|
|
20-Point Checklist EVERY Sales Letter Must Pass!
Sales letter not pulling like you want? Need a quick "fill in the blanks" formula for marketing your next product? Here are 20 essential components of the hard-selling sales letter: 1) Does your headline speak directly to your potential customer...
3 INTERLOCKING SALES INTENSIFIERS!
1) FLEXIBLE OFFERS Keep your offers as flexible as possible. If you offer a set price for your product, you could also offer the people that can't afford it an optional payment plan. For example, "3 Easy Payments Of $19.95". A few other options...
6 Steps to Avoid Losing Summer Sales
It's a fact - the online world dies down in the summer time. Kids are out of school, families are on vacation, there's fairs to attend to, and many are just spending too much time outside to be online. For those that market mostly online, the...
Shorten Sales Cycles in Complex Sales Environments
Help buyers discover the answers they need to understand and align all of their decision variables.
In complex sales, salespeople often find themselves negotiating their way through a web of decision influencers, conflicting initiatives, and...
"Why Saying No Can Make Your Sales Soar"
Word Count: 971 Character Width: 60 Resource Box: Choice of 2 =========================================================== "Why Saying No Can Make Your Sales Rate Soar" - by "Dangerous" Debbie Jenkins (c) Debbie Jenkins. All Rights Reserved....
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Avoiding the Sales Talk Sledgehammers
There is a saying that when all you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The underlying idea is that given the choice of only one tool, you’ll probably try to use it in inappropriate situations. On the surface of many sales pitches is an appeal that at first sounds persuasive, but may actually be counter-productive for the intended prospect. Many of these appeals have become cliché’s, phrases repeated so often, that we don’t look at the logic behind them. In fact, an accepted premise of much sales training is that “people buy emotionally and justify logically.” However, this really doesn’t describe the purchasing habits of the sophisticated buyer.
Sophisticated buyers are well-informed consumers, accustomed to reaching a decision only after research and deliberation. They are much less likely to succumb to the pseudo-logic found in many scripted sales pitches. Sophisticated buyers look behind the logic of these claims and what they find amounts to sales sledgehammers—blunt, heavy instruments not well-suited to the job at hand. Their first impulse is to get away from them by disengaging. If you want to be successful with this type of buyer, you’ll need to avoid swinging the following sledgehammers.
“We have over 100 years combined experience in this area.” The “combined experience” phrase is a dead giveaway you’re stretching your credibility. Here are some ways the sophisticated buyer interprets combined experience. “We have 20 people in the firm, each with about 5 year’s experience. So we are spread extremely thin and not very deep.” “The reason we don’t have any one person with 20 year’s experience is that no one wants to stay here that long.” Using this phrase in a relatively young field, such as technology, is downright silly. Besides, most people don’t care about experience nearly as much as results.
Sales people often tell prospects “That’s a great question!” It’s a decidedly clumsy attempt to compliment the prospect. Sophisticated buyers see through it immediately. Granted, some can use it with more finesse than others, but like most techniques, it is ineffective once recognized. If you insist on keeping it in your sales repertoire, here are three guidelines to use it more effectively. First, use it only once. By the third or fourth time people hear they’ve asked a great question, they become suspect. Second, don’t use it in a group of people. When everyone is asking great questions, no one feels special. Third, don’t plug it in automatically as part of a script. I’ve seen salespeople look for the opportunity to use this phrase, no matter how mundane the question.
“If you break the price of this down, it comes to the equivalent of one cup of café latte (or substitute your own) a day.” Many think café latte is overpriced in the first place and in the second place, some never drink it. This is a completely ineffective appeal to most. There is always the
risk, that you will choose an example that someone is unfamiliar with. An even more important reason to avoid this tactic lies in the different nature of of the sophisticated buyer. They tend to be long-term thinkers. They want to know if they are receiving value for the price. They don’t follow the monthly payment mentality of the credit card buyer. Amortizing cost on a daily basis simply isn’t the way they think.
When I was shopping for a new vehicle, a phrase I heard repeatedly was “What will it take to get your business today?” Again, some people used it with more finesse than others. Some people used it after 5 minutes, some used it after 20 minutes and others only used it after I had demonstrated interest in a particular vehicle, but everyone except the person I bought from used this phrase. This one-size fits all approach to sales doesn’t take into account the fact that individuals approach decisions differently. Some may be impulse buyers, others rely on peer information and still others like to spend time analysing sales literature. Sophisticated buyers tend to be deliberative in their approach, and such a question usually makes them feel as if they’re being rushed into a decision.
“Here’s lots of information on this product.” This approach says to give the prospect as much information as possible and the facts will speak for themselves. There is a big difference however, between information and knowledge. You don’t know which information the prospect may find persuasive. It could be third party validation, testimonials, or safety ratings. Rather then dumping everything you have on them, ask what they’d like to know. Another problem with the infodump is that the salesperson talks too much. A key part of any sale is building the relationship with the prospect. The salesperson who substitutes telling for asking is missing an opportunity to discover points of interest to the buyer.
