Friday, January 31, 2014

http://www.ginochimienti.com
Contact:  Gino
Business Description: Directories and Maps We here to help your business grow by extending its reach across the vast online universe. With the focus of creating a complete web presence, a campaign will help your business compete for customers in its area. Once you submit your business information, will send it out to a variety of directories and online platforms, including: Google, Bing and Yahoo search platforms Mobile device submission (Blackberry, IPhone, Droid) Social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare) Online directories Mapping submission GPS submission and 411 directories OnStar and other Telematics platforms Newsletter with coaching and tutoring your own IT life line Completion and audit reports showing your progress online Mobile Websites 71% of smartphone users search because of an ad they’ve seen either online or offline 82% of smartphone users notice mobile ads 74% of smartphone shoppers make a purchase as a result of using their smartphones to help with shopping 88% of those who look for local information on their smartphones take action within a day As smartphones become an integral part of people’s lives, consumers use mobile search more and more as a source for action-oriented search queries. With a combination of keywords, ads and websites that are strategically created for the mobile-search environment,  mobile campaigns are designed to help local businesses connect with their local customers through this constantly growing search medium. Advantage Internet Marketing Millions of people use their computers to find information through search engines.  campaigns are designed to help people using laptop and desktop computers find your business through strategically-designed search campaigns that target local search users in your area. Whether your target audience is big or small, a  campaign will make it easy for them to find your business. When people enter search queries that are relevant to your products and services, an ad for your business will appear in their search results. Once search users click on the ad, they will be taken to your campaign’s website. This site, designed to be an engaging and intuitive experience for the user, will provide a mixture of informative and beneficial content about your business, with the focus of creating a conversion-oriented response. Your potential customers are searching for your business.  will create an effective online presence that will help them find you. Please contact me to set up an appointment !
When agriculture was the secret to survive, farmers understood the value of sunlight. You could only work while the sun was shining so a typical day was from “sun up” to “sun down”.
When the sun went down, you stopped working. Whether you wanted to keep working or not, you had to stop. You were forced to stop.
Sunlight was the key to success .
And you only had so much of it.
Thousands of years later the science of agriculture hasn’t changed all that much. You still have a limited amount of sunlight in which to work.
Despite modern inventions and automated technology, we have not figured out a way to improve the practicality of getting things done while there is still time to get them done.
That truth is relevant in any industry in any time.
You might be tired. You might be sore from working hard every previous day for as long as you can remember. You might be depressed, angry, or too financially strapped to focus on the task ahead of you. But as long as you have sunlight, you have an opportunity to change things.
You have the possibility to do enough, fast enough to reap a harvest you could only otherwise dream about.
Sunlight is all the inspiration you need to change the course of history.
That’s your opportunity today. Right now. This very moment.
From dusk till dawn each moment you live is a sacred opportunity for you to improve your harvest.
But you have to work while the sun is shining. Some days the sun won’t come out. The skies will be darkened with the clouds. Storms will fill the sky, threatening your very existence.
What you have done to this point will have to be enough to carry you through until the sun shines bright again. Which is why what you have to do has to be done today.
While the Sun is still shining. Why you still have a chance to sow seeds that can make a difference in the days to come.
"A bold, vigorous assault has won many a faltering cause."

Thursday, January 30, 2014

"Nothing great will ever be achieved without great men, and men are great only if they are determined to be so."

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

"What holds so many employees back is an unwillingness to pay the price, to make the effort to sacrifice their ease and comfort."
I would like to invite to LIKE MY PAGE !https://www.facebook.com/pages/Gino-Chimienti/197675123614922
SALES QUESTION:
"What do I do when I finally get a hold of a prospect I've been chasing and they respond with - "I got your message, I'm not interested"?"
SalesBuzz Answer:
I've been asked and have answered this question before. My answer is still the same. If you hear this response from prospects regularly, you have a bigger problem at hand because it means your original message is missing the mark.
Missing the mark once in a while is OK and only natural. But if this response is happening on a weekly (or worse, daily) basis, that's an indicator that your OVS (Opening Value Statement) is off. And that usually only happens when you are following the wrong sales process / strategy to begin with (think about it... if you are repeatedly missing the mark on the very first step of the sales process, how can you argue you are on the right path?)
So if that's the situation you are in, it's time to re-tool your sales process.
If on the other hand you just want to be prepared on how to handle this type of response when it OCCASIONALLY comes up, that is a different story.
The best response I've found to the "I got your message, I'm not interested" response is to simply reply:
"Well, (PROSPECTS NAME) I'm not asking you to make a decision. I'm only calling because we recently helped (Competitor 1, 2 & 3) avoid/cut/reduce/lower (MAJOR HOT BUTTON) while at the same time gain/produce/generate/streamline (MAJOR BENEFIT / HOT BUTTON) and wanted to ask you a few questions just to see if what we have to offer may be of some help to you as well, would that be OK?"
EXAMPLE #1:
"Mr/Mrs (PROSPECTS NAME) I'm not asking you to make a decision [ever so slight pause] I'm only calling because we recently helped (Competitor 1, 2 & 3) avoid making OVERPAYMENTS on their property taxes & insurance premiums while streamlining their fixed asset management process and wanted to ask you a few questions just to see if what we have to offer may be of some help to you as well, would that be OK?"
EXAMPLE #2:
"Mr/Mrs (PROSPECTS NAME) I'm not asking you to make a decision [ever so slight pause] All I know is, (Competitor 1, 2 & 3) gave us a shot at their business over _____ months/years ago and they say they are happy. I tend to believe them cause they keep sending us a check every month and so I just wanted to ask you a few quick questions just to see if what we have to offer may be of some help to you as well, would that be OK?"
GREAT! BUT WHAT IF THEY STILL SAY "NO"?
BFD! Big. Freaking. Deal. I've lost more business chasing prospects that never wanted to be caught than I care to admit and realized a long time ago it's much better to move on to the next call then it is to stew about why a particular prospect doesn't want the best solution out there.
Now I'm not saying to give up totally if they truly are a potential whale of a client. Just be smart about it. If landing them really is a B.F.D. to you, and signing them really is worth it, BE DIFFERENT TO GET THEIR ATTENTION (You should be doing that anyway)
Caution: Don't just be creative for the sake of being creative. Brand / position yourself as a value added resource to your prospect (Note: this takes time, so be patient and have your time management skills in check)
One simple solution is to have 10 pre-written "problem-solving" articles queued up in an automated drip email campaign that focuses on solving a problem for your prospect. This way you can move on to less resistant prospects while auto branding yourself as a valuable resource to your hard-to-crack prospect without lifting a finger. Do it right and before you know it, that original cold call of yours will blossom into a nice hot lead.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

I would like to invite to LIKE MY PAGE !https://www.facebook.com/pages/Gino-Chimienti/197675123614922
http://www.ginochimienti.com
Contact:  Gino
Business Description: Directories and Maps We here to help your business grow by extending its reach across the vast online universe. With the focus of creating a complete web presence, a campaign will help your business compete for customers in its area. Once you submit your business information, will send it out to a variety of directories and online platforms, including: Google, Bing and Yahoo search platforms Mobile device submission (Blackberry, IPhone, Droid) Social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare) Online directories Mapping submission GPS submission and 411 directories OnStar and other Telematics platforms Newsletter with coaching and tutoring your own IT life line Completion and audit reports showing your progress online Mobile Websites 71% of smartphone users search because of an ad they’ve seen either online or offline 82% of smartphone users notice mobile ads 74% of smartphone shoppers make a purchase as a result of using their smartphones to help with shopping 88% of those who look for local information on their smartphones take action within a day As smartphones become an integral part of people’s lives, consumers use mobile search more and more as a source for action-oriented search queries. With a combination of keywords, ads and websites that are strategically created for the mobile-search environment,  mobile campaigns are designed to help local businesses connect with their local customers through this constantly growing search medium. Advantage Internet Marketing Millions of people use their computers to find information through search engines.  campaigns are designed to help people using laptop and desktop computers find your business through strategically-designed search campaigns that target local search users in your area. Whether your target audience is big or small, a  campaign will make it easy for them to find your business. When people enter search queries that are relevant to your products and services, an ad for your business will appear in their search results. Once search users click on the ad, they will be taken to your campaign’s website. This site, designed to be an engaging and intuitive experience for the user, will provide a mixture of informative and beneficial content about your business, with the focus of creating a conversion-oriented response. Your potential customers are searching for your business.  will create an effective online presence that will help them find you. Please contact me to set up an appointment !
If you have a problem with a member of your family who is negative, begin by writing a list of all the things you appreciate about that person. Remember to include gratitude to them for giving you a great desire for positivity in your life; because that is a gift they are giving you. As you focus with all of your strength on appreciation, you will not only reduce your exposure to the negativity, but at the same time you will be attracting positive people into your life.
Get yourself on to the appreciation frequency, and the law of attraction can only surround you with people who are in a positive state.
"The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes."

