Casual Articles
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Sales Training > How to Become the Best Salesperson in Your Industry

Tags

  • document
  • sincerely
  • challenge
  • really listening
  • withsix figure

  • Links

  • Feeder Pages... What They Are and Why They're A Great Source Of Free Traffic
  • Managing Poor Performance with Consequences
  • First to Market Theory Completely Out of Sync with Reality
  • Casual Articles - How to Become the Best Salesperson in Your Industry

    Why Are Document Shredding and Paper Shredders Important?
    Document shredding. Document Shredder. Paper Protection. You must have frequently heard such terms thrown about on the subject of document security and destruction and you are wondering just what the big deal is anyway about paper shredding. You have never done it before and you don’t see why you should either. Paper shredders and their ilk, shredding methods like centre line document shredding, Carleton document shredding and others are just an unnecessary expense. Or so you think. Well, think again!In an era that’s becoming increasingly
    rt of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn

    Naming Your Business Newsletter For Attention
    You receive them in the mail, see them on store counters, or they are handed to your at organizational meetings. Can you think of the name of your most popular print newsletter? What do you think makes the title stick to your mind? Does it rhyme? Do the letters formulate a word? Is a phrase or logo attached to it?When making decisions about the appropriate name for your newsletter, always keep in mind the image you want to project to your reader. How do you want them to remember you, your organization, product or service? Your newsl
    Sales is that single business practice that if done effectively will sky rocket any company to success.

    Unfortunately, 85% of businesses are not as good as they need to be in generating sales, which is why we have the staggering failure rate we do in small business.

    Sales can be very complex. Or it can be extremely simple. It’s all a matter of the mindset of the practitioner.

    Let’s take the simple road

    What does it take to be effective in sales? Just one thing; awareness.

    Awareness of your client’s problem.

    Awareness of the solution that is acceptable to your client; expressing that solution as a dollars and cents value.

    Awareness of the process the client will go through to decide to purchase or not.

    Jeffery Fox, author of How to Become a Rainmaker offers the following steps to sales success.

    * Cherish the client at all times
    * Treat clients as you would your best friend
    * Listen to clients and decipher their needs
    * Make (or give) clients what they need
    * Price your product to its dollarized value (in other words don’t sell price sell the value received from purchasing)
    * Give your clients more than they expect
    * Thank each client sincerely and often
    * Help clients pay you so they won’t be embarrassed and go elsewhere
    * Ask to do it again

    When we talk about relationships, however, we are talking about a business relationship not a familiar friendship. You have to be seen as the solution to a challenge and not a friend to hang out with.

    Six Figure Sales Coach, Kevin Nations, provides the idea of business rapport. He says the rapport you want to have with your client is that of an advisor, someone who the client feels comfortable discussing challenges with (pain) and trusts enough to provide a solution.

    I’ve found the best skill anyone in sales can develop is the art of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn,

    Are Interruptions Eating Away Your Time?
    The average interruption costs anywhere between 10-20 minutes of someone's precious time. If you have 4 interruptions a day, that amounts to one hour of productive time. Time that you can't get back.If you are being interrupted while you are trying to work in your office, here are some proven techniques that can help you eliminate lost time, yet still be a team player with that "well-intentioned" colleague.1. Be responsible with your punctuality so that you are not the cause of an interruption.2. Schedule a 10 minute meeting
    Just one thing; awareness.

    Awareness of your client’s problem.

    Awareness of the solution that is acceptable to your client; expressing that solution as a dollars and cents value.

    Awareness of the process the client will go through to decide to purchase or not.

    Jeffery Fox, author of How to Become a Rainmaker offers the following steps to sales success.

    * Cherish the client at all times
    * Treat clients as you would your best friend
    * Listen to clients and decipher their needs
    * Make (or give) clients what they need
    * Price your product to its dollarized value (in other words don’t sell price sell the value received from purchasing)
    * Give your clients more than they expect
    * Thank each client sincerely and often
    * Help clients pay you so they won’t be embarrassed and go elsewhere
    * Ask to do it again

    When we talk about relationships, however, we are talking about a business relationship not a familiar friendship. You have to be seen as the solution to a challenge and not a friend to hang out with.

    Six Figure Sales Coach, Kevin Nations, provides the idea of business rapport. He says the rapport you want to have with your client is that of an advisor, someone who the client feels comfortable discussing challenges with (pain) and trusts enough to provide a solution.

