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You are here: Home > Business > Sales Teleselling > 5 Reasons Sales & Service Reps Don't Follow Scripts |
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Casual Articles - 5 Reasons Sales & Service Reps Don't Follow Scripts
Entrepreneurs Know Fixed Costs Will Eat Them Alive rk should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materializedEntrepreneurs Know Fixed Costs Will Eat Them Alive -- number nineteen in a series taken from:How to Evaluate and Profit from a Business Opportunity - The Entrepreneur's GuideBy Art ConsoliFixed costs; those costs which are attributable to commitments for equipment, buildings, employment contracts, notes payable, and other items of this type require payment regardless of sales or profits, or the availability of cash to make the payments. The term is very descri How to Make a Fortune from Unique 'Resistance-free' Advertising Let's say your management team has already “scripted success.” They know with 100% certainty that if reps will follow a given sales or service script, they'll double their results.One of the most powerful offers you can use in your advertising is the word Free.But, you may well ask… how can I make a profit giving my products and services away without charging for them?Which is the exact reason why you need to understand the ‘LVC Formula’ which stands for the Lifetime Value of a Client!Here’s how it works. Let’s imagine for a moment you own a beauty salon. Now if you get a new customer, they may pay you $80 for their first treatment. Why is it then, after being introduced to that winning script, most reps won't agreeably or enthusiastically use it? There isn’t a single answer, but here are 5 reasons I've come up with as a manager and as a sales, telemarketing, and customer service consultant: (1) Immature people in business misunderstand money making routines. They treat business as if it is a liberal arts essay exam where mere opinion, providing it is heartfelt, original, and spontaneous, is to be valued above rote regurgitation. These folks don’t get the fact that their betters have labored ceaselessly to discover and to codify a routine so they don’t have to use trial and error each time they want to earn a paycheck. All they have to do is punch in, do the job the official way, and then punch out, and they’ll be able to pay their bills. (2) It takes effort and stamina and what my drama teacher in high school referred to as “performance discipline” to put on a show and make it EXACTLY the same before each passing audience. Outside of the military, the martial arts, a rigorous athletic program, or perhaps strict musical training, most people haven’t learned the necessity of self-discipline and its connection to competence and to mastery. (3) The lines have blurred beyond recognition in distinguishing work from play. Countless gurus and hucksters coming out of the “Age of Aquarius” have touted fun and games as being the way to unleash human potential. Work should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materialized. Microsoft Great Plains - Payroll & HR Inexpensive Solution? Not Any More ting, and customer service consultant:Microsoft Great Plains is main Microsoft Business Solutions accounting package for the US market. You should probably expect some issues when you have software development company to be bought by big player - in this case Great Plains Software was bought by Microsoft (Bill Gates was a friend to Doug Burgum - owner and leader of Great Plains Software - Great Plains Dynamics/eEnterprise). We certainly have some influence level in Microsoft Business Solutions, but what happened is ou (1) Immature people in business misunderstand money making routines. They treat business as if it is a liberal arts essay exam where mere opinion, providing it is heartfelt, original, and spontaneous, is to be valued above rote regurgitation. These folks don’t get the fact that their betters have labored ceaselessly to discover and to codify a routine so they don’t have to use trial and error each time they want to earn a paycheck. All they have to do is punch in, do the job the official way, and then punch out, and they’ll be able to pay their bills. (2) It takes effort and stamina and what my drama teacher in high school referred to as “performance discipline” to put on a show and make it EXACTLY the same before each passing audience. Outside of the military, the martial arts, a rigorous athletic program, or perhaps strict musical training, most people haven’t learned the necessity of self-discipline and its connection to competence and to mastery. (3) The lines have blurred beyond recognition in distinguishing work from play. Countless gurus and hucksters coming out of the “Age of Aquarius” have touted fun and games as being the way to unleash human potential. Work should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materialized Why Everyone That Provides A Service Should Sell A Product ave to use trial and error each time they want to earn a paycheck. All they have to do is punch in, do the job the official way, and then punch out, and they’ll be able to pay their bills.That is a pretty powerful statement I made in that headline. Everyone in the service industry should have something tangible to sell to go with it. That something tangible could be a process or formula that they claim as their own.You may be a copywriter and thinking Kelly has gone totally nuts; or a physician thinking Kelly has no clue about what I do or why.Let me give you some examples of what I'm talking about with this. Let's start with a copywriter or graphic d (2) It takes effort and stamina and what my drama teacher in high school referred to as “performance discipline” to put on a show and make it EXACTLY the same before each passing audience. Outside of the military, the martial arts, a rigorous athletic program, or perhaps strict musical training, most people haven’t learned the necessity of self-discipline and its connection to competence and to mastery. (3) The lines have blurred beyond recognition in distinguishing work from play. Countless gurus and hucksters coming out of the “Age of Aquarius” have touted fun and games as being the way to unleash human potential. Work should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materialized Outcomes and Processes – What Makes for a Great Restaurant? martial arts, a rigorous athletic program, or perhaps strict musical training, most people haven’t learned the necessity of self-discipline and its connection to competence and to mastery.When I was doing some work for Business Link in Kent, one of our evenings was spent at a hotel that reminded me so much of Ron Zemky’s work.Ron is the author of the “Tales of Knock Your Socks Off Service” books. Ron describes customer service as being made up of two dimensions – outcome and process.What Ron is saying is that there can be a range of product outcomes. From expectation not met, through met and up to value added. There are also a range of processes ra (3) The lines have blurred beyond recognition in distinguishing work from play. Countless gurus and hucksters coming out of the “Age of Aquarius” have touted fun and games as being the way to unleash human potential. Work should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materialized Limitations on S Corporations rk should always be fun, they insist, otherwise something is wrong. If it’s always fun, believe me, something is out of whack, and that something will be corrected, probably by dark market forces before long. Those high-flying tech companies that were awash in Wall Street money because their founders wrote dazzling business plans with outrageous profit predictions came crashing to earth when sales never materialized. But until then, there was free pizza, massages at your desk, on site health clubs, and mixers and fire walking every weekend. Fun and funding go together.It may be a good decision for small business owners to choose to be treated as an S corporation for Federal tax purposes. This allows income to flow through the corporation without being taxed until it is claimed as income by the shareholders. This avoids double taxation of corporate income. This may be the right decision for your new company, but you should discuss this thoroughly with your accountant before you decide. The following are the limitations on S corporations that y (4) Managers are soft on enforcement. I’ve known a mere handful of business owners and managers that have had the grit to MAKE PEOPLE STICK TO THEIR SCRIPTS, WORD FOR WORD. Most managers seem to want love and acceptance more than business results. A very famous tech company refused to make people follow brief scripts that were so successful that customers bought new products 50% of the time they were offered. Managers allowed their reps to freely choose whether to earn money for the company and its millions of shareholders. Soon enough, the stock price eroded, and this once shining star is today a mere dwarf. (5) Nobody wants to start at the bottom. Following directions, including those that are encoded into sales and service scripts, is something that the lowest of the low are required to do, or so many of today’s workers believe. Why have American phone jobs been outsourced to places like India and the Philippines and to Latin America? It’s not just a matter of a different standard of living. Recruitment and retention of a phone force in America is an incredibly arduous, Sisyphean task. Our workers see themselves as “too good” to be on the phones, unless, of course they can feel more PROFESSIONAL about it, which they equate with choosing their own methods, or non-methods, if you will. Just as there is no single reason for non-compliance with scripts, the solution isn’t a solitary one, either. We have to address all of the issues above, and be especially creati
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