Monday, January 27, 2014

Help? My sales have fallen and can't get them up!
 
Every day I receive emails from people who are struggling to close sales. They are smack dab in the middle of a sales slump and not sure what to do to get out.
 
Here are a few of many ways to pick up your fallen sales!
 
1.Change your attitude - Your attitude creates the space in which you perform in your business. The good news is that you can control it. The bad news is you can control it and you must to do something about.  It's one of the few things we have complete control over.  Nobody likes a salesperson with a bad attitude. So take stock of your mental and emotional strength so you can harness your emotions and control your attitude.
 
2.Commit to win - It's in the commitment to win that gives you the edge, gives you the creativity and the innovation to restructure and redesign your sales strategies.Making a commitment to win gives you the ability to think differently and creates new opportunities that will give you the advantages you need to succeed.  With a commitment to win, you will find ways to grow your business because sales are the only way to keep your business in business.
 
3.Sharpen your sales skills -Most salespeople don't spend enough time working on improving their sales skills and techniques. They might be able to get away with this in a booming market when selling is easy but the sale will go to the salesperson who truly understands why people buy and can help people make the right buying decisions.Begin now by putting your own plan in place to sharpen your skills and hone your sales techniques.  
 
4.Believe in yourself - One of the biggest problems with a slump or all the recession or bad economy chatter is that salespeople use that chatter to fuel the fire of self-doubt about themselves and their business. 
When they lock onto that belief, they look for all the ways to support the negative by searching newspapers, media, news programs.  
 
Having a positive and supportive belief structure is essential if you want to succeed in any market, but it's vitally essential if you want to keep on selling when you're in a slump.
You are running to the store for one of those quick "pick up a couple of things" trip.  But, by the time you actually get in the car your spouse has added 12, "Oh, and we also need ..."  What initially was a, "no list needed trip," has turned into you thinking maybe you should go in and quickly jot it all down.
But you go over the list in your mind like you are cramming for a final exam in school and you confidently remind yourself, "Nah, I'll remember."
Let me guess what is said while you are unpacking your bags on your kitchen counter:
"Dang!  I forgot the cereal!  I knew I forgot something, but I just couldn’t remember what!"
On the flip side, when I invest the time to write down exactly what I want to get, and I have that list with me in the store I give myself a GREAT chance to accomplish EXACTLY what I am setting out to get!
EVERY time you pick up the phone to make a call is the same opportunity as you going to the store.  Are you going to "wing it" without a list even though you know your odds of getting everything  you want are slim?  Or, do you put the correct value on EVERY call you make, and you are intentional and strategic in executing your sales game plan (going with a list)?
Are you ready to stop playing "supermarket roulette" with your prospects?  Wouldn’t it make you feel accomplished at least knowing regardless of the outcome, that you did everything on your end to move the deal forward?
When I am sitting one-on-one with a sales person showing them how to increase sales and productivity over the phone, it still shocks me how many of them make the BIGGEST mistake possible when cold calling! 
What is THE biggest mistake?
Picking up the phone without knowing exactly what you want, without knowing word-for-word how you are going to ask for it, and not having a secure back-up plan that allows you to meet at least one of your objectives.
Read, learn, and ACT on these 3 rules and you will NEVER return to your "kitchen counter" again and have to say, "AH!  I forgot!"
Rule #1:  Know EXACTLY What You Want
When I am sitting at a sales person’s desk and we are about to dig in and make calls, I intentionally never say anything until they are finished dialing the number.  Then, once the ear piece is up against their cheek, I say, "Hang up!"  They look at me like I’m crazy and I usually have to say it again.  "I’m serious.  Hang up!"
I then ask them, "tell me in 5 words or less EXACTLY what you are calling to get."
If I had a penny for the number of reps that could NOT answer this question, I would have at least $3 (do the math!).
Many of the cold calling training I've heard focuses on the script part first, BUT THAT'S COMPLETELY WRONG!  First, you HAVE to know what you want, then you build your "pitch" around accomplishing that (more on that in rule #2).  Don’t take this lightly.  When I built my cold calling pitch I realized that this exercise WOULD be THE DIFFERENCE between me getting appointments and not, so I took it very seriously, and was intentional in every sentence and word.
Let’s look at just a few of the items you could be looking to accomplish on a cold call:
1. Get a contact name and email address
2. Secure an appointment
3. Close a deal on the spot
4. Present pricing
5. Present your company’s solutions to your clients problems.
Your business, sales cycle, your client and other information will determine what it is that you want. Regardless, though, the main point is, for you to identify THE most important criteria you wish to achieve, and that is what you build around.
Think about the result you want as the center of a wheel, and the spokes are all the other words. The other words SUPPORT and go into the center of the wheel. 
Here’s why it’s IMPERATIVE this occur before you create your script: 
Because your script is written BASED ON what it is you are trying to accomplish!
So, take a few minutes and figure out what SPECIFIC action you are looking to get from your cold calling, and you’ve got Rule #1.
Rule #2:   Your Phone Call Is Like Any Great Movie (For a detailed step by step on formatting a powerful script that gets results, see Part II of this article, titled:  "Scripts Aren’t Just For Movies.")
For whatever reason, the longer a sales person has been in sales the more ludicrous they think this idea is.  Well, the longer I am showing sales people how to make money on the phones the more ludicrous I think it is that sales people don’t use them!
Just because you create a script, doesn’t mean you become a sales R2D2 (Star Wars) sales robot for the rest of your life.  Think about actors in a movie.  They all have scripts, but they don’t look like robots.  Why?  Because they learn it and have gone over them enough times to make it personal and real!
More evidence for you, for those who are fighting me on this (I know you’re out there!):  we only have 8-15 seconds to get permission to gain their interest!  That means each word or pause that takes up just one of those seconds carries a VERY large price tag; which means, you need to detail out EXACTLY what it is you want to say so you optimize EACH and EVERY word.
There are SO many benefits to going with a script to start:  (I say 'to start' because eventually you’ll just know it)
1. Don’t have to think about what you have to say.  How much of a relief is that? 
2. Knowing your delivery and content is powerful helps eliminate fear.
3. The more you do it, the better you get at it.
4. Once fine tuned, your results WILL skyrocket.
Rule #3:  Treat Your Cold Call Like A Genie
My father-in-law is notorious for asking, "What’s your contingency plan?"  Most of the time my answer consists of three words.  “Uh-Uh-Uh.”  Let’s face it.  Even though you put together a killer script, and you ask for the result you want, you won’t always get it.  So what do you do when that happens?  What I’ve seen involves the words, "scramble around in a panic!"
So Rule #3 is to identify and know what you will ask for if your prospect doesn’t agree to wish #1.  I ALWAYS know the top 3 results I want from every call, and I rank them in order of preference.  My main pitch is of course geared around my primary objective.  If they say no to that, I quickly jump to my #2 wish, and if that also gets denied, then I jump to my #3 wish.
Make sure that your ‘third wish’ is something that will give you the opportunity to keep in touch with the client.  Try and stay from something they would say "no" to.  For example, my last ditch wish was, "Mr. Client, thank you.  Is it OK if I keep in touch periodically to inform you of developments that I think will benefit you?"  Most people say "yes" to that, so that is my #3 default.
Summary:  If you INVEST the time to nail down these 3 rules, I GUARANTEE you will see results FAST!   In addition to seeing results, your confidence will soar when you don’t have to think so much about every call.  Think about how productive you will feel when:
1. You know EXACTLY what you are asking for.
2. Know PRECISELY what you are going to say.
3. Have a back-up plan so every time you reach someone you at least meet 1 objective.
And remember, next time you are about to leave for the store without that list, remind yourself that you can do that when you go to the store, but never when you are making precious, money making phone calls!