Selling the sophisticated buyer is more difficult. First, you must get away from sales scripts and focus more on adapting to the needs of the individual. This takes a great deal of interpersonal skill. Second, you have to rid yourself of sales cliché’s. If buyers hear the same phrase two or three times, they know they’re being sold and no one likes to be sold. Third, and perhaps most difficult, it requires a shift from telling to listening. The right questions allow you to discover selling points and build rapport. These changes are well worth the extra effort. Once you win this type of buyer, you are well rewarded with fuller customer engagement and a higher referral rate.
About the Author
Dr. Joseph Sommerville helps professionals create more persuasive messages. He is the President of Peak Communication Performance (www.peakcp.com), a Houston-based firm working worldwide to help professionals develop skills in strategic communication. Contact him at Sommerville@Peakcp.Com
|
|
|
|
|
Sales - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
Dubious selling practices may occasionally result in a sale if the ... These can be slightly influenced by the salesperson, however, the sales person knows ... |
en.wikipedia.org |
  |
Sales Jobs .com Worlds Largest Sales Employment Site |
Sales Jobs features thousands of sales jobs for sales professionals. |
www.salesjobs.com |
  |
Manage Smarter - Performance Gateway |
Manage Smarter is the online home of sales & marketing management, incentive, potential, presentations and training magazine. |
www.salesandmarketing.com |
  |
Oracle Customer Relationship Management Solutions |
Oracle's products cover the breadth of CRM functionality—from sales, ... With Siebel CRM On Demand, you can accelerate sales, improve marketing and deliver ... |
www.oracle.com |
  |
Sales and related occupations |
Sales and related occupations. Advertising sales agents · Cashiers · Counter and rental clerks · Demonstrators, product promoters, and models ... |
www.bls.gov |
  |
Sales Jobs - Search Sales & Marketing Jobs at Monster.com |
Sales Career Paths: This field offers many different options. ... Manage Your Sales Career: Get expert tips for developing your sales career and handling ... |
sales.monster.com |
  |
Government Sales and Auctions: FirstGov.gov |
Official site for information on all sales and auctions of government surplus property and assets. |
www.firstgov.gov |
  |
Sales and Marketing Executives International |
Worldwide association of sales and marketing management. |
www.smei.org |
  |
GPO U.S. Government Bookstore: Main Page |
Purchase Federal information products for sale through the United States Government Printing Office (GPO). Browse by topic, keyword, or special collections. |
bookstore.gpo.gov |
  |
Sales |
Sales is a major aspect of product management. Therefore, after reviewing information in this topic, you might also benefit from scanning the topic ... |
www.managementhelp.org |
  |
Sales Resource Center - Business Sales Web Site - Small Business ... |
Sales resource center at Inc.com, small business sales and marketing information. |
www.inc.com |
  |
Sales - Wex |
Transactions for the sale (and leasing) of goods is governed mainly by sales ... Federal law has a limited impact on transactions for the sale of goods. ... |
www.law.cornell.edu |
  |
Sales Jobs, Marketing Jobs, Advertising Jobs on CareerBuilder.com |
Looking for sales & marketing jobs? Start your job search at CareerBuilder, the leader in job search sites, and access hundreds of thousands of jobs today. |
sales-marketing.careerbuilder.com |
  |
Compare prices for retail store sales at SalesCircular |
SalesCircular shows what's on sale at local retail stores every week by collecting data from Sunday newspapers and other ads. |
www.salescircular.com |
  |
Sales Jobs in Canada - workopolis.com |
Sales Jobs - Find sales Jobs online with workopolis.com. ... CSR (84), Office Equipment Sales (5). Call Centre Opportunities (109), Real Estate Sales (12) ... |
www.workopolis.com |
  |
free online sales training articles, sales & selling processes ... |
Sales and selling terms explained. (Scroll down a little bit to find this set of terms.) |
www.businessballs.com |
  |
Music Sales Group |
Music Sales Group - Eight Offices and three distribution centres worldwide bring you the world's best music. The Music Sales Group is Europe's largest ... |
www.musicsales.com |
  |
Sales Autopsy |
A collection of the best of the worst of negative selling experiences. Sales horror stories to use for learning, training and managing salespeople. |
www.salesautopsy.com |
  |
REALTOR.com: Real estate listings & homes for sale |
REALTOR.com is the world's largest real estate database of homes for sale and the official site of the National Association of REALTORS. |
www.realtor.com |
  |
Marketing Jobs / Sales Jobs - NationJob.com Careers, Work ... |
Marketing Jobs / Sales Jobs - detailed job listings and company profiles - Updated daily. |
www.nationjob.com |
  |
|