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Show me a sales person. Take away accountability, and I’ll show you a marketing person.
* Invest in Relationships: So how many new people did you meet this week? How many cards did you collect at the events you attended? How many acquaintances did you check in with, just to say hello? That guy who e-mailed you looking for a job… did you offer to have coffee with him? If not, you should have. When he gets one — and he will — I promise he’ll remember you.
People who sell do all of these things, and the very best do them with genuine altruism and a desire to help others. In the end your ability to surface opportunities is a straight-line function of the number of people who are thinking about you this week, and job one is to make that happen among as large a group as possible, week in and week out.
* Look for Problems, not Opportunities: Opportunities knock, but when you look through the peephole, they’re often disguised as other people’s problems. People who can’t sell sometimes think it’s because they too rarely “find” opportunities. That’s nonsense. Fact is, most opportunities are made, by people who are very good at uncovering problems.
So look for problems. Walk in other people’s shoes. Make their problem yours, and really apply yourself to the problems best suited to your unique talents and experience. It may take some time, but good things will happen. Trust me.
* Get the First Meeting Right: The only “sales meeting” you really have is the first meeting. You have 5 objectives in this meeting, in this order: Establish warmth -Demonstrate you’re not a dick. To do this, it helps not to be a dick.
Establish competence -The first question on the table in every meeting is “Why should I listen to you?” Bring some content to the dance; a slide or better yet a story that shows you to be someone worthy of attention in your prospect’s busy schedule.
Find and confirm pain -“Pain” is what sales guys call The Problem, as it is perceived by the prospect. Have you asked what the problem is, exactly? Can you re-state it, in a way that makes them go, “Yes, exactly!” If not, slide after slide about how great you are wastes everyone’s time.
Gather inputs for buying vision -“Buying Vision” is what sales guys call the mental picture of what your customer wants to buy. This will inevitably be different in small but important ways from what you want to sell. Closing that gap is what sales is all about.
Get a concrete next step -Finally, leave with an action item. I hate when people come back from a pitch meeting and talk about what a “great meeting” it was. What’s the next step, Ziglar? If there’s not a clear one, it was most definitely NOT a great meeting.
*Learn how to close: I’m not talking about high pressure tactics here, I’m talking about following up to see where things are. Ask for the business. Show in your words and more importantly through the sustained intensity of your interest that you want the gig. If you don’t do that you don’t want it, and nobody gives their business to someone who’s disinterested in it.
*Finally, deliver: In the end, you need to deliver the goods. It’s a small world, and everyone that matters in it is on LinkedIn. Deliver on your promises and do right by people, and one day you’ll turn around and be someone worthy of trust. And there is no more useful sales tool than that.
Portions of your writing do not appear to be original. Your text appears to originate from the following article that was posted sometime in August 15, 2021: How to be a better marketing person.
I have listed examples below, but there are others.