Monday, July 16, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Sales Tips and Salesopedia.com
Saturday, July 14, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Consultative Selling to Morons
If you're faced with this, do two things:
- Ask more questions, even if they have nothing to do with what you're selling. Because you want to make sure your questions have a logical flow to allow the customer to stay focused, engage them by asking the questions that have nothing to do with what you're selling early on in the conversation.
- Ditch the presentation and focus on your visuals / pictures to do the communicating. The worst thing you can do is try to accelerate the close or attempt to manipulate the customer. DON'T, under any circumstance, do either of them.
The great thing about dealing with people who are painfully slow to catch on is that once they buy from you, they will more than likely become customers for life and they won't hesitate to recommend you to others.
Friday, July 13, 2007
Sales Training Tip #191: Keep Your Hands Visible
Monday, July 2, 2007
Sales Training Tip #190: Google Alerts
Sales Training Tip #189: PBJ Selling
Sales Training Tip #188: Vacation Reading
Sunday, July 1, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Consultative Selling is More Than Networking
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Sales Calls and the Myth of Preparation
If you're a supervisor, challenge your sales team to make sales calls even though they may not be fully prepared. Keep in mind that what I am advocating is the need to push ourselves to continuously find ways to eliminate unnecessary time in our sales process.
If you're a salesperson, ask yourself the following questions:
- What is the % of phone calls I make where I actually talk to someone? The vast majority of our phone calls wind up in voice mail anyway, so really all we need to make the call is a compelling point of interest to leave on the message.
- Do I have enough questions I can ask the customer in person to get them to reveal some great information that will guide me through the sales process? Your answer must be "yes".
In the end, I believe many people spend a lot of time preparing to make sales calls only to wind up not making them because they're afraid of rejection. If this is the case (and I believe it is 90% of the time), then you need to take a step back to consider the following:
- Do you truly believe in what you're selling?
- More importantly, do you have the passion to sell?
If you can't answer "yes" to both, then you will never be successful and you might as well start looking for another job.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Questions and Consultative Selling
My definition? Consultative selling is asking questions that allow the customer to reveal their true needs, thus allowing you to work with them to help develop a solution that goes beyond solving their basic needs / pain to, ultimately, achieving a higher level of success or satisfaction. It begins with the questions you ask and the quality of the listening you do. It concludes with you delivering what will exceed the expectations of the consumer, regardless of what you initially expected.
Professional Selling Skills Training: Consultative Selling is Like a PBJ
Monday, June 18, 2007
Sales Training Tip #187: Sound Like a "Solution-Provider"
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Sales Training Tip #186: What Not to Ask the CEO
Monday, June 4, 2007
Sales Training Tip #185: What Have You Learned?
Sunday, June 3, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Consultative Selling and Negotiating
Saturday, June 2, 2007
Professional Selling Skills Training: Prospecting and Cold-Call Selling
I've seen a number of studies which all say that the number one reason small businesses fail is lack of money. In my opinion, it's a lack of customers. This past week, I had a chance to talk to a networking group comprised of small business owners. My conversation with them confirmed this opinion even more.
Every small business must be committed to spending a percentage of their time and revenue looking for new customers, all while continuing to serve their existing ones. The easiest way for a small business owner to do this is to dedicate the first 45 minutes of every day to doing nothing but prospecting. I believe that if you don't prospect first thing in the morning, you're far less likely to do it any other time of the day. By not designating this to the first part of the work day, you will find yourself challenged for time and making compromises. When this happens, the most likely thing to get cut is prospecting / cold-calling because it's probably the least enjoyable task.
If you are interested in some tips to ensure success in your prospecting, I recently posted a new article on my website and I encourage you to read it. Visit www.TheSalesHunter.com, click "articles", and you'll see it listed towards the bottom.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Sales Training Tip #184: The 3 Letters of Cold Calling
The 3 letters of cold calling are "C I C". They stand for Client, Industry, Competitors. Make sure you know who the client is, the industry they compete in, and who their competitors are before you call on them.
Monday, May 28, 2007
Video Sales Training Tips
http://youtube.com/results?search_query=The+sales+hunter+mark+hunter
Professional Selling Skills Training: What is Consultative Selling?
The best way to determine if you're practicing consultative selling is to ask yourself this simple question: Is the solution I'm providing my customers beyond the scope of what they would have determined as the best one if I was not working with them?