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Suggest You - Are Buyers Liars?
If You're Going To Lose A Sale, Lose Early dining table. Perhaps ask
some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that
buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to
person and from time to time.Nobody likes to lose a bid. Unfortunately, it comes with the territory. Like a great hitter in baseball, even the best salesman only close about 20% to 33% of all the deals that they pursue. Having said that, let's discuss a strategy that might help you focus on the most promising deals and also help you to at least learn something from your lost deals.In the book “Hope is Not a Strategy”, Rick Page states the the worst case scenario is to commit significant resources to a potential deal, only to finish second. If you are going to lose a deal, it’s best that you “lose early”. That’s because the less time and energy that you invest in a lost cause, the more time and energy you have to spend on more promising deals. So if you can develop some methods to help you identify the most promising deals and the least promising deals, you can start “losing early” more often instead of finishing second in a deal that you were going to lose anyway. One of the ways to help you identify your most promising prospects is to review your most successful transactions and analyze them. You should be able to detect some patterns from your analysis that might be a strong predictor of future successes. Once these similarities are determined, you can start to loo Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers IT Sales Calls: Getting Past the Gatekeeper How to Get Buyers to Buy and Improve Your Sales
Forecast IT sales calls require connecting with the right person in order to be successful. However, getting past the gatekeepers is no easy feat. In this article, you'll learn some techniques to help get you in touch with the person you need to for your IT sales calls.IT Sales Cold Calls are DifficultHow do you get past the secretary gatekeeper/screener who only takes your name and number and says we’re not interested? This typically happens when you are cold calling so you may want to try another method of gaining new clients. If, however, you are going to use this kind of strategy to build your demand generation, you will certainly need to get past the gatekeeper to go on the IT sales call!How To Get Past the Gatekeeperso You can always call before or after the gatekeeper leaves. Chances are they’re a nine to five, eight to six, or eight to four kind of person. o You can send an email o You can send a fax o You can send a letter o You can send a postcard o You can send a Fed-Ex marked personal confidentialA lot of these gimmicks, however, have been around for a long time and many people see through them.IT Sales: A Better "In"The VERY best way is to get to the people you need is to b Think of the last time you bought something you don't buy regularly. Perhaps a car, or a notebook computer or - as a business-to-business buyer - a professional service (e.g. a consulting service). Think of the first time you considered buying this product (or service). What made you think you wanted or needed it? How long did it take you from this first thought to actually taking action and looking for potential vendors? How long did it take you from approaching vendors to finally make the purchase? Obviously, for different situations and different products, the length of the buying cycle, i.e. the time needed from the first consideration to the final purchase, can vary considerably. Unless you buy straight from the catalog or the internet, you are likely, in the course of your buying process, to interact with the seller. Most sellers will ask you at one point when you will be ready to make a buying decision. And typically, you will give them some estimate. Unfortunately, these estimates are often not in line with the real time needed for the buying decision. In most cases it takes longer than you expect. Why is that so? Are buyers liars? Poor forecasts It is a fact that most sales forecasts are pretty poor. They usually get better with more sales transactions. For example, if you sell low-value items, you have to sell lots of them and often require many sales transactions to get a reasonable total sales volume. For simple statistical reasons, your forecasts in such cases tend to be more reliable. If you forecast 100 transactions per month with an average value of 1,000 USD per transaction, chances are much better that you will come close to the forecasted figure of 100,000 USD per month than if you expect just 10 transactions with a value of 10,000 USD each. It is much more likely that three buyers will unexpectedly postpone or buy from the competition in the latter case than 30 in the first case. That's why many companies are so keen on their so-called 'bread & butter' business as it is more reliable and often covers to a large extent their fixed cost. Besides this volume problem, there is the problem of over-optimistic and over- pessimistic (yes, they also exist) sales executives. Experienced sales managers and directors typically know to which type their people belong and either coach them to become more realistic and/or to make adjustments in their forecasts accordingly. Another reason for poor forecasts, and perhaps the most important one, is inaccurate information from buyers. The issue of trust Most buyers don't really trust sellers. Because most sellers focus on selling, potential buyers feel the need to take care of their own interests to avoid buying the wrong product or service. They want to make the best possible buying decision. As a consequence, buyers show some reservations towards the seller and provide info only reluctantly to assure that they don't harm their own interests. Whether this happens consciously or subconsciously, it does not really matter. Fact is, in these cases, the seller often gets incomplete, inaccurate, sometimes even plain wrong information. How can a seller build sufficient trust to get the full truth from the buyer? Besides the commonly known factors like building good rapport and displaying competence, we found that the NATOO mindset of the seller is the biggest lever towards creating trust. NATOO stands for "Not Attached To Own Outcome." If sellers can detach from their own outcomes and instead focus on the best possible outcome of