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Suggest You - How to Deliver the Right Message, Every Time
How To Price Your Soaps For Maximum Profit at they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off".If you ever thought of making and selling your soaps, You must read this article. We'll talk about how to correctly price your soaps. This is very important, as you need to know exactly how much a bar of soap costs you to make. Pricing is extremely important for any business to maximize profit. Why? Simple. If you price your soaps too low - you end up loosing money you should be making. If you price your soaps too high - you loose customers and sales you should have made (because they buy from your competitor, where it's cheaper). Do you see why correct pricing is so important? ;-) So, let's begin. All the numbers below are merely examples. Your numbers will be different: 1. FIXED COSTS: All the costs you have before making one bar of soap, per month: Rent: $150 (one room of your house is used for soap making) Phone: $70 Water: $10 Electricity: $20 Insurance: $20 Equipment (pots, spoons, thermometers, moulds etc.): $30 (let's assume I spend $360 per year in equipment) So, the total for fixed costs is : $300 per month. If you make 1,000 soap bars per month, your fixed cost per bar would be: $300 / 1,000 = $0.3 per bar 2. RAW MATERIALS Let's take a simple soap recipe to make things easier here: Olive oil: $11 for 128 oz. Coconut Oil: $14.01 fo When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one syst Subliminal Advertising - How To Use It Frustrated CEO's and sales managers express that thought over and over, in one way or another. They're talking about their salespeople, of course. They harbor a feeling that
some of their salespeople just aren't doing what they want them to do, communicating the right message and they don't know what to do about it.Some of us scoff at subliminal advertising techniques. We like to think our minds are entirely logical and immune to the influence of others. This just isn't true, as any good salesman knows. After studying the subject for some time, I have come to accept that I will not just buy things, but I will be "sold" things, even by way of subliminal techniques.What I CAN do is learn the techniques that are used on me. Then, if I want to, I can use them too, when I believe it is ethical to do so. More importantly, I can protect myself from these techniques, or at least be sold the RIGHT things. Want to do the same? Would you like to learn a few subliminal advertising techniques? Start with the following sales pitch:"Does public speaking make you nervous? What if it was easy? Imagine standing at the podium, knowing exactly what to say to make them love you. Wouldn't that feel great? Just apply our simple methods, and you'll have that power. Use the form below to order right now."Okay, let's dissect the sales pitch, sentence-by-sentence.Sentence #1 : Does public speaking make you nervous? This gets the reader to say yes, which is habit forming. Getting a prospect to say yes is a classic old technique that still works. It also introduces the problem, for which the solution is coming.Sentence #2 : What if it was easy? This suggests the possibility of a solution, creating hope and anticipation in the reader.Sentence #3 : "Imagine standing at the podium, knowing exactly what to say to make them love you." The word "im If that thought occasionally passes through your mind, read on. "What do you want them to do?" I often reply. Boy – talk about opening a “can of worms.” That question is often too vague to hold any meaning in today’s world. Years ago, it may have been good enough to just say “get out there and sell.” But in today’s business world, it’s not enough. The selling environment has changed; your competition has surely changed and has become more ferocious. Now more than ever... businesses survive and crash based on the message that is being communicated to your prospects and clients, how often it’s delivered... if it’s actually, the right message for you... AND, if your message differentiates you in the eyes of your prospects and clients. How you develop your key positioning statement, (defined as “the statement” or message that “positions” you in the eyes of your audience as the obvious choice), how you train your employees on that statement, how you measure their growth and the development of their skill sets and last... how they deliver your message effectively to your audience... are the critical elements to a successful training, marketing and sales plan. Our economy has grown increasingly complex, many markets are maturing, the demands and expectations of your customers are growing, your customers' choices of ways to satisfy their needs are multiplying, and information technology is growing more powerful and user friendly. All that means is that you need to be much more effective in your sales communication and directing your sales force than at any time in the past. Successful sales management in the approaching 21st century world requires a more sophisticated answer from you than just "Get out there and sell!” ”Selling MODE” is great, but without gathering the right type of marketing intelligence and information from your prospects... you hamper your success. Here’s an example: Client “A” owns a small pharmaceutical company. Every month they are analyzing data to determine their market share. They also analyze who the high prescribing physicians are for their drug, as well as for the competition. They use that information to make territory and product line forecasts, as well as a basis for developing more sophisticated joint marketing plans with his partner-vendors. I'm sure you'll agree -- that's good information to have. But don't the salespeople do those kinds of things on their own? Do they really need that kind of precise direction from management? Take a little self-test. Consider each of your salespeople, one at a time. Ask yourself, "Is ...