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Smallbusinesssales

Great Salespeople Push Distractions From Selling Aside

July 25, 2019 By Adriana

This was first posted in July 2019; in the summertime, when the living is easy. Where we are bombarded by distractions from selling. Maybe we are planning a vacation or just returned from one. Or the garden is full of fresh vegetables needing to be picked and processed. Kids are out of school and demand our attention. But, hey, great salespeople still have quotas to meet, sales to close and pipelines to fill.

Great salespeople push summertime distractions from selling asidie

Push The Summertime Distractions From Selling Aside
Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

Away With Distractions From Selling!

Great salespeople know how to deal with all that competes for their time. They are committed to their customers, their company and their family. By setting goals, organizing time and focusing on the task at hand, great salespeople work without distraction. Knowing that this time of year offers more distractions from selling, great salespeople make sure to plan both for goal achieving activities and family time. Creating an optimal work – life balance is important….

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Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

Creating Good Customers For Life

July 18, 2019 By Adriana

How does the future look for growing your sales volume? Are you chasing the best value customers? Do you look for the “easy win” and move on? Or do you create customers for life?

Being intentional in seeking good customers will create customers for life

Great Salespeople Create Customers For Life Image by Dean Norris from Pixabay

Grow Sales Volume Intentionally

Great salespeople look for new customers having characteristics similar to their best customers. The goal is to develop mutually beneficial long-term relationships and create customers for life. Even if you are in a “one call close” business, the best prospects have needs and resources to meet the needs similar to your best customers. And, in my experience, there are very few “one-and-done” transactions for professional salespeople. Customers may make large purchases like homes and cars infrequently but they will buy again. In the meantime they have friends, family and colleagues who can be referred to the great salespeople….

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Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

The Salesperson’s Decision Maker Dilemma

July 11, 2019 By Adriana

Ever gotten to the end of your sales presentation and heard: “Well, I gotta run this by the boss?” Do you qualify the buyer by finding out who and how decisions are made? Are you comfortable asking to be introduced to the decision maker?

Only Present To The Decision Maker

Great Salespeople Always Present To The Decision Maker
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

Find The Decision Maker

My mentor Jim Wilson offers this advice:

Whether you are in a living room setting or selling to a Fortune 100 company, it is imperative that you understand the decision-making process completely before you make your presentation. Can you answer these questions?

  • Who is involved in the decision-making process?
  • Exactly what is the process?
  • What is the time frame?
  • Once they hear your presentation, are they committed to either a “Yes” or a “No”?

…

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Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

When Great Salespeople Need To Declare Independence

July 4, 2019 By Adriana

To proclaim that sometimes selling is a declaration of independence

Great Salespeople Know When To Declare Independence From Bad Customers
Image From Pixabay

This blog is posted on July 4, 2019. In the United States of America we celebrate July 4th as Independence Day. This is the date when the Second Continental Congress declared the United States to be a free and independent country.

The Declaration of Independence asserted each of us has the right to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”. And that free people can institute governments to protect these rights.

What Does Independence Day Have To Do With Selling?

We call this blog Secrets of the Softer Side of Selling because over the 45 years of selling experience we learned that the “soft skills” are effective in changing behavior. The Founders of the United States had tried to change King George’s behavior by petition. But he was tyrannical in his behavior to the petitioners. So the Founders decided to declare independence and “fire” the King.

There have been times over my selling career when the relationship with a customer wasn’t mutually beneficial. When I couldn’t change that, I “fired” the customer. The Founders were not able to have an amicable separation from Great Britain. However, I always worked hard to part friends with customers when the relationship wasn’t mutually beneficial. I continued to keep in touch with past customers in hopes their situation would change and we could again do business.

Good Selling Sometimes Means To Declare Independence

Great salespeople approach each new prospect with optimism planning to develop a mutually beneficial long-term relationship. Most of the time it works out that way. But when it doesn’t great salespeople have the selling skills to end the relationship. And do it in a respectful, professional manner.

What You Can Do Right Now

Look at your customer list. Which ones are great customers? Those where you have a strong long-term mutually beneficial relationship. Are there customers you would rather send to your competition? They take more time, energy and cost more to maintain rather than produce sufficient profit. If so plan a strategy to either improve the relationship or “declare independence” from them.

