understand clients
will always have new choices for the services or products they sell.
To keep clients satisfied, they constantly conduct client reality
checks. They are always checking client perceptions and attitudes.
Poor salespeople take the money and run.
One lesson the best salespeople learned
is that it is always easier and less costly to do more business with a
present client than it is to keep finding new clients. They put just
as much of their time, energy and resources into keeping clients and
building client relationships as they do looking for new clients.
I am sure if you have been selling for
a number of years, you have probably taken issue with some of my
points in this article. That's good. I hope I triggered some thinking
on your part. Old school salespeople, those that are unwilling to
adapt or change their approaches or strategies, are stuck in outdated
perceptions and realities.
All I ask you to do is re-examine your
selling philosophies in light of current market and consumer trends. I
am confident that some of you need to re-focus some of your attitudes
and approaches if you are going to excel in the sales profession in
the years ahead.
Tim Connor is the president of
Connor Resource Group in Davidson, N.C. He has been a full time
professional speaker and trainer since 1973, and he has given more
than 4,500 presentations in twenty countries, to a wide variety of
sales, management and executive audiences. Contact him at
(704) 895-1230 or e-mail him at tim@timconnor.com.
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