(salesperson's name).... systematically collecting that kind of market information on his or her own?" On their own? No. So, what is the first step in getting your salespeople to start delivering the right message? Ideally, those things proceed directly from your strategic plan. For example, if your strategic plan says that you want to penetrate a new market segment, then you should expect your salespeople to make X calls per month on that segment, or create X new customers within that segment, or do X amount of sales with that segment, or achieve X amount of gross profit with that segment. The first step is to develop your strategic plan, and then to create expectations for your sales force that directly support that strategic plan. If you don’t have a strategic plan, it’s time to start developing one. Here’s a shortcut... Begin by creating precise expectations for your sales force. Develop a list of the three to ten most important things (goals) you want them to do (communicating your specific message should be #1). Bringing in a certain amount of sales or gross profits should be one of them, but only one of them. Next, make sure that your list of expectations is easily, accurately and fairly measurable. I believe in the acronym SMAART. Your goals and objectives should be: 1. S – Specific. “Improving service” is not specific. How, exactly, will you improve it? Look at your goals with creativity. Financial objectives are SMAART, and they’re easy to identify. But nonfinancial objectives, such as increasing your customer attitudes towards you and your company, and lowering employee turnover are also SMAART. They’re specific, measurable, aggressive, accountable, realistic and potentially time-specific. If you're highly automated and use effective sales force, training and goal measuring software, it'll be a snap. If you're not effectively automated, it'll be much more difficult. For example, one of my clients wanted his sales force to call on new prospects. His business was growing, and his salespeople were happy. But he was sure that there was additional market share to be had in accounts that were not being cultivated. He wasn't automated, and didn't believe his veteran sales force would accurately and thoroughly complete weekly call reports. In addition, he didn’t have an accurate way to measure what “message” the sales force was communicating day to day, week to week. His sales cycle was long, and he didn't want to wait until he saw actual sales numbers. Those sales could occur 6 to 12 months after the first sales call. He determined to measure his sales forces' activity, (calling on new prospects) not the results (sales to new prospects). We struggled with a way to easily, fairly and accurately measure the activity of calling on new prospects. And then it hit us. Bingo! Suppose they allowed technology to help them deliver the RIGHT MESSAGE as well as, help them in tracking “new quotes” and opportunities... automatically and in real-time. We could not only measure the number of sales calls made to prospects but we could now measure the number of quotes made to them as well. The system would be easy, accurate, and fair. We could also measure... with real-time tools – “key message” delivery. What we wanted the salespeople to communicate... those “key messages” were added to the system and viewed by the salesperson each time they made a call. By clicking a box for the actual message that was delivered, we were able to track which message was actually the most effective. Having decided that, it was an easy step to give each salesperson a quarterly expectation for the number of "quotes made to new prospects." Our strategic initiative, "Gain market share," turned into a measurable expectation for each salesperson, "Generate X quotes per month to prospects not on the database." In the past, another client of ours “process” of monitoring on-the-job performance and keeping proper employee evaluation records was a laborious one. What our client "used to do" was forward a Word document (essentially a checklist) to all of their managers across the country for monthly progress reports on their employees. The managers would in turn fill out the form and email it back to the administrator. When all of the record forms were received, the administrator would compile the information and submit it all to Human Resources, so that they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off". When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one syste How Can You Tell When Change Management Commeth? world requires a more sophisticated answer from you than just "Get out there and sell!”Have you ever watched a corporate executive on the financial news and the gentleman