Sunday, January 26, 2014

http://www.ginochimienti.com
Contact:  Gino
Business Description: Directories and Maps We here to help your business grow by extending its reach across the vast online universe. With the focus of creating a complete web presence, a campaign will help your business compete for customers in its area. Once you submit your business information, will send it out to a variety of directories and online platforms, including: Google, Bing and Yahoo search platforms Mobile device submission (Blackberry, IPhone, Droid) Social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare) Online directories Mapping submission GPS submission and 411 directories OnStar and other Telematics platforms Newsletter with coaching and tutoring your own IT life line Completion and audit reports showing your progress online Mobile Websites 71% of smartphone users search because of an ad they’ve seen either online or offline 82% of smartphone users notice mobile ads 74% of smartphone shoppers make a purchase as a result of using their smartphones to help with shopping 88% of those who look for local information on their smartphones take action within a day As smartphones become an integral part of people’s lives, consumers use mobile search more and more as a source for action-oriented search queries. With a combination of keywords, ads and websites that are strategically created for the mobile-search environment,  mobile campaigns are designed to help local businesses connect with their local customers through this constantly growing search medium. Advantage Internet Marketing Millions of people use their computers to find information through search engines.  campaigns are designed to help people using laptop and desktop computers find your business through strategically-designed search campaigns that target local search users in your area. Whether your target audience is big or small, a  campaign will make it easy for them to find your business. When people enter search queries that are relevant to your products and services, an ad for your business will appear in their search results. Once search users click on the ad, they will be taken to your campaign’s website. This site, designed to be an engaging and intuitive experience for the user, will provide a mixture of informative and beneficial content about your business, with the focus of creating a conversion-oriented response. Your potential customers are searching for your business.  will create an effective online presence that will help them find you. Please contact me to set up an appointment ! @408-256-2814
"Obstacles cannot crush me. Every obstacle yields to stern resolve."
There is not a salesperson in existence who hasn't repeatedly heard of the need to "close the sale." Every new sales manager must view the process of encouraging his/her sales force to "close the sale" as an initiation into the profession. If you're going to be a sales manager, you, therefore, must improve everyone's ability to "close." Doesn't it come with the job?
The sales training literature is awash with advice. Some of it tedious and trivial: "If he says this, you say that." Other advice is grandiose: "35 new sure-fire closing techniques." Still other is harmful. "Overcome that objection," as if selling in the B2B world was a contest between you and the customer, with one of you winning (overcoming) and the other losing (being overcome). That's an attitude that won't get you far.
All of this advice shares one common element. It's incredibly overdone. There is no one aspect of sales (at least in the B2B world) that undeservedly receives more disproportionate time and talk than the subject of "closing the sale."
Not that there is no need to "close." Every project must come to a conclusion, every offer be resolved one way or the other. It's just that, in my experience, closing has never been the result of verbal gymnastics on my part. It's not my clever refrains, my slick tactics, my memorized "objection over-comers" nor my manipulative perseverance that has brought me business. Instead, it was the suitability of my offer to the needs/desires/values of the customer.
On those occasions where my offer precisely met the customer's combination of desires, values and preferences, I got the business. Where my offer was off, and some competitor's offer was a closer match, I didn't get the business.
I don't mean to imply that every sales opportunity is that black and white. Clearly there is a lot of grey area in the process. But, from my perspective, the grey area tipping point was most often the personal factors of rapport, relationship and trust, and almost never the tactical manipulations of the salespeople involved.
I learned early on in my sales career that it was far more important and profitable to "open" the sale precisely than it was to close strongly. If I spend a lot of time, energy and mental acuity on learning the precise dimensions of the customer's needs, and if I crafted an offer that matched those precisely, there was very little need for concern about closing.
I realize that I am tramping all over the hallowed ground of a vast number of sales managers, sales trainers and sales consultants. I am, however, reflecting thoughtfully on my 30-plus years of selling all kinds of things, and my 18-plus years of training and developing sales people. I believe that most thoughtful salespeople will line up on my side of the issue.
All that said, there some principles and simple rules that can give us direction on this issue. Let's start with our language. Instead of "closing the sale" let's first call it "resolving the next step." Not only should the project in general have a resolution, but also every sales interaction (a conversation with a prospect or customer), should have as its goal the identification of a next step in the sales process and the natural and logical commitment to that step.
So, for example, when you are seeing a prospect for the first time, the ideal next step is to get a commitment from the prospect for a second meeting. Without that, you have no hope of getting the ultimate purchase order. To walk away from the sales call without resolving "what happens next" is to leave the sales call incomplete and relatively worthless.
The ideal next step for a meeting when you are collecting information about the customer's needs is the customer's commitment to view your presentation of your solution.
The ideal next step following a sales call in which you present your solution is for the customer to identify the next step in his/her buying process, and commit to that.
On and on we go. Every sales call should end in some resolution of the next step in the process, even if the resolution is "no next step with you."
Notice that in each of these occasions, the definition of the "next step" is a commitment on the part of the prospect or customer to do something that moves the project forward. Acquiring that commitment, in each and every sales interaction, is one of the habits of the most successful salespeople. It's what I term "resolving the next step."
If the goal is to successfully arrive at the ultimate resolution, the perceptive salesperson understands that the means to that is a step-by-step process. Every sales call is an investment of time and energy on the part of the customer. And every investment of time and energy should result in some kind of an action step. Unless you are so entertaining that the customer looks at his/her time invested with you as a substitute for the movies this weekend, he/she probably doesn't want to squander his time with you. He probably wants to accomplish something as a result of his investment of time with you. The something will take the shape of a "next step" in his process.
So, the thoughtful and effective salesperson recognizes that, and merely asks the customer to identify the next step. When he does, it's nailed down with a deadline. The project moves forward, the sales process continues, and you know exactly where you and the customer stand.
All of that brings us to one the most powerful "resolution" strategies. I call it "Alternate next steps." The definition is this: An alternate next step is an offer made to the customer following the stated or implied rejection of a previous offer. It always involves a smaller risk on the part of the customer, like plan B. If the customer agrees to the alternate offer, it always keeps you in the game and the project moving forward.
Here's an example. You are offering a one year contract on a product which the customer uses every month. The customer indicates that he's not ready to sign that. Instead of confronting the issue, you resolve it. You offer plan B, an alternate next step.
You suggest, instead, that the customer buy two months worth of the product to see how it works out, and then you and he will get together to assess the benefits of continuing. Instead of a 12 month contract, your offer is a two month trial.
Does that offer represent less risk to the customer? Of course. If the customer agrees to that step, are you still in the game? Is the project still going forward? Yes to both.
You see, the reason the customer didn't say yes to your original offer has to do with his concerns - perhaps issues that have nothing to do with you or your product. By offering an alternate next step, you reduce his risk, and provide a mutually acceptable way to resolve the next step. The reason he didn't offer a positive solution to your original offer has more to do with you missing something in the customer, than it did with your lack of verbal dexterity.
Let's summarize:

  1. Forget "closing the sale." Instead think, "resolving the next step."
  2. Remember that effective "opening" is the best single tactic for closing.
  3. Create a habit of always asking for action as a way to resolve every sales interaction.
  4. Develop the habit of offering "alternate next steps."