prospects, including the possibility that their products may not be the best solution for the buyers, only then will buyers develop true trust towards sellers. I know that this is a very hard call for most sales people as they are usually driven by their need to achieve sales results. Letting go of this need and instead focusing on the best possible outcome for the buyer is not easy. It can only work if the sales person believes that this attitude will lead to better results in the longer run. Our own experience and the experience with our clients have clearly shown that this is true. Not only does it lead to more truthful conversations between seller and buyer--it also helps make your forecasts more reliable. This level of trust is a precondition for encouraging buyers to buy and thus accelerate the buying decision process. Buying Processes versus Sales Processes Once you have achieved a truly trustful relationship with your buyer, you will get the permission to help your buyer make a buying decision. In order to do this effectively and efficiently, you must gain an understanding of buying decision processes. Think of yourself when you buy anything beyond satisfying your daily needs. For example, if you want to buy a new dining table for your home. In our workshops we typically ask three to four people to describe the way they buy. We ask them about their criteria for buying such rather ordinary things. We ask them where they buy such items. We ask them if anyone else is directly or indirectly involved in the buying decision. We ask them about what they expect from the sales person. And we ask them if the way they buy such an item today is different from the way they bought the same item some years ago. Ask yourself those same questions if you would buy a dining table. Perhaps ask some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to person and from time to time. Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers Effective Exhibiting ore sales transactions. For example, if you sell low-value items, you have to sell
lots of them and often require many sales transactions to get a reasonable total
sales volume.Exhibiting can be a great form of Direct Marketing and if you can get your exhibition stand set-up correctly, i.e. in the right place, with the right staff, offering the right service etc, then the benefits can be even greater. So what are the important considerations and what should one try to do?LOCATION and SPACE Do everything you can to get a spot where you will be noticed and ensure that you are aware exactly of how much space you will have, so that you can effectively plan your stand design.STAFF It may sound strange to say but use the right staff. This is a sales environment and the face-to-face nature of the exhibition may offer some excellent opportunities. Staff should be well trained in preparation for the exhibition and they should be dressed appropriately (according to the type of exhibition). Make sure that people can tell who the staff are as opposed to other event visitors.THE EXHIBITION STAND Ensure you have a very noticeable and attractive exhibition stand. The stand should be well designed and should effectively use graphical design provided suitable.ARRIVING Arrive at the exhibition well prepared. Make sure you go to the show set-up with everything you may need including items such as: For simple statistical reasons, your forecasts in such cases tend to be more reliable. If you forecast 100 transactions per month with an average value of 1,000 USD per transaction, chances are much better that you will come close to the forecasted figure of 100,000 USD per month than if you expect just 10 transactions with a value of 10,000 USD each. It is much more likely that three buyers will unexpectedly postpone or buy from the competition in the latter case than 30 in the first case. That's why many companies are so keen on their so-called 'bread & butter' business as it is more reliable and often covers to a large extent their fixed cost. Besides this volume problem, there is the problem of over-optimistic and over- pessimistic (yes, they also exist) sales executives. Experienced sales managers and directors typically know to which type their people belong and either coach them to become more realistic and/or to make adjustments in their forecasts accordingly. Another reason for poor forecasts, and perhaps the most important one, is inaccurate information from buyers. The issue of trust Most buyers don't really trust sellers. Because most sellers focus on selling, potential buyers feel the need to take care of their own interests to avoid buying the wrong product or service. They want to make the best possible buying decision. As a consequence, buyers show some reservations towards the seller and provide info only reluctantly to assure that they don't harm their own interests. Whether this happens consciously or subconsciously, it does not really matter. Fact is, in these cases, the seller often gets incomplete, inaccurate, sometimes even plain wrong information. How can a seller build sufficient trust to get the full truth from the buyer? Besides the commonly known factors like building good rapport and displaying competence, we found that the NATOO mindset of the seller is the biggest lever towards creating trust. NATOO stands for "Not Attached To Own Outcome." If sellers can detach from their own outcomes and instead focus on the best possible outcome of prospects, including the possibility that their products may not be the best solution for the buyers, only then will buyers develop true trust towards sellers. I know that this is a very hard call for most sales people as they are usually driven by their need to achieve sales results. Letting go of this need and instead focusing on the best possible outcome for the buyer is not easy. It can only work if the sales person believes that this attitude will lead to better results in the longer run. Our own experience and the experience with our clients have clearly shown that this is true. Not only does it lead to more truthful conversations between seller and buyer--it also helps make your forecasts more reliable. This level of trust is a precondition for encouraging buyers to buy and thus accelerate the buying decision process. Buying Processes versus Sales Processes Once you have achieved a truly trustful relationship with your buyer, you will get the permission to help your buyer make a buying decision. In order to do this effectively and efficiently, you must gain an understanding of buying decision processes. Think of yourself when you buy anything beyond satisfying your daily needs. For example, if you want to buy a new dining table for your home. In our workshops we typically ask three to four people to describe the way they buy. We ask them about their criteria for buying such rather ordinary things. We ask them where they buy such items. We ask them if anyone else is directly or indirectly involved in the buying decision. We ask them about what they expect from the sales person. And we ask them if the way they buy such an item today is different from the way they bought the same item some years ago. Ask yourself those same questions if you would buy a dining table. Perhaps ask some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to person and from time to time. Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers Unsecured Credit Cards : What's The Difference? s focus on selling,
potential buyers feel the need to take care of their own interests to avoid buying the
wrong product or service. They want to make the best possible buying decision.There are a lot of terms associated with the credit world. With such daunting vocabulary as variable APR or secured card, sometimes people can get confused about just what a feature of a credit card means.First, we’ll discuss what a secured credit card is. A secured card is a card that is guaranteed. When you apply for one of these cards, you guarantee a deposit of cash or otherwise collateral so the bank can be sure that you will pay them back. This is a must when establishing credit or trying to rebuild a shattered credit rating. So, on the opposite end, unsecured credit cards are cards that you get without any guarantee to the bank that you will pay them back. For this reason, unsecured cards are usually only offered to people who have a good credit standing.To establish a good standing, most people begin with secured credit cards and work their way up to unsecured credit cards. Since the bank is placing so much trust in you, they have to see a good track record. For this reason, you should always try to keep your credit rating in tip-top condition. Pay bills on time, regularly use your card and immediately pay it off. If you maintain this month after month, your credit rating will begin to rise. You will be known as a trust worthy perso As a consequence, buyers show some reservations towards the seller and provide info only reluctantly to assure that they don't harm their own interests. Whether this happens consciously or subconsciously, it does not really matter. Fact is, in these cases, the seller often gets incomplete, inaccurate, sometimes even plain wrong information. How can a seller build sufficient trust to get the full truth from the buyer? Besides the commonly known factors like building good rapport and displaying competence, we found that the NATOO mindset of the seller is the biggest lever towards creating trust. NATOO stands for "Not Attached To Own Outcome." If sellers can detach from their own outcomes and instead focus on the best possible outcome of prospects, including the possibility that their products may not be the best solution for the buyers, only then will buyers develop true trust towards sellers. I know that this is a very hard call for most sales people as they are usually driven by their need to achieve sales results. Letting go of this need and instead focusing on the best possible outcome for the buyer is not easy. It can only work if the sales person believes that this attitude will lead to better results in the longer run. Our own experience and the experience with our clients have clearly shown that this is true. Not only does it lead to more truthful conversations between seller and buyer--it also helps make your forecasts more reliable. This level of trust is a precondition for encouraging buyers to buy and thus accelerate the buying decision process. Buying Processes versus Sales Processes Once you have achieved a truly trustful relationship with your buyer, you will get the permission to help your buyer make a buying decision. In order to do this effectively and efficiently, you must gain an understanding of buying decision processes. Think of yourself when you buy anything beyond satisfying your daily needs. For example, if you want to buy a new dining table for your home. In our workshops we typically ask three to four people to describe the way they buy. We ask them about their criteria for buying such rather ordinary things. We ask them where they buy such items. We ask them if anyone else is directly or indirectly involved in the buying decision. We ask them about what they expect from the sales person. And we ask them if the way they buy such an item today is different from the way they bought the same item some years ago. Ask yourself those same questions if you would buy a dining table. Perhaps ask some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to person and from time to time. Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers 10 Tips for Would-be Entrepreneurs attitude will lead to better results in the longer run.Every evening as the sun sets beyond the mangroves that line the shore along the western bank of Lake Myakka, Florida, herds of wild deer and wild black pigs come down to the water's edge to drink and slake their thirst.I have seen them up close and it is a beautiful, peaceful and inspiring sight!Every evening as the sun sets beyond the mangroves that line the shore a horde of hungry alligators wait just below the surface and watch for their prey.I have seen them and nature in the raw is truly an awesome sight!It doesn't matter whether you are a gentle deer, a greedy pig or an armor-plated alligator--survival depends on your ability to move fast!When you see what looks like an opportunity, you must grab it quick.But even if you don't grab it, the opportunity will not be wasted because someone who is hungrier that you surely will.We all make mistakes. That's how we learn. Consider these 10 Tips for Would-be Entrepreneurs:1. Be constantly on the lookout for moneymaking opportunities.2. Trust your intuition. If it looks like a good opportunity--grab it.3. Nothing ventured. Nothing gained. Big risk means big reward.4. Be willing to take carefully calculated risks.5. When you Our own experience