says something and you think to yourself why is he running that company anyway? Indeed this was my thought when I watched the President of HP, who happened to be at Davos with all the World Leaders say something really silly and she was serious enough that I almost did not believe it.I said to myself why on Earth is she running this company, surely she is smart enough not to say such things or smart enough to know the reality of the situation. She was canned about 3-weeks later and for good reason in my humble opinion. Especially considering my uncles grew up with the HP Founder’s kids in Palo Alto, CA.When you see executives making excuses and mistakes in rapid succession you know it is time for management succession and that folks is How you can tell when Change Management Commeth. We saw the same things at Boeing a few years back with bad management and ridiculous decisions, which caused great harm to the company. We saw the same with Daimler Chryslers Freightliner Truck Division. In fact we see it all the time.What is unfortunate and Collins talks about this in both his books; Built to Last; and From Good to Great; that businesses and corporations cannot run this way. Perhaps corporate shake-ups are a good thing, because if these folks cannot handle it they need to be gone. Consider all this in 2006. ”Selling MODE” is great, but without gathering the right type of marketing intelligence and information from your prospects... you hamper your success. Here’s an example: Client “A” owns a small pharmaceutical company. Every month they are analyzing data to determine their market share. They also analyze who the high prescribing physicians are for their drug, as well as for the competition. They use that information to make territory and product line forecasts, as well as a basis for developing more sophisticated joint marketing plans with his partner-vendors. I'm sure you'll agree -- that's good information to have. But don't the salespeople do those kinds of things on their own? Do they really need that kind of precise direction from management? Take a little self-test. Consider each of your salespeople, one at a time. Ask yourself, "Is ...(salesperson's name).... systematically collecting that kind of market information on his or her own?" On their own? No. So, what is the first step in getting your salespeople to start delivering the right message? Ideally, those things proceed directly from your strategic plan. For example, if your strategic plan says that you want to penetrate a new market segment, then you should expect your salespeople to make X calls per month on that segment, or create X new customers within that segment, or do X amount of sales with that segment, or achieve X amount of gross profit with that segment. The first step is to develop your strategic plan, and then to create expectations for your sales force that directly support that strategic plan. If you don’t have a strategic plan, it’s time to start developing one. Here’s a shortcut... Begin by creating precise expectations for your sales force. Develop a list of the three to ten most important things (goals) you want them to do (communicating your specific message should be #1). Bringing in a certain amount of sales or gross profits should be one of them, but only one of them. Next, make sure that your list of expectations is easily, accurately and fairly measurable. I believe in the acronym SMAART. Your goals and objectives should be: 1. S – Specific. “Improving service” is not specific. How, exactly, will you improve it? Look at your goals with creativity. Financial objectives are SMAART, and they’re easy to identify. But nonfinancial objectives, such as increasing your customer attitudes towards you and your company, and lowering employee turnover are also SMAART. They’re specific, measurable, aggressive, accountable, realistic and potentially time-specific. If you're highly automated and use effective sales force, training and goal measuring software, it'll be a snap. If you're not effectively automated, it'll be much more difficult. For example, one of my clients wanted his sales force to call on new prospects. His business was growing, and his salespeople were happy. But he was sure that there was additional market share to be had in accounts that were not being cultivated. He wasn't automated, and didn't believe his veteran sales force would accurately and thoroughly complete weekly call reports. In addition, he didn’t have an accurate way to measure what “message” the sales force was communicating day to day, week to week. His sales cycle was long, and he didn't want to wait until he saw actual sales numbers. Those sales could occur 6 to 12 months after the first sales call. He determined to measure his sales forces' activity, (calling on new prospects) not the results (sales to new prospects). We struggled with a way to easily, fairly and accurately measure the activity of calling on new prospects. And then it hit us. Bingo! Suppose they allowed technology to help them deliver the RIGHT MESSAGE as well as, help them in tracking “new quotes” and opportunities... automatically and in real-time. We could not only measure the number of sales calls made to prospects but we could now measure the number of quotes made to them as well. The system would be easy, accurate, and fair. We could also measure... with