To learn more sales secrets see Chapter Twenty-Two, Customer Management, in Secrets of the Softer Side of Selling. For even more sales help, join our FREE Sales Club! “See” you next week.

Good selling!
Don Crawford & Lois Carter Crawford

 

Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, sales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

Sell Out Of A Sales Slump

June 27, 2019 By Adriana

Slumps happen. The baseball slugger can’t even hit the pitch in the center of the strike zone. Fish are jumping and being hooked by everyone but you. The rest of the sales team is hitting quota. But there you are wondering what’s going wrong. You are in a sales slump.

Sell Out Of A Sales Slump

What To Do To Get Out Of A Sales Slump?
Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

Take An Inventory Of Your Activities

Great salespeople know that successful selling is performing a specific set of activities well over and over again:

  • Prospecting
  • Qualifying
  • Presenting
  • Closing
  • Following up

Measure the sales activity level for each of these. Compare the sales slump activity level against your peak performance. Great salespeople are excellent self-managers. They continually evaluate their performance and make improvements to overcome weaknesses….

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Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

Overcome Buyer Resistance

June 20, 2019 By Adriana

Ever hear these buyer resistance comments? “We are doing just fine.” “Our current vendor is performing well.” “Now is not the time to make a change.” Or a hundred other put offs the buyer uses.

Buyers can treat change by "stonewalling".

Ever Been “Stonewalled” By A Buyer Resistant To Change?
Image from Pixabay

The Need To Break Through Buyer Resistance Thinking

Thomas Williams and Thomas Saine (Tom&Tom for short) in their book “The Seller’s Challenge” recommend using Insight-Driven conversations. These conversations open the recalcitrant buyer’s mind to the potential of change. Great salespeople use facts and historical successes presented as an alternative way of looking at the current situation. These insight-driven conversations gently open the way for the great salesperson to overcome buyer resistance.

An Example Of Overcoming Buyer Resistance

When I worked for a safety products distributor, a railroad company sent a letter asking for a 5% reduction in price. The buyer there considered earplugs, gloves, hard hats and other safety products commodities and sought vendors to compete on price. Good for the buyer, not so good for the seller. Using insight-driven selling, our sales team moved the conversation from commodity pricing to reducing workplace injuries. The national accounts manager asked about the most common injury and found out it was employees being struck by trains in switching yards at night. Lost time and medical costs were significant. So, knowing this was a “pain point” for the safety manager, the national sales manager offered a solution of supplying custom designed highly reflective clothing. By making the employees highly visible, workplace injuries dropped. And the buyer’s mindset was changed from “low price commodity” to “concerned, helpful vendor”.

How Does It Work?

According to Tom&Tom, insight-driven conversations include:

  • Create Curiosity – a statement to make the buyer curious enough to join the conversation
  • Teach – a lesson which matches a buyer’s concern to your strength
  • Share The Pain – show empathy by identifying a threat or negative outcome
  • Show Contrast – take issue with the status quo and offer a solution
  • Invite Collaboration – ask open ended question to find out buyer’s viewpoint and encourage dialog
  • Provide Proof – use history of success with other companies to validate your claim

By using inclusive language and open-ended questions, great salespeople overcome buyer resistance. They realize that insight-driven selling is not a linear, step-by-step process. It includes all the elements but great salespeople know when to engage each element and when to switch to another to overcome buyer resistance.

What You Can Do Right Now

Think about all the “excuses” buyers use to put you off.

For each excuse you regularly hear, write as many ideas as you can for each of the six elements to overcome buyer resistance above.

Practice including them in your sales conversations to create “pain” in the buyer.

Make sure you rehearse so the ideas are natural, not scripted. Great salespeople listen to the buyer and move the conversation toward the outcome they are looking for.

To learn more sales secrets see Chapter Ten, Finding the Pain, in Secrets of the Softer Side of Selling. For even more sales help, join our FREE Sales Club! “See” you next week.

Good selling!
Don Crawford & Lois Carter Crawford

 

Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

How To Handle The Angry Customer

June 13, 2019 By Adriana

Has it happened to you? The phone call from an upset customer. Or your boss gets the phone call and tells you to fix it. Worse yet you walk into a meeting with the customer and he unloads on you. How do you handle the angry customer?

