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Posts Tagged ‘Tim Hagen’

Sales is Easy BUt we Need to Coach and Challenge Sales People

January 8th, 2010

I often laugh when I hear people say they could never do sales. When I ask why, they state all that rejection and hearing the word "no". It hit me, that’s why so many people actually fail at sales because they hear the word "no" so often. The sad fact is they should never hear that word if they follow a simple to use sales formula.

1. Ask (open-ended questions, these usually start with "what" or "how")
2. Shut Up & Listen
3. Address what the client said and seek a way to help or solve a problem

THATS IT

Isn’t that what sales is suppose to be about? Asking clients questions to see how we can or maybe cannot help. Most sales people have preconceived notions of what they are going to say or do in a sales call. What a BIG mistake. This puts you in the frame of mind of "Saying" and not asking. This is the biggest mistake I see when working with clients. Sales people who know what they are going to say before hearing a word coming from the client.

Mistakes in sales are usually very subtle and are attributed to a lack of sales planning. The planning should require what questions will be asked to ascertain specific areas of need, and what are the possible solutions for those responses. What do we hate about sales people? They are too pushy, they talk too much, they didn’t even listen, etc. The sad fact is when asked what specific questions sales people use to ask their client to define needs they respond with a long-winded synopsis’s of what they try to do in selling. By the way, they never answer the question. Here are the top mistakes sales people make:

1. They ask close ended questions (questions that require a "yes" or "no" response).
2. They have no planned or defined questioning sequence.
3. They rarely listen to what clients say because they are already thinking of what they want to say next.
4. Their call objectives are usually centered on the notion of what they want to do versus seeking information to help the client. This mentality pigeonholes their thought process.
5. The biggest mistake I get from sales people is that they know what they are doing. The attitude is centered on the perception they have mastered sales. Sales is NOT an event you simply master, rather a process you can always get better at.

So how do we help sales people succeed? How can we get sales people to perform better? The first thing we need to do is break down the basics of sales techniques into a very simplistic components. Next, we need to condition their behaviors to follow the sales components. The trick is not how to do sales, rather getting people to break their habits into a very question-based approach that is centered around the client, NOT them. Sounds easy, but it is not. Sales people hate to change. Here are some basic methods to help sales people improve their sales

1. Use question sheets to be filled out by sales people.This helps steer them and provide a glimpse of what is actually said.
2. Start each question with the words "what" or "why". This guarantees the client will provide ample information.
3. Listen! OK, so what does this mean? We need to break sales people’s habits of thinking what they want to say while the client is talking. This inhibits the sales person from learning something that could actually help close the sale. You do this with listening games and role-playing activities.
4. Encourage sales people to come up with at least 1 new question before each sales call. This promotes the thinking and associated behaviors with asking and listening

Sales is really easy if we focus on what we want to learn, what questions provide that information, and ultimately how we can solve/address the customer issues. Sales people often have their own way of doing things, but let’s challenge them to look at the fundamentals.

Tim Hagen Sales Management, Sales Training , , , , , , ,

Why you Need to Work Smarter in 2010

December 11th, 2009

A 2009 Sales Performance Optimization Survey done by CSO Insights reported that only 58.8% of sales people were meeting their quotas in 2009.

If only half of your company’s sales force is hitting their numbers the important sales skills, sales effectivenessquestion becomes, how do we increase sales?  The average number of phone calls and meetings has already increased significantly throughout recent years but even with this increased effort sales are down.

So what do we do?  Work SMARTER.

CSO Insights came to this conclusion while evaluating their survey results.

“ The real objective is going to be how to make great calls: motivating stakeholders to meet with you; creating a sense of urgency that moves evaluating your solutions to the top of their priority list; differentiating yourself from the competition; selling value rather than discounting prices; creating a compelling business case to get the project approved now.  This will require your salespeople to be more effective at selling than they were in 2008.”
-    CSO Insights

While an increase in calls and meetings is always a good thing, don’t forget to adequately prepare for them.  If your going to put in the extra effort to make the extra calls and book more appointments make sure you get the most you can from each of these interactions.  Make sure your selling value not price, find out your customers needs and tell them how you can solve them to create urgency to buy, and make EVERY call a great call with 110% of your effort.

Work SMARTER in 2010, and watch your competitors fall by the wayside.

Shannon Gburzynski Sales Training , , , , ,

Reverse the flow to succeed at coaching…

July 9th, 2009

Most business coaching takes place with one-way communication: The leader helps the employee. Try reversing the flow — have the employee "teach" a new concept to the leader…to prove that he or she has a solid understanding of the concept. Learn more about the "teach the teacher" concept in Tim Hagen’s new book "Quit Managing and Start Coaching." Just enter the book title at http://www.amazon.com to order your copy.

Matt Byrnes Sales Training , ,