real-time tools – “key message” delivery. What we wanted the salespeople to communicate... those “key messages” were added to the system and viewed by the salesperson each time they made a call. By clicking a box for the actual message that was delivered, we were able to track which message was actually the most effective. Having decided that, it was an easy step to give each salesperson a quarterly expectation for the number of "quotes made to new prospects." Our strategic initiative, "Gain market share," turned into a measurable expectation for each salesperson, "Generate X quotes per month to prospects not on the database." In the past, another client of ours “process” of monitoring on-the-job performance and keeping proper employee evaluation records was a laborious one. What our client "used to do" was forward a Word document (essentially a checklist) to all of their managers across the country for monthly progress reports on their employees. The managers would in turn fill out the form and email it back to the administrator. When all of the record forms were received, the administrator would compile the information and submit it all to Human Resources, so that they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off". When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one syst Why Is It Useful to Change Jobs? age should be #1).Changing jobs is quite natural for many people nowadays. Specialists kept on switching companies looking for a better place to work at. But their functional responsibilities still remain the same. However, such rotation without the change of your occupation is not 100% useful. Psychological research has showed that a person will have more chances to succeed if he changes his vocation once 5 – 7 years. Thus he will acquire new knowledge and experience and he will learn how to deal with new unusual tasks.Even if you have created a dynamic plan for developing your career from a clerk to a senior manager in a particular company new responsibilities don’t substitute old ones, but are just added to the existing duties. In other words, you don’t change your activity – but the sphere of your responsibility becomes wider. In fact, a person keeps on working in the same professional area. However paradoxical it may be, but after a few years since submitting your sales resume you are more likely to lose your sales competence than to gain or improve it. You get tired of routine work; you fulfill your duties mechanically with no zest and enthusiasm. That is why psychologists suggest changing the content of the work not its place. Human resource managers still make the same mistake: they are looking for the applicants with at least a year – relevant experience. They don’t consider retrained specialists or those who have no experience in the pertinent area. They don’t take into account that inexperienced candidates have considerable advantages over the expe Bringing in a certain amount of sales or gross profits should be one of them, but only one of them. Next, make sure that your list of expectations is easily, accurately and fairly measurable. I believe in the acronym SMAART. Your goals and objectives should be: 1. S – Specific. “Improving service” is not specific. How, exactly, will you improve it? Look at your goals with creativity. Financial objectives are SMAART, and they’re easy to identify. But nonfinancial objectives, such as increasing your customer attitudes towards you and your company, and lowering employee turnover are also SMAART. They’re specific, measurable, aggressive, accountable, realistic and potentially time-specific. If you're highly automated and use effective sales force, training and goal measuring software, it'll be a snap. If you're not effectively automated, it'll be much more difficult. For example, one of my clients wanted his sales force to call on new prospects. His business was growing, and his salespeople were happy. But he was sure that there was additional market share to be had in accounts that were not being cultivated. He wasn't automated, and didn't believe his veteran sales force would accurately and thoroughly complete weekly call reports. In addition, he didn’t have an accurate way to measure what “message” the sales force was communicating day to day, week to week. His sales cycle was long, and he didn't want to wait until he saw actual sales numbers. Those sales could occur 6 to 12 months after the first sales call. He determined to measure his sales forces' activity, (calling on new prospects) not the results (sales to new prospects). We struggled with a way to easily, fairly and accurately measure the activity of calling on new prospects. And then it hit us. Bingo! Suppose they allowed technology to help them deliver the RIGHT MESSAGE as well as, help them in tracking “new quotes” and opportunities... automatically and in real-time. We could not only measure the number of sales calls made to prospects but we could now measure the number of quotes made to them as well. The system would be easy, accurate, and fair. We could also measure... with real-time tools – “key message” delivery. What we wanted the salespeople to communicate... those “key messages” were added to the system and viewed by the salesperson each time they made a call. By clicking a box for the actual message that was delivered, we were able to