Very angry emoji symbolizing an unhappy customer

Great Salespeople Know How To Handle An Angry Customer
Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay

Every Sale Has Three Possible Outcomes

When we meet our customer’s expectations they have a “moment of truth”. The desired outcome from a sale is a “moment of magic” where we exceed the customer’s expectations. But, oh my, the customer experienced a “moment of misery” when we failed to meet their expectations. The challenge for the great salesperson is to convert those moments of misery to moments of magic or at least moments of truth. Great salespeople are mediators when dealing with an angry customer

The First Step Is To Clarify The Concern

When I managed a sales office for a safety products distributor, occasionally one of the customer service reps would rush into my office. An angry customer had called to complain about an order. I asked two questions: “Did anyone die?” and “Was production stopped?” Usually the answers were “no”. So then I would say: “It should be an easy problem to solve.” It is very important when helping an angry customer to be sure you completely understand the problem from their point of view. Great salespeople ask enough questions to completely understand the angry customer’s concern. By getting to the heart of the problem, the great salesperson shows empathy.

Verify The Customer’s Concern

In my experience there are always two sides to an angry customer’s problem. The customer’s expectations and how my company met those expectations. Great salespeople have good relationships throughout their company. If the customer is upset about a missed delivery date, check to see what was promised. When the customer received the wrong items, find out why. Maybe the contract terms were met by your company but misunderstood by the angry customer. Great salespeople find out how and why an error occurred.

Satisfy The Angry Customer

Once the great salesperson knows all there is about the problem from both the customer and seller, they set about solving the problem. Dick Musto was the VP of Engineering for manufacturing company I worked for. We designed, fabricated and installed custom equipment. Since each project was unique there were occasional opportunities for moments of misery. Dick Musto’s question for the salesperson was: “What is the customer’s solution?” Often that was the best approach to solve the problem. And, as Dick Musto reasoned if the solution worked, the customer’s ego was stroked and a moment of misery was turned into a moment of magic. Great salespeople are empowered to find acceptable solutions for angry customers.

The Customer Is Always Right

Except when they are wrong. Misunderstandings do occur. When we were shopping for new car we test-drove a model we really liked. Unfortunately it had already been sold. But the salesperson said he could get one “just like it” from a neighboring dealer. When the new car arrived it was “almost just like” the one we test drove. The price was a little less because of the missing features. We wanted the roof rack as seen on the car we test drove and the weatherproof floor mats. Adding those features to the car we were offered would have increased the price more than we wanted. The dealer offered concessions and we agreed to pay a bit more to get the features to make it “just like” the one we tested. Complex sales are made with comprehensive contracts. How the customer interprets the contract may differ from the seller’s intention. While the seller is “legally justified” in their position, great salespeople work with the angry customer to create a moment of magic.

After The Problem Is Solved Follow Up

Great salespeople know that future business depends on how well the angry customer feels in the end. Was the final resolution a moment of magic? Has the seller’s company made the changes necessary to prevent a reoccurrence? Great salespeople go the extra mile to be sure the relationship will continue for future business.

To learn more sales secrets see Chapter Fourteen, Post Sale Secrets and Activities, in Secrets of the Softer Side of Selling. For even more sales help, join our FREE Sales Club! “See” you next week.

Good selling!
Don Crawford & Lois Carter Crawford

Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

Great Salespeople Are Mentally Tough

June 6, 2019 By Adriana

Have you ever lost a big order? Been fired? Had a bad day or week? It’s all part of life as a great salesperson. And they are great because they are mentally tough. Great salespeople go out each day to succeed sometimes to fail but whatever happens, they pick themselves up and do it all over again.

Mentally tough salespeople are resilient

Great Salespeople Are Mentally Tough
Image by Tumisu from Pixabay

Remember The One That Got Away?

I remember one sale I had worked really hard on back in my early days as a professional salesperson. The order was for five supplied air carts for a safety department at a paper mill. I had convinced the safety manager I had the best product and the best price. He had put the requisition through to the buyer with my company as the vendor of choice. But the buyer had a buddy at the competing company and gave them a chance to meet my offer. I lost the business.

I was angry. First with the buyer who, in my opinion, had no integrity. Then with myself for not building a better relationship with the buyer….

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Filed Under: Sales Tips Tagged With: B2BSales, Salesperson, Salesprocess, Salesprospecting, Salestools, Selling, Smallbusinesssales

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