Sharpen your Sales Techniques
Sales is the lifeblood that drives business. There are no jobs unless someone brings the business through the door. Career success often depends on your ability to sell a product, a service or an idea. Even if you are the accountant for the business- you’re in sales. If you engage with vendors or customers – then you are in sales. Everyone in the company must realize they are in sales whether their titles state that or not. No matter what field you’re in, you’ll sell better by remembering these key pieces of sales wisdom:
Satisfy the customer: There’s a meat counter in the supermarket in my neighborhood. There are always three or four clerks waiting on customers. But one of the clerks always has customers waiting for him even if one of the other clerks isn’t busy.
One day I asked him the reason for his popularity. He said: “The other clerks always put more meat on the scale and then take some away to arrive at what the customer ordered. I always put less on the scale and then add to it. It makes all the difference.”
A sales person tells, a good sales person explains, and a great sales person demonstrates: A company was selling unbreakable mirror glass and had a sales contest. At the awards banquet they asked the #1 sales rep what his secret was. He explained that he had the factory cut him several four-by-four squares of the mirror glass. When he went out on calls he would put one of the squares on the customer’s desk and then take out a hammer and try to smash it. It wouldn’t break – and the impressed customer was sold.
Sell what’s on the truck: Years ago, in New York City an Italian fruit vendor was teaching his son the basics of salesmanship.
“Don’t tell people we are out of peaches,” the father said patiently, “ask them to buy some of our very fresh plums. Sell what’s on the truck.”
Many of today’s salespeople could take the same advice. Don’t spend a lot of time complaining about the current state of the product line or describing products you can’t deliver right away. Sell what’s on the truck – and your customers will be well served with the quality products you can deliver to them right now.
Get in front of prospects: Every sale starts with a prospect – a potential customer with an interest in what you’ve got to sell. Identify those who need what you’re offering. Find out where they are so you can target your sales efforts effectively.
Profile your buyers: Your product should fill a defined need. Analyze the kind of people who might benefit from what you’ve got to offer so you can tailor your pitch to them. Do they already use something similar? Do they need to be educated about what you can do for them?
Get into the customer’s mind: You have to tailor your approach to match individual buyers. Once you’ve targeted specific prospects, spend some time getting to know their personal priorities and professional preferences, and what they’re looking for when they consider products like yours. You’ll do a better job of selling to them if you focus on satisfying their requirements instead of yours.
Know when and how to ask for the sale: Author Murray Raphel offers these words of wisdom: “A ‘closing’ . . . defeats your primary goal in selling: the lifetime value of the customer. You don’t ‘close’ the sale. You ‘open’ relationships. Isn’t the end of the first sale really the beginning of the next sale to the same customer?”
Ask for the order: I can’t believe how many sales people do everything right, but then they fail to ask for the order. Often that’s the most important part of the process.
The famous automobile pioneer Henry Ford was once asked by an insurance agent whom he had known for many years why he never got any of Ford’s business.
“You never asked me,” Ford replied.
What sales techniques are you going to sharpen today to move your business forward?
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