track which message was actually the most effective. Having decided that, it was an easy step to give each salesperson a quarterly expectation for the number of "quotes made to new prospects." Our strategic initiative, "Gain market share," turned into a measurable expectation for each salesperson, "Generate X quotes per month to prospects not on the database." In the past, another client of ours “process” of monitoring on-the-job performance and keeping proper employee evaluation records was a laborious one. What our client "used to do" was forward a Word document (essentially a checklist) to all of their managers across the country for monthly progress reports on their employees. The managers would in turn fill out the form and email it back to the administrator. When all of the record forms were received, the administrator would compile the information and submit it all to Human Resources, so that they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off". When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one syst Get Clients With a Small Business Networking Strategy Networking, Ugh!Much like the thought of marketing and sales, the thought of networking may make you cringe. For most solo-pros, service professionals, and small business owners, they hear the word networking and it brings to mind the old business standard of promotional networking at 'meet & greet' events where it's understood and accepted that everyone is there to schmooze and subtly manipulate one another in an attempt to gain some advantage, for themselves or their business, which will increase their bottom line.Who wouldn't cringe at the thought of spending an hour or two exchanging banalities and sales pitches with a phony smile plastered on your face to hide your discomfort, in an attempt to 'use' someone else to get a leg-up on the competition or to boost your profits, only to walk away with a pocketful of biz cards and the prospect of hours of work to continue the charade through email and by phone? It feels uncomfortable, self-serving and deceptive. Chances are all those biz cards you collected will end up in a drawer of your desk never to be seen again because you'll so dread following up that you'll procrastinate doing so until they're forgotten.The good news is it doesn't have to be that way! The Book Yourself Solid networking strategy operates from an entirely different paradigm; it's all about connecting and sharing with others, and all you have to do to begin to employ it is to shift your perspective from one of scarcity and fear, to one of abundance and love. With the Book Yourself Solid Networking Strategy, the f His sales cycle was long, and he didn't want to wait until he saw actual sales numbers. Those sales could occur 6 to 12 months after the first sales call. He determined to measure his sales forces' activity, (calling on new prospects) not the results (sales to new prospects). We struggled with a way to easily, fairly and accurately measure the activity of calling on new prospects. And then it hit us. Bingo! Suppose they allowed technology to help them deliver the RIGHT MESSAGE as well as, help them in tracking “new quotes” and opportunities... automatically and in real-time. We could not only measure the number of sales calls made to prospects but we could now measure the number of quotes made to them as well. The system would be easy, accurate, and fair. We could also measure... with real-time tools – “key message” delivery. What we wanted the salespeople to communicate... those “key messages” were added to the system and viewed by the salesperson each time they made a call. By clicking a box for the actual message that was delivered, we were able to track which message was actually the most effective. Having decided that, it was an easy step to give each salesperson a quarterly expectation for the number of "quotes made to new prospects." Our strategic initiative, "Gain market share," turned into a measurable expectation for each salesperson, "Generate X quotes per month to prospects not on the database." In the past, another client of ours “process” of monitoring on-the-job performance and keeping proper employee evaluation records was a laborious one. What our client "used to do" was forward a Word document (essentially a checklist) to all of their managers across the country for monthly progress reports on their employees. The managers would in turn fill out the form and email it back to the administrator. When all of the record forms were received, the administrator would compile the information and submit it all to Human Resources, so that they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off". When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one syst Winning the Battle and the War - Negotiation Success at they could decide who gets promoted and who gets a salary increase. This process was not only time-consuming, but reports couldn't be optimized in real-time (they had to wait once a month to collect all of the documents from the field). In addition to lost productivity, that current system allowed for people to basically "slack off".Everyday we enter into a variety of negotiations with prospective employees, current employees, and vendors. Though the situations are different, there are some basic guidelines that will ensure negotiation success.It is important