If you can execute these four things with ever growing excellence, you'll enjoy your customers respect, you'll maintain positive relationships and become far more important to them, and, you'll far outsell the manipulative "closers" surrounding you.
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Saturday, January 25, 2014

You cannot make it as a wandering generality. You must become a meaningful specific .
"My customers seem to have less time available for me than before. They are harder to see, and when I do get in front of them, they often seem rushed or preoccupied. What can I do about this?"
Sound familiar? It's a question that I am hearing more and more often. I'm sure you have run it through your mind a few times.
It may be that the problem is you. You may be irritating and abrasive, and over time your customers may have decided that they don't want you around.
But it's probably not you. It's your customer. No matter what you sell, it is likely that your customer has more to do and less time in which to do it than ever before. Your customer's lack of time is a relatively recent phenomenon. It wasn't much of an issue a few years ago, but it has become universal and growing in intensity day by day. Your customer is overworked and pressed for time. As a result, there is just not enough time in the day to get everything done. Some things have to go. A long, leisurely conversation with a sales person is often one of those things that is going.
I believe we are at the beginning of a new trend - a trend with awesome implications for sales people. It used to be that being viewed as a "value-added" vendor was a desirable position to occupy in the customer's mind. That meant that the product or service you represented brought your customer more value for the money than the offerings of your competitors. It was why they did business with you.
Notice the focus was on the product or service you represented. The process involved - the sales calls you made on the customer, and the discussions you had with him or her - were viewed as a means to an end. It was what both of you did in order to come to the exchange of money for your value-added offerings.
Those were the rules, and customers and sales people understood them. These rules of sales interactions are deeply ingrained - so deeply, in fact, that many of us cannot conceive of the profession of sales being done any other way. It is what we know, and how we have made our living.
But the rules are changing. We are at the beginning of a new paradigm for the field sales person. The new paradigm is this: Today, not only must the product or service bring value to the customer, but the time you spend with the customer must also be of value to him or her. In other words, the sales process itself must bring value to your customer. Your customer must gain something from every sales call. He/she must see a reason for spending time with you - a payback for his investment of time.
Now, of course you have your agenda, and you have your objectives for the sales call. You know what value you want to gain from the meeting with your customer. But what about your customer? What is he going to gain from investing that precious 30 - 45 minutes with you?
In today's time-compressed and overwhelming world, your sales call must bring the customer some value. Here's a way to visualize this emerging new rule. Suppose you were to make a routine sales call on a regular customer. At the end of the call you filled out an invoice, handed it to him and said, "OK, John, that will be $150.00 for my time." In other words, you charge him for the value he received by talking with you. Would he pay your bill? Would he have derived enough value from the time he spent with you so that he would gladly pay you for it?
OK, the illustration may seem a bit over the edge. Most industries are not at the point, yet, where they will charge for sales calls. But in the information rich, too-many-things-to-do world in which you and your customers live, time is more precious than money.
When you ask for your customer's time, you are asking for something very limited and very precious. If you take 30 minutes of his day, he has invested 6.25% of his workday in you. He has a thousand other things he could have done in that time. What did he get for that investment with you?
The point is this: If you are going to be successful in the Information Age economy, you must focus on bringing something of value to your customers every time you ask them to invest their time in you. You must view every sales call through the perspective of the value you can bring to your customers. A sales call is no longer just about the objectives that you want to achieve, it is also about the objectives your customer wants to achieve. It's as if you present that $150.00 bill at the end of every sales call and expect to be paid.
So, how can you adjust to new situation? Here are some proven practices that will help you make the transition:
1. Understand your customer's situation as thoroughly as possible before you take his time.
Your customer expects you to know something about his business, his customers, his processes and his problems before you visit. That means that you must spend more time before a sales call gathering information about that customer. Check to see if the customer has a website, and gather useful information from it. Call and ask the receptionist to send you a company brochure. Ask around your company to see what other colleagues might know about the account. If you don't know that the customer is qualified and worth your time, you will be wasting his.
2. Think through the sales call from the customer's perspective.
Put yourself in the shoes of that customer. What else does he/she have to do other than talk to you? What problems is he facing, what opportunities? How can you bring him or her something that will simplify his job, help him overcome his problems, or reduce the amount of time he spends on your project?
This is a simple little technique that can make a huge difference in your performance. Before every sales call, stop and think about this question: What will the customer gain from the time he/she spends with me? If you can't articulate some gain for the customer, consider not making the sales call.
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3. Prepare something of potential value for every call.
This is a long-range strategy. As you consistently hold to this strategy, over time you'll build up a certain expectation in the customer's mind. Don't expect an immediate payback from this strategy, but, nonetheless, stick to it for the long haul.
Try to bring something to every sales call that your customer would think is valuable. This can, of course, be your latest and greatest product or service, providing that it really would help them. Or, it may be an idea that you have found for a change in their processes, or it may be a new way to implement something they have purchased from you in the past. Maybe it's a copy of an article that you thought might help them. It can even be a good question you share with them that gets them thinking about their business in a different way.
After a few such calls, your customer will come to respect you and look forward to your calls, knowing that you're not there just to work some agenda of yours, but rather he'll come to expect to gain something from your sales calls.
You'll find it easier to make appointments and get time with your customers when you've built in them the expectation that the time spent with you will be well worth the cost of it.
If you are guided by this principle of always bringing something of value, you'll recognize that there is another side to this coin. If you have nothing to leave the customer that will be of value to that customer, you probably shouldn't make the sales call. Don't take his time.
4. Be a resource.
One of my clients suggested that sales people need to be the "customer's search engine." I couldn't agree more. Strive to be the customer's most trusted and most knowledgeable resource, the customer's source of information, not just about your product, but about the whole category of things that you sell, their applications, and their advantages and problems.
Share information that is bigger than just the product or service that you sell. If you do, then your customer will look forward to your visits and view them as valuable.
I realize that this is a change in thinking for a lot of sales reps. But it's a change that is coming, whether you want to make it or not. Your choice is to be a leader and thus gain a significant edge over your competition, or to wait until the market forces you to change. The choice is yours.
http://www.ginochimienti.com
Contact:  Gino
Business Description: Directories and Maps We here to help your business grow by extending its reach across the vast online universe. With the focus of creating a complete web presence, a campaign will help your business compete for customers in its area. Once you submit your business information, will send it out to a variety of directories and online platforms, including: Google, Bing and Yahoo search platforms Mobile device submission (Blackberry, IPhone, Droid) Social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare) Online directories Mapping submission GPS submission and 411 directories OnStar and other Telematics platforms Newsletter with coaching and tutoring your own IT life line Completion and audit reports showing your progress online Mobile Websites 71% of smartphone users search because of an ad they’ve seen either online or offline 82% of smartphone users notice mobile ads 74% of smartphone shoppers make a purchase as a result of using their smartphones to help with shopping 88% of those who look for local information on their smartphones take action within a day As smartphones become an integral part of people’s lives, consumers use mobile search more and more as a source for action-oriented search queries. With a combination of keywords, ads and websites that are strategically created for the mobile-search environment,  mobile campaigns are designed to help local businesses connect with their local customers through this constantly growing search medium. Advantage Internet Marketing Millions of people use their computers to find information through search engines.  campaigns are designed to help people using laptop and desktop computers find your business through strategically-designed search campaigns that target local search users in your area. Whether your target audience is big or small, a  campaign will make it easy for them to find your business. When people enter search queries that are relevant to your products and services, an ad for your business will appear in their search results. Once search users click on the ad, they will be taken to your campaign’s website. This site, designed to be an engaging and intuitive experience for the user, will provide a mixture of informative and beneficial content about your business, with the focus of creating a conversion-oriented response. Your potential customers are searching for your business.  will create an effective online presence that will help them find you. Please contact me to set up an appointment ! @408-256-2814
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"Diligence is the mother of good fortune, and idleness-its opposite-never led to good intention's goal."

