Thursday, April 15, 2010



Sales Success Strategies - Making a

Strong Start to the Sales Call


In this segment--- Sales success strategies: making a strong start to the sales call --- we'll be focusing on two issues. First, some tips and considerations with implication on broad sales strategy, specifically, why people (and organizations) buy, and, hence, how you can help them WANT to buy what you offer.

Then we'll look at some practical selling strategies addressing what to do just prior to the sales call, as well as how to make a strong start when you finally sit down with the prospect.Before getting to the how-to, we need to put it into perspective: Why do people buy? More specifically, why would they buy the product or service you are offering?

Further, how does why they buy shape your approach as you plan a selling strategy for this unique meeting? Organizations, and the Decision Makers within them, buy only if they arrive at solidly "Yes" answers to four fundamental questions. Sales success strategies question #1 in the prospect's mind: Do we face a need?


Increasing Sales Through

Telemarketing


People and organizations buy if and only if they have and feel a need. No need? No buy. It's that simple.Without the pull of that need, all the bells and whistles, and all the price discounts and special offers are powerless to bring about the sale.

Sales success strategies question #2 in the prospect's mind: Is that need strong enough to justify our spending money to fill it? We all face a variety of needs, more needs than we could ever hope to fill, so we give priority only to the needs we perceive as truly significant.

Therefore, one of your most important tasks as you sell is to help the potential customer not only become aware of a need that can be filled by your product or service, but also become enthusiastic enough about filling it that it becomes a priority.


Three Email Marketing Tips to Get More Sales


Sales success strategies question #3 in the prospect's mind: Will this product or service in fact fill that need? Only after the need and its importance are clear to the Decision Maker is it appropriate to begin talking about your product and what it can do for that person or organization.

After all, the prospect WILL NOT BE interested in buying your product for its own sake. What the potential buyer WILL BE interested in is finding a way of FILLING THE NEED that he or she has now recognized as important. Your product becomes of interest insofar as it is a useful means to filling that need.

(In another segment, we look at the three main ways of creating or enhancing the Prospect's awareness of need... and the way we find best.) Therefore, to make the sale, you'll need to make the link clear between the specific needs of the customer (as you have explored them together) and the specific ways in which your product can fill those needs. (We'll examine ways of making this linkage clear in another segment here.)


Sales Prospecting in Down Economies


Sales success strategies question #4 in the prospect's mind: Will it fill the need better or more cost-effectively than any other approaches presently available to this prospect? To conclude the sale, you'll need to deal with the issue of cost. But "price" and "real cost" are usually not the same.

As we'll see, price---that is, what a buyer pays at the start---is rarely as important as you (the seller) think. What really matters is not so much what your product costs out of pocket today, as its overall "cost-effectiveness" -- that is, what the customer gets in return for the money spent.
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Sunday, January 3, 2010

Sales

The part I like the most about doing a sales job is getting my sales incentives after the long haul of hard work. It somehow has a magical power to pull me towards working harder to earn more. And without realizing it, I had been repeating the cycle of 'hard work - incentives' for over a decade now. And I am not pulling my brakes. But I have seen how sales incentive becomes a 'bad master'.

I have seen other sales people do whatever it takes, and I really mean 'whatever it takes', to get their incentives.They create fake orders, change order amount, and dump products to create volume for their sales which they return on a later date. I have seen it all. I have seen the two faces of sales incentive. But during those years of being a sales person there had been only 2 or 3 times where I totally missed my incentives payout.

I am talking about 12 years in total. Whenever I was asked the question, "How did you do that? What you do differently?" I always sum up my answer in this manner, "I focus on the business, and not the sales." I have never failed to get a blank stare right after that. Let me explain.By focusing on sales, a sales person only interested in short term gain. There is no wonder why many sales personnel do whatever they can to grab the payout.

They are driven mainly by greed, and they often think that incentive is a 'be all - end all' affair. Nothing is further from the truth. On the other hand, by focusing on business relationship, I am more interested in what I can do for the customers, not the other way around. Their success is my success, in that order. And by having this simple mind shift, the figure for my sales incentive proves that it is the right thing to do.

Just like friends, I do not mind having more. In short, sales incentive is a powerful tool for companies or business owners to motivate sales personnel to deliver results. But like a coin, incentive has two faces. A simple mind shift from short term gain to value long term relationship creates better profit in the end. So who is sales incentive to you - a friend or a foe?
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