Thirteen Tips to Selling More Successfully as a Trusted Sales
Professional
Do you want to sell more successfully using an honorable and
straightforward approach? Read these thirteen sales tips to help
you be perceived as a trusted sales professional by buyers.
Incorporating these sales tips into your selling process will
differentiate you from the rest and help you sell more
successfully.
1. Attitude can be everything. It is important to remember that
your attitudes drive all actions and these actions are perceived
by buyers as trust-building or trust-breaking. The most
important change you can make to sell more successfully is to
adopt and reinforce attitudes that will lead to actions
resulting in greater levels of trust. Conversely, it is just as
important to "lose the attitudes" that result in actions that
are trust-breaking.
2. Truly believe in the product or service and company for which
you sell. This is a really difficult hurdle for most sellers who
strongly believe in straightforward selling. If you don't
believe your products or services will benefit your buyers, then
you will constantly be in conflict with yourself during the
sales process. If selling using a straightforward platform is
truly important to you, it might be necessary for you to find
another product or service you will better represent to truly be
successful using this approach.
3. Intimately know the product or service and environment in
which you sell. Do you need to be an expert? Maybe not. But it
can only benefit your customer to know as much as possible so
you can identify if your product or service can best meet their
needs. A significant aspect of building trust with your buying
counterparts is quickly establishing credibility. First and
foremost, you should know much more about your products and
services - as well as your competitors' products and services -
than your prospects. Secondly, you should know your customers'
organization and industry and the unique challenges and issues
they face better than any of your competitors. Lastly, "I don't
know" is a very appropriate answer when that is, indeed, the
case. If you're new to a market, letting your potential
customers know that up-front will help lower their expectations
and make you feel more comfortable when giving "I don't know" as
an answer. When you use this response, however, make sure you
offer to find out the answer in a specified timeframe, and then
be sure to keep that promise.
4. Live within your means. It's simple. Don't force yourself
into a position where you "have to make the sale" or you lose
something. For one, prospects don't like to feel like you are
desperate for business. Secondly, if you want to sell using an
honorable approach, it's important to reduce the risk/reward for
a given sales situation. If you typically make only three to
five sales per year and find yourself in serious debt, don't you
think there's a definite likelihood that you might "stretch your
value structure" a bit to make sure you win the sale so that
your debt can be reduced?
5. Focus on helping the prospect rather than making the sale. If
all you're thinking about is making the sale, this will be
perceived negatively by your prospect through your actions. It
doesn't mean you should never think about the sale, it simply
means that you need to focus on the prospect's needs first and
foremost.
6. View yourself as an advisor. This is a different mindset that
may be foreign to a lot of salespeople. If you adopt the mindset
that you're an advisor with the primary goal of identifying and
fulfilling your potential customers needs, your attitudes and
actions will be perceived very differently by your
counterpart(s) than if your view yourself as a sales rep needing
to "overcome the obstacles" and "close the sale."
7. Focus on the long-term. Admittedly, this is difficult. Most
salespeople are used to the frequent calls from sales managers
reminding them that "we've got to make our monthly or quarterly
targets." If you can adopt this attitude, though, you will
likely see higher sales, both short-term and long-term. Buyers
hate to be "closed." If you take a short-term mentality, there's
a high likelihood that buyers will perceive you as trying to
close them - this is trust-breaking and your sales will likely
suffer in the short AND long-term.
8. Some business is not worth pursuing. Most sales managers
probably hate this one. It's important, though, to be realistic
about each sales opportunity. You're not going to win every
sale, so why work under the assumption that you will?
Oftentimes, there are many early indicators that will lead you
to believe that there's a low probability for making the sale.
If that's the case, move on and spend your limited time and
energy on opportunities where there's a higher probability for
success.
9. Tell the prospect if your product or service will not meet
their needs. Once you've had a reasonable opportunity to ask the
appropriate questions, you must be willing to let the prospect
know, as soon as possible, if your product or service will not
meet their needs. This will result in a more efficient buy/sell
process and save both you and the prospect valuable time that
could be better spent elsewhere. The prospect will respect and
probably trust you more for selling in this manner, and very
well may purchase or recommend someone else to purchase from you
in the future.
10. Ask questions, listen, and take notes. Entire books have
been written on this subject. Prior to every prospect meeting,
you should already have a list of at least one dozen questions
to ask. The prospect's response to each of these questions
should oftentimes be followed by one to three additional
questions to drill down to the true issues and needs. Always
take notes. This will show the prospect that you're truly
listening. Also, send your typed notes to the prospect and ask
them to review to ensure that you did indeed "get it right."
11. Follow the 80/20 Rule. When meeting with a potential buyer,
you should try to talk 20% of the time and allow them to talk
80% of the time - a lot of salespeople and sales managers get
this one confused.
12. Be direct. Answer buyer questions directly. Why do you think
there is such a loss in the public's trust with politicians? How
often do they provide a direct answer to a question? Rarely.
Just because most politicians set a poor example, doesn't mean
you should.
13. No "closing." One of the worst things you can do as a
salesperson is to spend a lot of time and effort building trust
with a prospect, only to destroy your "trust factor" towards the
end of a complex sales process. No buyer likes to feel they're
being manipulated or "closed." Make a recommendation, preferably
with several options for the prospect to consider, and ask them
to identify the next steps with a timeline. Tell them you'd
really appreciate their business and ask what next steps you can
take that will be helpful to them.