These big mistakes seem to be shockingly common. Make sure you're not guilty of any of them. Maintain a painstaking and detailed journal of your sales campaign
Sales campaigns become overstretched and the sales professionals become fatigued both mentally and morally. Some become complacent because of the facade of friendliness and cordiality by cleaver purchase agents who want you to lower your guard. You have to become a boxing champ in the ring always like a Mike Tyson on the guard.
From my years of experience and a field sales professional and sales coach , I've observed that the following 10 basic selling errors are
surprisingly common.
1. ANSWERING OBJECTIONS THE CUSTOMER HASN'T SURFACED
Though it's a good idea to anticipate objections that the
customer might have and prepare reasonable answers to them, it's a horrible
idea to surface those objections yourself--because you've just created an issue
that probably didn't exist. Explaining away something preemptively can also
make you seem defensive and unsure of the real value of your offering.
Fix: Never
start any sentence with "You may be wondering..." or "Perhaps
you're asking yourself..."
2. LEAVING THE 'NEXT STEP' TO THE CUSTOMER
I've read dozens of so-called sales letters and sales emails that end with a suggestion
that the customer should call or contact the seller "if you're
interested" or "in order to learn more." The people who send
these letters always complain that they don't get any responses.
No kidding--you're asking the customer to do your work
for you.
Fix: Keep the
ball in your court. Try substituting a closer like this: "I will call you
next week to discuss whether it makes sense to discuss this matter
further."
3. SELLING FEATURES RATHER THAN RESULTS
Incredibly, some people (usually “marketing experts”) believe that
customers buy a product because it has desirable features. They therefore
rattle off a list of those features, hoping that at least one will spark up
the customer's interest.
In fact,
customers care only about the results of purchasing a product and the ways it
will affect their lives and their businesses.
Fix: Figure
out why a customer buys your product rather than somebody else's. Then
sell thatresult, using the features to add-on to your ability to
deliver that result.
4. FAKING INTIMACY
Like it or
not, the minute you're positioned in somebody's mind as "a person who is
trying to sell me something," you're fighting an uphill battle to win
trust. Under those circumstances, the absolute worst thing you can do is to try
to act cozy in tense relationships.
The most
common manifestation: brightly asking, "How are you doing today?" at
the beginning of a cold call. It makes people want to puke.
Fix: Remain
personable and professional--but no more--until such time as you actually forge
a friendship, which typically takes weeks.
5. WRITING A SALES PROPOSAL TOO SOON
Although
proposals can occasionally help 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.
Because writing a proposal takes time and effort, it's usually a bad investment
unless you've got the inside track on the sale.
Fix: Write a
sales proposal only after you've got a
verbal agreement.
6. TALKING MORE THAN LISTENING
I've spoken
about this problem repeatedly in my seminars/lectures, but the error is
so common that it bears repeating. When you're selling, it's all too easy to
get excited and nervous and then try to "drive the sale" forward by
talking or giving a sales pitch. Customers find this extraordinarily irritating.
Fix: In your
mind, redefine selling as a passive activity that consists
mostly of listening, considering, and reacting to what the customer does and
says.
7. WASTING TIME ON DEAD-END 'OPPORTUNITIES'
What with voice mail, gatekeepers, and a challenging
economy (not to mention the craziness of global competition), it sometimes
seems like a miracle when you actually get into a sales conversation with a
live human being. When that happens, the possibility of making a sale can
become so seductive that you don't want to spoil the dream by asking questions
that might reveal this as a false opportunity.
Fix: Within
the first five minutes of your first conversation, ask questions that will
reveal whether the customer has a real need--as well as the money to satisfy
it.
8. FAILING TO FOLLOW THROUGH
The sad truth
is that, to customers, people who sell are guilty until proven innocent.
Building a customer relationship is about gradually building up enough trust to
overcome the natural antipathy that most people feel toward sellers.
Because of
this, you're not going to get any slack if you fail to deliver when promised.
Drop the ball, even once, and you're probably out of the game.
Fix: Get
serious about your to-do list and scheduling specific events. Make only commitments
that you're 100% certain you can keep.
9. TREATING A "CLOSE" AS THE END OF THE PROCESS
Maybe it's the
result of unfortunate terminology, but a lot of companies and individuals take
"closing the deal" to mean that the sales activity has ended. Nothing
could be further from the truth.
The real work happens after you've
closed the deal--because that's when you can start building the kind of
relationship that will eventually generate follow-on business and referral
sales, both of which are far easier and profitable than winning new business.
Fix: Always aim for long-term relationships
rather than short-term revenue. That way a "close" is the beginning,
not the end, of the process.
10. ASKING FOR A REFERRAL TOO SOON
Some sales
training programs recommend asking, "Do you know somebody else who might
need my product?" even when prospects say they're not interested. Other
programs suggest asking a similar question when you've closed your first sale
to a customer.
Both approaches are wrong, because customers in their
right mind do not put their own reputations at risk by recommending somebody
whose ability to perform is unknown to them.
Fix: Ask for
referrals only after the customer is delighted with the products or services
that you've sold.
HERE’S WHAT TO DO NEXT
These big mistakes seem to be shockingly common. Make
sure you're not guilty of any of them. Maintain a painstaking and detailed
journal of your sales campaign ... and on a Sunday morning notice the pattern and
indications which come you might not only have committed these mistakes again
but have found new novel ones. A sales champ is always in the making ...his
work like a master craftsman is never done!
with best compliments
DrWilfred Monteiro


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