to remember that the most successful negotiations are entered into and conducted with good faith. This does not necessarily mean giving into every demand or sacrificing your position, but it does mean going into negotiation sessions with the intention of listening, compromising when necessary, and with the spirit of fairness. One good way to establish good faith is to make an initial offering that affirms your willingness to meet your opposition half way. With a vendor it may be a flexible delivery schedule or with a prospective employee with a benefit offer. Choose something with which you have some flexibility and concession will not adversely affect your company’s position.Remember, prior to entering into negotiations, do your research. See what other businesses are doing, talk to associates, and use your networking contacts to see what other companies are offering. Check what the market is for goods and services, salaries, and benefits. Failure to know what other employers and businesses are offering can cost you money or failure to secure contracts. The internet is a valuable resource, as well as trade association publications, and your contacts in your industry. What are other companies paying for goods, offering in vacation time, and bidding for contracts? You won’t When the online performance management tool was rolled out to their organization, productivity increased immediately. What they got was... □ a central repository for over 300 individual performance appraisals which could be easily searched upon by management and HR. □ an easy to use, online "update" form where managers could check off items that were completed and add their comments as to how the employee performed vs the goals that were set. □ a place where managers could go, whenever they wanted... essentially the forms were online, 24x7 and could be accessed and updated at any time, from anywhere with a computer. □ instant, real-time feedback - which allowed for actionable information to be at their fingertips, when they needed it most. □ HR could now benchmark who the "star performers" were, who were on the training and development "fast track" for promotion, in real-time. No longer did they have to wait for monthly updates. Their ROI was significant - but witnessed mostly through the time that they saved and their newly-found ability to make quicker decisions. Let’s Quickly Review: There are three critical things that we are measuring here: the number of potential opportunities in the pipeline, the message that is delivered, as well as, the effectiveness of our objective “measuring” and tying that back on an individual employee/salesperson basis. Utilizing the right type of technology can effectively let you deliver your message, measure and train your employees and track your “new quotes”, opportunities or “key positioning” statements, all through one system. The right system would allow you to benchmark and evaluate the effectiveness of your training program, measure it against the actual objectives and goals achieved, while simultaneously delivering the right message to each prospect and client that you touch, every time. Here’s your action plan...... in a nutshell. 1. Come up with your “positioning statements” – what makes you different? Why should your prospect consider you as the obvious choice over your competition? What elements position you and your company as the experts in your marketplace? These key positioning statements need to be recorded and measured for their individual effectiveness. If you have a way to automate the tracking of these key messages... you’re ahead of the game. 2. Create individual scorecards, by role or position. The scorecards need to contain the criteria and objectives that are important to the success of your campaign. A SMAART goal could be – “deliver 15 new ‘quotes’ in the first quarter”. Another goal could be – “back-sell” or “cross-sell” 1 present client / per month.. into some of your other products and solutions. List these “goals” down the card, include a sign off date, a “rating” – 1-5, and a comments section to document results and feedback. 3. Based on the results of #2, develop training courses and presentations that can be scheduled and delivered automatically to those individuals based on the evaluations derived from your scorecards. What you end up with is a new type of marketing/sales force that is delivering your key message based on their own individual objectives. But most importantly, you now have a “real” method to track the effectiveness of your marketing, as well as the ability to tie-back your individual training directly to performance objectives. Most business owners think they can just deliver product knowledge, send their salespeople on the road and everything just takes care of itself. Wrong, Wrong, Wrong. Most games are not won with HOME RUNS. Most games are won by doing all the right things, hitting, fielding and delivering good, sound “pitching” that positions you as the expert and obvious choice for your customers. When you do that and do it right – you sales and marketing programs transform overnight. And, by using the right technology to manage everything – you maximize your resources, your productivity and your overall effectiveness and can reach the heights that you’ve only dreamt about. 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