    I’ve found the best skill anyone in sales can develop is the art of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn

    How Segmentation Can Help You to Win More Business
    Deciding on who you should market to is one of the most important business decisions you will ever make. Market segmentation is all about: 'Communicating with groups of people who have similar needs.'The benefits of this approach include: getting more attention; being seen as an expert; relevant messages for defined groups; more effective marketing.Get more attentionIn the 21st Century - we are all inundated by marketing messages. It is said that we are swamped by some 5,000 on an average day. So how
    * Listen to clients and decipher their needs
    * Make (or give) clients what they need
    * Price your product to its dollarized value (in other words don’t sell price sell the value received from purchasing)
    * Give your clients more than they expect
    * Thank each client sincerely and often
    * Help clients pay you so they won’t be embarrassed and go elsewhere
    * Ask to do it again

    When we talk about relationships, however, we are talking about a business relationship not a familiar friendship. You have to be seen as the solution to a challenge and not a friend to hang out with.

    Six Figure Sales Coach, Kevin Nations, provides the idea of business rapport. He says the rapport you want to have with your client is that of an advisor, someone who the client feels comfortable discussing challenges with (pain) and trusts enough to provide a solution.

    I’ve found the best skill anyone in sales can develop is the art of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn

    Networking: Is Your Approach Too Self-Centered?
    It's a classic mistake by networkers: their approach is focused on their own needs rather than on the needs of their contacts.Fortunately, a popular new book by Bonnie Lowe makes it easy to solve this problem. The book, "Networkaholics Revealed! True Confessions From People Who Networked Their Way to Success (And How You Can Do the Same)," provides strategies and success stories from 49 master networkers.Many of those strategies focus on how networkers can benefit from being selfless instead of selfish.The goal is hap
    a business relationship not a familiar friendship. You have to be seen as the solution to a challenge and not a friend to hang out with.

    Six Figure Sales Coach, Kevin Nations, provides the idea of business rapport. He says the rapport you want to have with your client is that of an advisor, someone who the client feels comfortable discussing challenges with (pain) and trusts enough to provide a solution.

    I’ve found the best skill anyone in sales can develop is the art of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn

    How Smooth is Your Business Sailing Along?
    Have you ever been sailing on a beautiful summer’s day, the wind perfect, the water ideal? But when you look around, you notice there were a number of other sailboats, with their sails as full as yours, but some are much faster, and you feel like you are standing still!You look around and find your anchor is running along the bottom of the marina. You were still moving forward, but no where near the speed as the other sailboats out that day.Is this happening to your business? Are your sails full of great opportunities? Is your
    rt of active listening. Ask questions, listen, and write down what you hear.

    Clients feel engaged and heard when you, as the sales person, take the time to make note of what is being discussed. Note taking also “forces” you to become an active and engaged listener.

    Next time you’re on a sales call, focus on your personal listening style. Are you really listening and engaged in what the client is saying or are you calculating your next response?

    David Hepburn, Master Sales Trainer with the Sandler Sales Institute offers a slightly different perspective of sales and selling.

    David offers the following thoughts to consider:

    The sales person goes in to a call without a plan. The client that you are trying to involve in your product (sell) has a plan.

    They lie, steal/cheat and then hide. That's the client's plan.

    They lie and tell you they are interested in your products, they love them, and they are the best.

    They steal or cheat when they ask you to be an unpaid consultant and educate them on everything they need to know and then they tell you "they'll think about it."

    And when you try to get back to them, they hide and you have to send out the Search and Rescue Team just to get them to tell you NO.

    That's the basis of the Buyer's Plan. If sales people don't have a plan to combat this plan, they will lose every time, even though they think that they have a chance to make a sale.

    David sees the biggest challenge most sales people have is "Winging it."

    They are hoping for the best instead of practicing, preparing, maintaining positive thoughts upon entering the client’s office, etc.

    Let’s face it, very seldom does a small business owner, in the role of sales person, prepare for the sales call. Yet preparation is the shortest path to sales success.

    Again, awareness comes into the picture. If you do not understand the clients business, if you don’t know anything about them or their industry, if you have no idea of the challenges they face, it will be very difficult to add value to their business and secure a long term relationship.

    Here is the easy way to make your sales effort more effective

    The ACTION step you need to take is very simple. Take one idea from this article and practice it this week.

    Next week take another idea and practice it.

    By th

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.casualarticles.com/article/39767/casualarticles-How-to-Become-the-Best-Salesperson-in-Your-Industry.html">How to Become the Best Salesperson in Your Industry</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.casualarticles.com/article/39767/casualarticles-How-to-Become-the-Best-Salesperson-in-Your-Industry.html]How to Become the Best Salesperson in Your Industry[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Walmart, As It Was

    Networking in Government Circles in Washington DC; How to act Gay

    How To Create An Effective Business Development Strategy

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com