Friday, January 24, 2014

"Someone might have a germ of talent, but 90% of it is discipline and how you practice it, what you do with it. Instinct won't carry you through the entire journey. It's what you do in the moments between inspiration."
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Here’s a little known secret that the top salespeople are aware of. They never have to “close” a sale.
What if you never had to worry about sounding like you were pushing, closing or forcing someone to buy from you?
“Just Sell Value.” – What does that even mean?
The alternative approach that I’m suggesting results in more profitable sales with less effort. Many salespeople believe that their product or service should speak for itself. To compound this, sales managers continue to remind their salespeople to sell value. The phrase “sell value” has been so overused that it’s lost its meaning. Just ask each of your salespeople how they specifically sell value and you’ll hear a variety of responses. And most won’t have a strategy nor the refined message to do so.
For example, for many sellers, once they encounter any resistance from a customer or prospect, they back down or are quick to ask for a time best suited for a follow-up call. Unfortunately, this “dead time” also gives your competition the opportunity to gain a foothold in your accounts and when many selling opportunities are lost.
If salespeople were truly selling value, then they would not allow this to happen. Why? Because aside from uncovering each of your buyer’s priorities, challenges, expectations and objectives, you have also made them an internal advocate. As such, you’re serving people the way they want to be served and always act with their best interests in mind. That is, by definition, selling value.
Stop Closing, Start Opening Up New Possibilities
The word “closing” has certainly gotten a bad rap because of the negative connotation associated with it. After all, look at the root of the word, “close” which is synonymous with ‘shutting, locking, finishing, final, and end.’
Instead of closing, what if you can create a new opening without having to close? You can accomplish this in a simple conversation that does not threaten your integrity by sounding too “pushy.”
The word “closing” is really the wrong title for this phase in the selling process. This phase should be considered the “agreement phase” or “opening phase.” As opposed to closing the opportunity for a sale to occur, you are opening up the possibility to work with that particular prospect or customer by agreeing to move the sales process to the next stage  and explore other solutions. It is at this time when you are suggesting alternative options in the form of a question that creates a new possibility for your prospect to consider which might better suit his or her needs.
Here are the most generic and common obstacles to selling:
  • I need to think about it
  • The price is too high
  • I want to shop around
  • I need more information
  • I’m already working with another vender
  • I’m not the only decision maker
  • We have no budget
  • I’m not interested
  • There’s been a recent reorg
  • I’m not responsible for this initiative anymore
  • This is a bad time
  • We are already under contract for the next few years with another vender
  • And so on…
How can you create a new opening that can overcome these concerns? Remember my definition of selling: the art of creating possibility.
It is at this point, during any conversation with a prospect or customer when you are creating new possibilities that may have never existed before. You are uncovering new needs, new solutions, new priorities, even needs that your buyers didn’t realize they had!
What Is An Objection Anyway?
Here’s a friendly reminder of the definition of an objection. It’s a sign of interest; a request for more information or a prospect’s concern or fear that needs to be satisfied in order to continue guiding the buyer through your sales process and to its natural conclusion.
If you stop and think about it,  with the top objections you hear, is the person actually saying, “No?” The prospect is not saying “No, I don’t want to and never will use your product or service or buy from you.” What they are really saying is, “I’m saying ‘No’ or a form of ‘No’ because you haven’t given me enough of a compelling reason to buy from you or have satisfied all of my concerns and priorities.”
In other words, instead of fearing objections, embrace them. Every objection provides you with a new opportunity to share the right information with a prospect that can move them to the next stage in your sales process.
Defusing an Initial Objection
If you refer back to the list of common objections I shared with you earlier, here are several examples of how you can respond to the objection, “We don’t have a budget for this. (We can’t afford this.)”
The intention behind the following responses is to first ensure that you are, in fact dealing with an actual objection rather than a smokescreen. Therefore, isolate the objection down to its core to see if the initial objection they shared with you is really the truth or if it’s something else.
The “something else” could be that they don’t believe you, don’t trust you yet, don’t believe you or your product can help them, they may not be the decision maker, they have been burned before, they are having a bad day and you are their new target, they are not the best prospect for you, they are getting a comparison bid to compare it to their current and preferred vender, and so on.
Rather than react to an objection with a statement that creates an adversarial posture between you and the prospect (Example: defending your position, service, or product) respond to the objections you hear with a question. Here’s how.
Buyer: “We don’t have a budget for this.”
You: “Mr. Buyer, I certainly understand and appreciate you sharing that with me. It seems as if everyone today is more sensitive about operating within their limited budget.”
  • What follows are some responsive questions you can ask in this situation:
  • How do you typically budget for a project like this?
  • How do you typically go about making a decision like this?
  • May I ask, what is the process you use when making this type of decision?
  • What are the factors you consider when choosing a vender?
  • Other than you, who else may be involved in this vender selection?
You can also leverage the following, more specific budget related questions:
  • May I ask, is it that you have no budget now and there may be budget in the future?
  • May I ask, is it that you don’t have a budget at all or is it more about the hesitation to work with a new vender?
  •  How much do you think my product would cost that would make you feel that there’s no budget available for this?
  • Has the budget been cut altogether or has it been dramatically reduced?
  • Is it a budgetary concern or are you more concerned about the value you will receive?
  • So, if you don’t have the money right now, who in your company does?
After using these types of questions, you will be able to confirm whether the objection they shared is the core objection or if the real objection is actually something else. These questions will enable you to expose what their primary concern or reluctance actually is. And remember, like any set of precision based selling questions, treat them like a buffet. Take the ones you like leave the ones you don’t.
Get Permission
Now that you’ve smoked out the real objection, it’s time to offer a solution. However, the key for this conversation to work without you sounding like a high pressure or “cheesy” salesperson is to first get permission. You can create a new opening to overcome a prospect’s concern by asking for permission to do so.
Before offering a response, a solution or a new possibility that would defuse their objection, now is the time for you to get permission to discuss a solution to their concern. This way, you will quickly learn whether or not this person is truly a qualified prospect who is looking for a better solution, someone who you are better off without or if the objection they stated is, in fact, the only true obstacle to the sale. Here are some examples.
1. “Mr. Prospect, at this point, I’m not sure if you would realize the ROI that my other customers have experienced. However, if it was possible for me to demonstrate a rapid ROI so that you can start realizing the advantages of our service within one month, is that something you would be interested in talking about?”
2. “Mr. Prospect, if budget was no longer an issue for you, would you be open to exploring this in more detail?”
I love using “if” questions. All I did here was reverse or take away the objection to determine if “not having a budget” is the only thing that’s truly getting in the way. Now that I’ve hypothetically removed this objection, their response should be a “yes.” If not, then there’s still something else going on or another obstacle that they haven’t shared with you yet. So, keep digging!
3. “Mr. Prospect, if I can demonstrate to you in just three minutes how the value you receive will far outweigh the manageable investment that I would propose, would you be open to hearing more?”
Notice how I include a timeline of 3 minutes to let the prospect know that this will not take up all of their precious time. Just make sure that you can accomplish what you are proposing in the timeline you stipulate.
Salespeople Don’t Overcome Objections. Buyers Do.
If they say “Yes,” to any of these examples, you now have a prospect who is interested in hearing more about the solutions you can offer. So, go for the appointment (sale, demo, or whatever is the next step in your sales process)! Since you have gained permission to explore other options, the prospect is now willing to listen to your suggestions.
If you fail to ask permission, and instead dump alternative solutions or more information on them even before you have a true understanding of what their primary objection is, you are running the risk of sounding too pushy, which causes a prospect to shut down their listening and put up their defensive wall that prevents you from making a sale.
The next time you run into an objection, defuse it by getting permission to continue with the conversation. The result will be more sales with less resistance.
Remember, like all selling strategies, there are no absolutes. When some prospects say “No” they actually mean it. However, if you can convert even 35 percent of the “No’s” you hear into selling opportunities, then this process would be considered wildly successful.
The key point here is this; salespeople don’t overcome objections, buyers do. The only person who can truly overcome an objection is the prospect. Salespeople create the opportunity for this to occur through their effective use of questions.
Selling is therefore the art of asking questions, listening openly and intentionally, and gaining information; not giving it.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Hi Ho Silver! When I was young, I loved The Lone Ranger. He worked alone. Only one close relationship and he wasn’t dependent on anyone. When I started in sales, I was a “Lone Ranger”. I was only interested in me.
Every morning, I got up and listened to the same radio station WIIFM (What’s In It For Me!). If my company asked me to do something outside the scope of selling the prospect, I’d tell myself, “I don’t get paid for that”. When I sold someone something, I often left a wake of customer service issues in my path.
As I matured, I learned the value of the organization I worked for, the “Company”. I learned it was disingenuous to cash the company’s check and not support the company. However, I had to discover this secret to success in sales the hard way. So today, here’s my sales tip to make more money.
Think of your company as a boat in the middle of the ocean. Think of the people on the boat as the people in your company. Now, if a hole springs in the corner of the boat you wouldn’t point at the hole and say that’s accountings hole.  You wouldn’t say that part of the boat is customer services’. You’d run over and plug the hole. In fact, in a boat in the middle of the ocean everyone would cooperate because their survival is dependent on the boat.
When you think of your company as a boat, your “Lone Ranger” attitude will go away. You would begin making sure you didn’t create or ignore problems.
To maximize the power of the organization behind you, you should abandon the “Fighter Pilot” mentality and embrace the “Boat” mentality. When you hang up the phone with someone in your organization it should be your goal for them to say to themselves or a co-worker “Wow, I’m glad they work with us”.
When you communicate with any department, the company executives, or other sales people your goal should be the same. When they close their conversation with you, they say to themselves, “Wow, we’re lucky to have them!”
How do you do this? First, don’t wait on someone else to adopt this philosophy. One person told me he’d never do this. He said in his company everyone was out for themselves and he wasn’t going to be different.
My mom used to say, “If everyone jumped off the bridge, would you?”  What other people do shouldn’t determine your behavior. If this situation exists, you should change companies or begin changing the culture yourself. There is too much sales power in a unified boat to face a career without one.
Second, get your mind off of what you need and get it on what your co-workers need. They’ll take care of you if you take care of them. It requires some risk and trust but if you come through and your co-workers don’t, see above.
My sales exploded when I quit listening to “WIIFM” and I tuned into my co-workers. I know yours will too. Start your own WOW  company today.
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"Character consists of what you do on the third and fourth tries."

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

There’s not a lot you can do about the national economy but there is a lot you can do about your personal economy. 

3 Ingredients to Sending Highly Effective Emails


Dodge the delete button

Email is an effective way to increase brand awareness, leads and sales, but many businesses don’t get the response rate they are looking for because their approach is weak, worn-out and completely off track. It comes down to three seconds and if your message doesn’t hit the target your email will be immediately deleted. Your mission should be to get your reader to open, read and respond.
Do people respond to your emails in the way you want them to? Are you sure that you’re making the best possible impression with your emails?
Unfortunately most of the emails messages received are ineffective, lengthy and seller centered. Many do not stand a chance and end up in the trash without being read. They make it to the trash because they’re missing these 3 key ingredients.
1. The subject line must be eye catching and compelling
2. The body of the email must be brief and to the point
3. The ending should get the reader to take some sort of action
The subject line must have a purpose and be customized to the reader. It needs to resonate with the mind of the reader and should compel them to open and skim. People receive hundreds of emails every day and most are read with a finger on the trigger of the delete button. If the subject is generic, boring and weak it immediately gets dumped in the trash.
Think of the email subject line as a headline in a newspaper or magazine. You have 2-3 seconds to grab their attention, so choose a headline that is strong and compelling. A few strong and well-chosen words increase the open rate by over thirty-four percent. Invest time in your subject line as if you were paying hundreds of dollars for each one.
I coach sales teams, through my sales coaching programs to try out a few test subject lines on other people before you send them to prospective clients. Try sending them to others in your office, on your team or in your family to get their input and reaction to the subject line. Ask yourself, would you open your own emails?
If you’re lucky enough for them to open your email, you must make your point as briefly as you can without sacrificing quality. An effective and easy formula to follow is one subject line, two brief paragraphs and one action item. I have received and saved many emails that were nothing but a not so cleverly disguised seven paragraph sales pitch. What a waste of time, money and energy.
Your email needs to start with a quick, friendly and to the point statement explaining why you’re writing to them. Remember that you need to get their attention and hold it. Email readers and web surfers think and react in seconds so use your time wisely.
They’re choosing to read your email so you owe it to them to make it about them, not you. Repeat, what’s in it for them, not you! If the body is all about you, your company and how amazing you are, it will be deleted, dumped and discarded without any thought. You think customers want to know all about your company, but the reality is they don’t. They only want to know what’s in it for them. I can’t stress this enough; it’s not about you.
They want to know how you can help them solve their issues and problems. The more time you invest in discussing their issues, the greater the likelihood you’ll move the sales conversation forward. If you don’t, guess where your email is going? The trash!
Your audience needs to be engaged or they simply stop reading. Very seldom do I receive an email that gets my attention, holds my interest, and causes me to take an action.
Don’t buy into the belief that, “they were not interested,” accept the truth and responsibility that, “your email wasn’t interesting!” If you correctly present your ideas through their eyes, you can make any subject interesting.
With email and on-line communication you have only two to three seconds to get their attention. Only seven seconds to build interest and about twenty seconds to get them to take an action. Following this rule will improve your response rate dramatically. 
Measuring customer growth regularly and consistently will increase sales. How? Because measuring customer growth allows you to find accounts that can grow, buy more products and become even bigger customers.
The best, fastest way to increase your sales is to work within your current customer pool. You already know that incremental sales opportunities (selling up and cross selling) are effective ways to make more sales, but how do you know which of your customers will be most likely to respond to your sales pitches?
Measure customer growth.
Without consistent measurement, you have no way of finding these prospects and risk missing out on a lot of sales.
The Sales Leader Classification System
The Sales Leader Classification System we discussed in a previous article is a process of identifying key traits in customers and then classifying accounts into one of four segments. It allows you to manage your time more profitably and also helps you measure customer growth more effectively.
As we discussed, you will use engagement and potential growth opportunities to analyze each of your accounts and classify them as a Maintenance, Key, Service or Growth Potential Account. Each of these accounts has different characteristics and requires differentiated attention.
While these classifications will help you find the best ways to manage each account profitably it’s not all the system can do. It can also help you keep tabs on your accounts and measure their growth so you can expand them even more, making more sales.
Measure Consistently
Measuring customer growth entails spending time internally with your sales team monitoring your accounts. Each type of customer should be reviewed at a different time so you can see what goals are being met and how the account is growing.
My suggestion is to measure your accounts as follows:
Maintenance Accounts – Quarterly
Key Accounts – Quarterly
Service Accounts – Annually
Growth Potential Accounts – Monthly
What is the point of measuring your accounts?
Besides giving you the ability to see how well you are servicing each account, this practice allows you to see how accounts are changing and how they may be growing into different segments of the classification model. Remember that it is possible for some of your customers to start in one segment and grow into another. In fact, this is very positive and being aware of it will help you grow your business.
Measuring regularly also allows you to get ahead of any issues, slowdowns or losses quickly. When you discover growth is not happening as expected quickly, you can make changes, adjust your approach and find new opportunities. If you wait until the end of the year to measure progress it will be too late!
When you measure accounts, reevaluate their classification and decide if they should be moved into another segment. But, don’t stop there. After you measure growth and move customers into new segment, make the necessary internal changes to better service those accounts.
For example, maybe you weren’t spending much time on one of your Service Accounts, but now that account has grown and is a Growth Account. These two segments require differentiated attention, and Growth Accounts deserve more of your time. By changing the way you work with growing accounts you will be able to leverage current customers and increase your sales.
Measurements allow you to see what is in the sales pipeline, what opportunities are active, and what resources you need to grow your accounts. Constant measurement also gives you a chance to reassess account classifications and make changes so you can spend your time and resources most profitably. Consistent measurement makes it possible for you to fully leverage your customer base so you can sell more in less time while making more profit!

