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Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

November 5th, 2009 @ 5:30 am

Categories: Motivation, Sales Skills, Sales Tips, Watercooler

Tags: Insight, Sales Strategy, Sales Force Management, Professional Development, Sales, Career, Geoffrey James

I’ve been rereading Jeff Thull’s book “Exceptional Selling“.  He’s peppered the book with interesting observations and insight about selling, many of which have sparked me to think about key sales issues.

Here are some of his gems, with my own interpretation of their deeper meaning:

  • INSIGHT #1: Salespeople are guilty until proven innocent. While you and I know that selling is the soul of business and a good way to help people, most folk (even in business) tend to look upon the profession with suspicion.  The minute you walk into an office, you need to prove that you can add value and that you’re not trying to pull a fast one.  Sad but true.
  • INSIGHT #2: When you’re feeling pressure, you’re doing something wrong. If you’re constantly end the quarter with a flurry of activity, trying desperately to make your numbers, you haven’t managed your time, or you’re not thinking your sales process through.  Selling is not an “unnatural act.”  It’s supposed to be easy, not a struggle against time and fate.
  • INSIGHT #3: Never answer an unasked question. It’s all too easy to scuttle a sale by raising issues that haven’t yet entered a prospect’s head.  Such behavior usually occurs when the sales professional is so afraid of losing the sale that he begins surfacing (and answering) objections that exist only in his own paranoia.  Remember, you can’t read minds, so don’t try.
  • INSIGHT #4: One opinion does not make a consensus. It’s human nature to take one opinion (usually the last you just heard) and turn it into a final judgment.  However, one opinion is meaningless.  Just because the last prospect thought your offering was a waste of time, doesn’t mean that the next prospect will feel the same way.
  • INSIGHT #5: Always protect the customer’s self-esteem. It’s absolutely true that EXACTLY half of all the customer you meet will be of below average intelligence within their demographic.  Even so, it’s your job to help them make good decisions and advance their careers.  And you have to do this gently, without making them feel foolish.
  • INSIGHT #7: The purpose of a proposal is to reinforce already-made decisions. While proposals can sometimes help to develop an opportunity, in most cases, the proposal requesting (and writing) process happens after the prospect has already defined the problem and (probably) defined the solution as well.
  • INSIGHT #8: Remain professionally involved and emotionally detached. This is perhaps the best advice that anyone ever gave a sales professional.  Taking things personally is the surest way to make yourself miserable.  You can care about the customer, your career and your own firm, but it’s crazy to use any of those as a proof point for your self worth.

READERS: Got any additional insights to share?

 
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  •  
    1

    scuollo

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    An insight I learned early on: be comfortable with silence. You do not always need to be the one talking. Ask a question, then be silent. Do not offer multiple choice answers. Do not guess the answer. Let the customer think about and give you their answer.
    You have two ears and one mouth. Use them proportionally.

  •  
    2

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Re Note 1:
    Excellent insight! Thanks!

  •  
    3

    mtauseef

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Brilliant insight. Thank you

  •  
    4

    sertelsen

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Re: Note 1
    correct...
    when the moment of silence comes, the one who talks first, loses... happy

  •  
    5

    csthompson

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    A great list, simple stuff thats often overlooked. Its not about us as salespeople, its gotta be about the client. Check out this list of common mistakes sales people and leaders make, and how to avoid them here http://www.bulletproofyoursalesteam.com/freereport/7costlymistakes.html

  •  
    6

    Coach-Lee-428

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Great simple and common sense tips. Sales is a transference of feelings and until you have established a solid (positive) relationship that transference will not happen.

  •  
    7

    eggmarketing

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Good post. I'm guilty of thinking #1. I own my own business, so of course I have to do my own selling, but I refuse to think of myself as as sales person! Is that wrong??

  •  
    8

    conlad

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    This is great advice, and you know why? It goes to the core behaviour and mental issues that affect a salesman. More often that not those books with tips about selling bring with them a myriad of small things and tactics to employ, without really addressing the fact that each person has their style and never can a single tactic be applied all the time. In contrast, these insights should be in your mind always and shape your overall sales career, no matter the style or tactic you prefer or product you sell.

  •  
    9

    odlamn

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Two insights from a long ago mentor (thanks RP) have stuck with me. 1.) It is never too late to change your mind.
    2.) The eagle does not hunt flies.
    This article is good - insights, when internalized develop our character. Choose wisely.

  •  
    10

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Re Note 9:
    Quote: The eagle does not hunt flies.

    The eagle DOES hunt small rodents.

    For that matter: A whale hunts plankton but a tiny shrew will attack and eat a medium-sized python. So I guess I'd rather be a shrew than a whale.

  •  
    11

    david_room@...

    11/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Some very astute observations

  •  
    12

    gunterwessels

    11/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Insight number 5 reminds me that the salesperson's credibility is critical. "Don't make the customer feel inferior" implies that your credibility has been established as an expert. This is not easy, and due care needs to be taken if you want to build that level of influence. Perhaps the greatest asset a salesperson has in the selling process is personal credibility. Build it early, and often.

  •  
    13

    Mark Allen Roberts

    11/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Great Post I plan to share,

    #9 Listen!

    When buyers are asked why they do not buy, price is not on the list. The #1 issue is the salesperson failed to listen, as I discuss in my blog: http://nosmokeandmirrors.wordpress.com/2009/04/23/warning-buyers-say-what-salespeople-do-wrongprice-is-not-on-the-list/

    Mark Allen Roberts
    www.outbsolutions.com

  •  
    14

    Coach-Lee-428

    11/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Eight Insights That Make Selling Easier

    Agree with Mark as my coach as said "When you are telling, you ain't selling." Excuse the poor grammar.

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