and the experience with our clients have clearly shown that this is true. Not only does it lead to more truthful conversations between seller and buyer--it also helps make your forecasts more reliable. This level of trust is a precondition for encouraging buyers to buy and thus accelerate the buying decision process. Buying Processes versus Sales Processes Once you have achieved a truly trustful relationship with your buyer, you will get the permission to help your buyer make a buying decision. In order to do this effectively and efficiently, you must gain an understanding of buying decision processes. Think of yourself when you buy anything beyond satisfying your daily needs. For example, if you want to buy a new dining table for your home. In our workshops we typically ask three to four people to describe the way they buy. We ask them about their criteria for buying such rather ordinary things. We ask them where they buy such items. We ask them if anyone else is directly or indirectly involved in the buying decision. We ask them about what they expect from the sales person. And we ask them if the way they buy such an item today is different from the way they bought the same item some years ago. Ask yourself those same questions if you would buy a dining table. Perhaps ask some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to person and from time to time. Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers Marketing The Real You dining table. Perhaps ask
some of your friends or colleagues as well. What you will notice is that
buying processes for the very same item can vary tremendously from person to
person and from time to time.I often wonder how the practice began of pretending to be someone else in order to market your business. You know what I'm talking about -- it's the marketing face, the selling voice, that you often put on in order to attend a networking event or make a sales call. Who taught you to do that?I have a suspicion where we learn this behavior. Most of us spend a lifetime observing showroom salespeople, product spokespersons in the media, and hucksters on street corners. What we see demonstrated there is artificial enthusiasm, manipulative use of language, feigned interest, and in some cases outright deception.Sounds awful, doesn't it? So why copy any part of this distasteful way of selling?Psychologist Abraham Maslow said, "If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail." Perhaps we believe this is the only way we can sell because it's the only way we know. I'm not accusing anyone of consciously deceiving prospective clients. What I'm suggesting is that what we do unconsciously and automatically is to behave nauthentically around them.Intuitively, many of us feel as if something is wrong with this way of operating. When we have to sell ourselves, we find it unpleasant, disagreeable, even repulsive. But what if all those Obviously, the most successful sales process is one which matches largely with any buying process. Unfortunately, most sellers are trained to follow a certain sales process which may or may not match with a person's buying process. Using traditional sales approaches, the seller who employs a selling process which matches with the most probable buying process in his industry will be the most successful one. However, even those 'successful' sellers typically reach only a 20 -30% lead-conversion-rate, i.e. they lose 70-80% of the available business. The Stop Selling! approach is based on the premise that a seller must continuously adjust his selling process in order to match as closely as possible with the buyer's preferred buying process. That means the seller must give up the comfort of a more or less fixed selling process. Since we can never really know what the buying process of a buyer is at any given time, the seller must develop a high level of sensitivity towards the buyer in order to minimize the risk of 'losing' him. Accelerate the Buying Decision by Coaching Your Buyer We can't truly know how buyers buy. In fact, most buyers don't even know in advance exactly how they are going to buy. This is not a problem but an opportunity. What the seller can meaningfully do is to coach the buyer through his/ her buying decision. What does coaching mean? Unlike consulting where you analyze your buyer's needs and then recommend the best possible solution you (!) have, coaching means you work from the belief that you don't know if you have a truly good solution for your buyer. Instead, through active listening and effective questioning, you help the buyer line up all necessary criteria to render a buying decision possible. Only answers to questions related to the seller's products, services and performance are actually required by the seller. On the other hand, many of the answers to the questions a coaching sales person asks are irrelevant for the seller but crucial for the buyer. For example, in the case of the dining table, it is important for the seller to know the buyer's design preferences whereas only the buyer really needs to know if the spouse must be involved in the buying decision. In many cases the buyer is left alone to line up all necessary criteria for a buying decision; hence, the buyer often undergoes a time-consuming trial-and-error process. A savvy seller doesn't leave this process unmanaged; a savvy seller pro-actively supports the buyer in his discovery. The seller knows at a very early stage if there is anything meaningful he can offer to the buyer, thus minimizing the risk of wasting time or what we have come to describe as misleads. As a consequence, the buyer reaches a buying decision more quickly. The Invisible Decision Maker In many buying situations, the seller doesn't have direct access to the ultimate decision maker or to third parties who influence the buying decision. In order to maximize the chance of getting the business once you have worked out a good solution for the buyer, it is necessary to coach the buyer in dealing with these third parties. In such situations it is indispensable to discuss with your buyer the potential reactions and preferences of these influencers and how to best deal with any objections they might have. Ideally, the seller gets the buyer to involve these third parties - directly or indirectly - right from the beginning to reduce if not avoid the occurrence of any objections.
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