Measuring customer growth regularly and consistently will increase sales. How? Because measuring customer growth allows you to find accounts that can grow, buy more products and become even bigger customers.
The best, fastest way to increase your sales is to work within your current customer pool. You already know that incremental sales opportunities (selling up and cross selling) are effective ways to make more sales, but how do you know which of your customers will be most likely to respond to your sales pitches?
Measure customer growth.
Without consistent measurement, you have no way of finding these prospects and risk missing out on a lot of sales.
The Sales Leader Classification System
The Sales Leader Classification System we discussed in a previous article is a process of identifying key traits in customers and then classifying accounts into one of four segments. It allows you to manage your time more profitably and also helps you measure customer growth more effectively.
As we discussed, you will use engagement and potential growth opportunities to analyze each of your accounts and classify them as a Maintenance, Key, Service or Growth Potential Account. Each of these accounts has different characteristics and requires differentiated attention.
While these classifications will help you find the best ways to manage each account profitably it’s not all the system can do. It can also help you keep tabs on your accounts and measure their growth so you can expand them even more, making more sales.
Measure Consistently
Measuring customer growth entails spending time internally with your sales team monitoring your accounts. Each type of customer should be reviewed at a different time so you can see what goals are being met and how the account is growing.
My suggestion is to measure your accounts as follows:
  • Maintenance Accounts – Quarterly
  • Key Accounts – Quarterly
  • Service Accounts – Annually
  • Growth Potential Accounts – Monthly

What is the point of measuring your accounts?
Besides giving you the ability to see how well you are servicing each account, this practice allows you to see how accounts are changing and how they may be growing into different segments of the classification model. Remember that it is possible for some of your customers to start in one segment and grow into another. In fact, this is very positive and being aware of it will help you grow your business.
Measuring regularly also allows you to get ahead of any issues, slowdowns or losses quickly. When you discover growth is not happening as expected quickly, you can make changes, adjust your approach and find new opportunities. If you wait until the end of the year to measure progress it will be too late!
When you measure accounts, reevaluate their classification and decide if they should be moved into another segment. But, don’t stop there. After you measure growth and move customers into new segment, make the necessary internal changes to better service those accounts.
For example, maybe you weren’t spending much time on one of your Service Accounts, but now that account has grown and is a Growth Account. These two segments require differentiated attention, and Growth Accounts deserve more of your time. By changing the way you work with growing accounts you will be able to leverage current customers and increase your sales.
Measurements allow you to see what is in the sales pipeline, what opportunities are active, and what resources you need to grow your accounts. Constant measurement also gives you a chance to reassess account classifications and make changes so you can spend your time and resources most profitably. Consistent measurement makes it possible for you to fully leverage your customer base so you can sell more in less time while making more profit!
"The most delightful surprise in life is to suddenly recognize your own worth."

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

"There is at least one point in the history of any company when you have to change dramatically to rise to the next level of performance. Miss that moment, and you start to decline."
The 4th quarter has ended. You can almost hear a collective sigh of relief as many reps are anxious to put a difficult Q4 behind them.
So what’s your plan for Q1? Do you move forward with the same ideas, skills, attitude and enthusiasm that you used in Q4? Only if you want the same type of results.
If you’re like me, you’re looking for ways to create and capitalize on more opportunities next quarter. Here are the six key principles that I’ve decided to focus on. I’m confident they could help you and your team win more business! Take a quick read and then let me know your thoughts by commenting at the end. I look forward to hearing from you.
#1. Stop dropping your price! 
Dropping your prices is one of the easiest ways to try and win business when times are tough. Although price concessions can be valuable in winning key opportunities, they can easily become a crutch that masks other problems. When you sell on price you are simply renting the customer’s business, when you sell on value you own it. Work on communicating value with each and every touch point. Why, given all of the competitive alternatives available, should this customer want to do business with you now?
#2. Get a better plan. 
What is your plan for reaching more potential prospects? Anyone can make calls, and it takes almost no skill to convert a huge number of contacts into a sparse number of opportunities. But if you want to significantly increase your sales results, you’ll need to have a better plan. Selling is not an activity, it’s a process. What is yours?
#3. Don’t make decisions for your prospects. 
Stop assuming they won’t take your call, agree to an appointment or give you an order. I know it hurts to lose, but you can’t lose what you don’t have. Move forward the remainder of this year with a relentless “go for no” attitude. Sure you’ll face a little more rejection, but that helps clean out your funnel and forces you to focus on the right opportunities. And you just might be surprised how many times you’ll hear a “yes”.    
#4. Follow up with everyone! 
Customers buy when they are ready to buy, not when you are ready to sell. Too many reps throw proposal after proposal out the door and then lose interest in following up because they get distracted chasing a newer opportunity.  According to the National Sales Executive Association, 80% of all new business is won after the fifth contact. Make it a practice to follow up with everyone but don’t become a pest who calls every day leaving the same message. You’re better than that. Want a tip? End every conversation with these magic words: “I know it’s easy to get busy and I’m guessing you would rather not play phone tag. Why don’t we get out our calendars and schedule our next conversation right now.”  This will force both you and prospect to stay in tune and in touch!
#5. Ask for the order! 
This is one of the top 3 reasons why reps don’t get the business. They just don’t ask for it. Don’t focus on the outcome, focus on the process. If you’ve done the right things in the right way, it becomes your professional responsibility to be assertive.
When should you close? Early and often! Asking for little commitments along the way makes asking for the final commitment much easier. Plus you’ll lean very quickly how real the opportunity is. Customers who are unwilling to make small commitments along the way are going to be even less enthusiastic about making a bigger commitment later on.
#6. Master the critical skills. 
If you’re going to sell more every year, you need to get better every year. Let’s look at this a different way. If what you are currently doing would produce the results you are looking for, the results should have already shown up.
There is an abundance of sales books, tele-seminars, podcasts, webinars, and sales training programs available today. What are you waiting for?
So where do you start? Start by honestly answering a few of these questions.
How much preparation are you putting into each call? Are the questions you ask thought provoking or mind numbing? Do your ideas have value for the prospect or do you find yourself just pitching the “latest” widget from the factory? When was the last time you got feedback on your presentation skills? What are the top three obstacles prospects throw at you? How do you clearly and concisely address these obstacles? What are you doing every week to help build better relationships? The list goes on and on.
It takes courage to admit you could be a better sales rep and confidence to believe you can change. It takes nothing to create excuses.
Make a commitment right now to improve yourself and if you do, I’m confident you’ll close more deals and create more success!
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It is hard work to learn a new skill. It is not easy to break old habits. Starting something new requires extraordinary focus and attention.
Momentum, on the other hand, just requires a tiny next step.
It is easy to fantasize about your new resolution as being the magical difference between success and failure — that by deciding to turn over a new leaf everything will suddenly be new and better for you moving forward.
But it is also going to be a lot harder for you.
Things are going to get worse before they get better — because momentum is what moves mountains. Not swinging the first blow.
Perhaps instead of new resolutions you just need to take the next step from where you are right now. Instead of deciding that you need something new and magical and hopeful in your life, you just need to do what you know you should be doing already.
Shuffling along. Moving forward. Just not stopping.
The key to success is to maintain your momentum.
Getting started is the hardest part of getting to where you want to be. Building up enough power and planning and potential to break past the barriers holding you back. But when you’re already moving, it’s easier to change course. To adapt. To prioritize. Because you have momentum.
And that momentum is what propels you towards where you want to be.
So maybe it’s time to stop resolving and just keep moving.
Maybe it’s time to stop flailing wildly in the dark for a magical elixir and just do the unglamorous job of grinding out what needs to be done each day.
After all, if you keep moving towards where you want to be you’ll eventually get there.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Thomas Edison was a great inventor.  But Thomas Edison was a greater salesperson.  He and his team may have invented the electric light bulb, but without the support and resources (read investment) of others, that idea wouldn’t have moved forward from his team.  The idea looks obvious now, but all successful new ideas look good with the 20/20 perspective of looking backwards.
Much of the writing and thinking about creativity is about getting the idea.  While getting the idea is a necessary seed for the process, in the end you must be successful in convincing, persuading and yes, selling your creative ideas if you want them to be used and applied.
The time will come, sooner or later, when you have a great, new idea that you want to persuade others to support, provide resources for or buy. If you don’t sell it, it is almost like you never had the idea in the first place.
Here are some suggestions on how to help others see what you already see – and sell them on your creative idea.

  1. Start by understanding their perspective.  You already understand and are excited by your idea and its prospects.  Remember that they aren’t there yet mentally (that is why you are having a conversation with them).  Don’t make a presentation, have a conversation.  And don’t make it about your idea, but about them and their needs.  Understand what their perspective is first and craft your whole plan based on them and their needs.
  2. Connect your idea to pain they experience.  You are likely enamored by the benefits of your idea.  Others care less about that than about reducing the pain, frustration, and challenges they face.  Know what their pain is, then help them see how your idea will alleviate that pain.
  3. Tell a story.  Stories are a powerful communication tool.  But don’t make it about you and your idea (or how you came up with the idea).  Make them the star of your story – and how your idea solves their problems and makes their life better.
  4. Show them the end result. Help people see the idea in action and what it will do in the world.  Once you have identified and alleviated pain, now you can talk bigger picture benefits of how the world is different because of your idea.  We think in pictures so if you help people see the outcome in a vivid three-dimensional picture, your message will be more compelling.
  5. Be enthusiastic.  Be sold on the idea yourself.  If not, you have already lost.  Think about it – are you drawn to people who have a genuine passion and belief in what they are talking about?   (So will the people you are trying to persuade.)  You can’t use your attitude and passion alone – it must be connected to the other items on this list – but without it, you will be far less successful.
  6. Be patient.  Give people time. The minute you share your creative idea people may not immediately jump up and say “let’s do it!”  Be patient both in the moment and as people have time to think about it.
  7. Be Persistent. Patience is important but patience with persistence is more effective.  Follow-up with people as they have time to think about your idea.  Ask them follow-up questions to better understand their concerns and to further clarify your vision. If your idea is worth the effort, make the effort.
Giving opens up the door to receiving. You have so many opportunities to give every day.
Give kind words. Give a smile. Give appreciation and love. Give compliments. You can give courtesy to other motorists while you are driving. You can give a smile to the car parking attendant. You can give a warm greeting to the newspaper stand person or the person who makes your coffee. You can give by allowing a stranger to go ahead of you into an elevator, and you can give by asking which floor they are going to and pressing the button for them. If someone drops something you can give a helping hand and pick it up for them. You can give warm embraces to those you love. And you can give appreciation and encouragement to everyone.
There are so many opportunities for you to give and thereby open the door to receiving.
When agriculture was the secret to survive, farmers understood the value of sunlight. You could only work while the sun was shining so a typical day was from “sun up” to “sun down”.
When the sun went down, you stopped working. Whether you wanted to keep working or not, you had to stop. You were forced to stop.
Sunlight was the key to success .
And you only had so much of it.
Thousands of years later the science of agriculture hasn’t changed all that much. You still have a limited amount of sunlight in which to work.
Despite modern inventions and automated technology, we have not figured out a way to improve the practicality of getting things done while there is still time to get them done.
That truth is relevant in any industry in any time.
You might be tired. You might be sore from working hard every previous day for as long as you can remember. You might be depressed, angry, or too financially strapped to focus on the task ahead of you. But as long as you have sunlight, you have an opportunity to change things.
You have the possibility to do enough, fast enough to reap a harvest you could only otherwise dream about.
Sunlight is all the inspiration you need to change the course of history.
That’s your opportunity today. Right now. This very moment.
From dusk till dawn each moment you live is a sacred opportunity for you to improve your harvest.
But you have to work while the sun is shining. Some days the sun won’t come out. The skies will be darkened with the clouds. Storms will fill the sky, threatening your very existence.
What you have done to this point will have to be enough to carry you through until the sun shines bright again. Which is why what you have to do has to be done today.
While the Sun is still shining. Why you still have a chance to sow seeds that can make a difference in the days to come.
Long term relationships depend on your authenticity.
 
Being authentic when you are selling means actually possessing the attributes or characteristics you claim or demonstrate. It means you are sincere, free from dishonesty and that you are true to your own personality and character. Being authentic makes being congruent throughout the business development process easy.
 
When you listen to a prospect your interest needs to be genuine. You know when someone is being insincere and so do your clients. You will probably have met people who can be quite good at convincing others of their sincerity and apparent genuine interest. Those people find it difficult to build long-term trusted relationships because their lack of authenticity is soon found out. They may be able to start relationships but their lack of sincerity ends that relationship pretty quickly.
 
Being successful in sales doesn't come from being slick or pushy, or copying someone else. That never works because people can sense you're not yourself.  
 
The key is to understand who you are and be yourself.
 
Sales success begins with being who you are. It's really is as simple as that. The prospect will come to you because they're attracted to your authenticity. When you're being real, your honesty and trust shines through, and people are drawn to you.
"Happiness is not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort."

Sunday, January 19, 2014

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I didn’t want a speech.
I only wanted to buy.
I was motivated to buy, but then why couldn’t I buy?
It’s simple: The person I was talking to on the phone was determined to read through his entire script.
We’ve all been there as a customer and yet I have a feeling we have also been there as a salesperson. No finger pointing. Instead, I’ll point to myself and admit I’ve done it.
There have undoubtedly been more than a few occasions where I’ve talked too much and, as a result, sabotaged or delayed closing a sale.
Think about this: Do you want to buy from somebody who won’t shut up? No! Then why do salespeople talk too much?
I think it comes down to one thing: Insecurity.
Salespeople who talk too much are simply insecure and the way they deal with being insecure is by never giving up control. This means one thing. They do all the talking…and talking…and still more talking.
For your next sales call, try a few things.
First, measure the amount of time you’re talking versus the amount of time the customer is talking.
Second, be conscious of the number of times you interrupt the customer. Surprisingly, I’ve found salespeople cutting off customers far more than we realize. We do it out of a fear the customer is going to get control of the conversation.
Skip the sales speech.
In fact, even skip the script. Make the sales call a conversation.
If it sounds creepy, maybe it’s your confidence or lack of confidence. As I look back on some of my past sales calls that came across more as a sales speech, it was my lack of confidence.
The correlation is scary. The lower the level of confidence, the higher the likelihood the sales call will be a sales speech.