Thank you.. and goodnight
Almost exactly two years after my first post, I've decided it's time to put SalesItch to bed. Thank you to everyone who frequented my humble blog.
With best wishes,
Ed
Almost exactly two years after my first post, I've decided it's time to put SalesItch to bed. Thank you to everyone who frequented my humble blog.
With best wishes,
Ed
As mentioned in my last sales blooper post, I started my sales career in, effectively, telesales. As that company is long-gone I feel I can now share with you some of the funny/cringe-worthy moments of that first job…. this and the following stories are all 100% true, though names and details have been changed to protect the innocent.
Me : “Good morning, this is Ed McLean from Company Z. Is Janet Hawley available please?”
Gatekeeper : “Have you spoken to Janet before?”
Me : “No, I haven’t, but..”
Gatekeeper : “Oh, actually, yes I remember, I think she was expect a call from you. I will give you her direct line. It’s 00 2023…33”
Me : “Errr, thank you”… (that’s strange….)
(Calling new number)
New gatekeeper “Good morning, Samaritans”
More bloopers soon….
Sales bloopers : No 2
As mentioned in my last sales blooper post, I started my sales career in, effectively, telesales. As that company is long-gone I feel I can now share with you some of the funny/cringe-worthy moments of that first job…. this and the following stories are all 100% true, though names and details have been changed to protect the innocent.
Me : “Good morning, may I speak to Mike Wright please?”
Gatekeeper : “No, I am sorry, Mike doesn’t take calls”
Me : “OK, no problem. Perhaps you can help, I saw that Mike recently made an announcement about the Hertford project. I have been working on a similar project and wanted to make contact. Is Mike in the office at the moment?”
Gatekeeper : “Err, he is here, but he doesn’t take calls”
Me : ”Yes, I appreciate that, but this…”
Gatekeeper : “Mike won’t take your call because he is deaf.”
Me : ”Oh……… I’ll send an email”
More bloopers soon….
I started my sales career in, effectively, telesales. As that company is long-gone I feel I can now share with you some of the funny/cringe-worthy moments of that first job…. this and the following stories are all 100% true, though names and details have been changed to protect the innocent.
Me : “Good morning, may I speak to Monsieur Lafarge?”
Gatekeeper : “No, it’s not possible to speak to him. Why do you want to speak to him?”
Me : “It’s regarding your company’s announcement about the DGT launch, we’re involved in a similar project. Could you put me through please?”
Gatekeeper : “No, I cannot put you through...”
Me : ”I appreciate that Monsieur Lafarge is busy, but…”
Gatekeeper : “Monsieur Lafarge is dead”
Me : ”Oh………”
More bloopers soon….
I'm currently researching a new market segment for my employer. Obviously, part of this is understanding what individual companies do and how they fit into the industry. I have only a decade's experience in business, but I think that should be enough to understand what it is companies do. However, decoding what these companies do is incredibly difficult. I am not just talking about jargon, but about clear attempts by companies to avoid saying what they do (usually by listing benefits, "we help companies to maximise workflow efficiencies..").
Are you really that scared to admit what you do? Surely if you what you do isn't different/better than others, then the way you do it is? Otherwise, what is your value proposition in relation to the competition?
If you don't want to tell me what you do and how it will help me, I can click elsewhere in less than a second. And if I do, your sales people miss out.
Rant over.
Understanding is one of the least acknowledged fundamentals in selling. If we don’t understand what our prospect means we are likely to shape an inappropriate solution. Try these questions – you might be surprised to discover that your understanding is way-off. These questions also work well when a prospect is very vocal and shooting off in many directions and you need to isolate the core problem and get them to refocus.
• (Repeat your understanding) Does that some up the situation?
• (Repeat your understanding) Have I got that right?
• If I understand correctly, you were saying that…. is that right?
• Would it be accurate to say (phrase problem)?
• So, essentially, the most important point for you is… is that right?
More questions for you to use in your selling coming soon. Bookmark/RSS SalesItch now…. And don’t forget to add a comment to share your favourite questions with the community!
Optimism is seen as one of the most important qualities of a sales person. You have got to have the ability to experience a string of losses and still be able to walk into your next meeting feeling certain that your proposition is strong.
That is certainly true, however, I’d like to argue the corner for pessimism. When the optimist is sure the meeting will go well, the pessimist is anticipating problems and preparing for every eventuality. Where the optimist skips around the office with joy at a complementary line in an email from a prospect, the pessimist thinks “it may be a negotiating tactic” and prepares for tougher negotiations. Where the optimist is sure the opportunities in her pipeline will pretty much all come in, the pessimist is on the phone tracking down new opportunities because he’s sure those pipeline opportunities are going to drop out.
Seeing the worst case scenario and everything in between allows you to prepare.
Unbridled optimism, like unbridled pessimism, is a disaster. But the right combination of the two provides the sales person with a more robust approach to his job.
Interestingly, research by Martin Seligman discovered that pessimists are much better predictors of what will actually happen than optimists. A rather depressing discovery, but it supports my point that reality is often trickier than the rose tinted view we would like to have.
We all know that prospects’ problems are the starting point for successful selling, but once you discover a problem, where should you take it? Here are a few of my favourite questions for exploring, quantifying and measuring problems.
• Why/how is that an issue?
• What is this costing you?
• Who else is affected by this issue?
• How does that impact the business/ department/ you?
• Why does that matter?
• What’s driving this?
• What’s motivating you to take action on this?
• Where does this initiative come from?
• Where (in the organisation) did this problem start?
• "How do you think (industry) vendors, in general fail the market?" (then drill down on what unsolved problem they are searching for help with)
• "Which means...?" (use to encourage the prospect to explain the problem more deeply)
More questions for you to use in your selling coming soon. Bookmark/RSS SalesItch now…. And don’t forget to add a comment to share your favourite questions with the community!
You do? Good, because there's a hell of a lot of it coming up. I've been rather smug in the past in considering the sales profession a very safe and secure place to be. My thinking went that there will always be stuff to be sold, whether it’s products, services or ideas. That side of the buying/selling equation will stay near enough the same (aside from the shift that has already happened from sale people to internet based sales for commodity goods). On the whole, the changes have been and will be in the market side – what buyers are doing.
Think about it: