Here is a brand new article
by Linda and Art. You can be the first to publish it. Sales
and selling have become even more important in our business
organizations. Just the sheer number of new books and articles
demonstrate the need to learn more about effective sales
methods.
Below is the article. As it says; "It is revolutionary!"
Feel free to format the article anyway that it best fits
your ezine. Please let us know when you plan to publish
it.
Dr. Tom Carlson (tomcarlson@styleworks4u.com)
A Revolutionary 'NEW' Dimension In Sales
Make many more closings in the same amount of time!
By Art Nelson and
Linda Carlson
Phase I
Phase I: Learning the Product is the first thing Paul
does as he begins his career in sales. This 'newbie' envisions
three major factors that will determine his success or failure
in sales. They are:
1. Knowledge of his product.
2. Knowledge of the benefits that it offers to his prospects.
3. How well he communicates that knowledge and benefits
to his prospects.
Most salespeople don't have a problem with product knowledge.
The company usually spends plenty of time and money to assure
the competence level of its sales force. So, Paul is fine
at 1, 2, and since his mother said, "You can sell an
icebox to an Eskimo," he figures he will do well at
3.
The problem shows up when Paul (now on his own) tries to
share this knowledge with his prospects. He finds that some
prospects get really 'turned on' by the product and its
benefits; but there are other prospects that never seem
to get interested or 'understand.' Talking to them is like
"talking to brick walls."
He doesn't understand why every prospect doesn't insist
on purchasing. He is warm and charming every time! It must
be the way he closes. There has to be a secret he needs
to discover.
Phase II
Upon realizing this, Paul enters Phase II of his career:
The Search For Enlightenment. The great question of a salesman's
life haunts him on his prospecting calls. In the face of
obvious need, why doesn't my prospect buy?
"He needs this product. I qualified him carefully.
Why can't I close him?"
So, Paul begins reading, listening to tapes, attending
seminars, etc. for every gimmick that comes along promising
the "Secret of Closing."
Phase III
After a season of this, he enters Phase III of his career:
The Stasis Of Superstition.
Paul (like most sales people) is making 2 or 3 sales for
ten presentations. But since he really doesn't understand
why he sells sometimes and sometimes doesn't, he "freezes"
or "cans" his presentation. He is afraid to change
it because he might mess up his success so, he plays the
'numbers game.'
Paul falls into a pattern of expecting to close 'just so
many' sales. No amount of reading, listening to tapes, or
taking sales seminars changes his pattern for long. He is
hoping to keep enough prospects on the line that the ones
he doesn't sell won't really matter. He'll still be a 'successful'
salesman.
Phase IV
Before ICTech® (Individualized Communication Technology)
most of us (salespeople) ended our career growth in Phase
III. Now with the Natural Styles strategy used in ICTech®
we can move into Phase IV: Natural Persuasion.
Knowing how the 5 styles are born to process information,
allows the salesperson to tailor his presentation for the
format most easily understood and agreed upon by the prospect.
It doesn't matter how well you know your product or how
smooth your presentation is. Until your prospect UNDERSTANDS
your product and its applications for him you won't close
a sale.
Understanding the strategy lets you dispense with gimmicks
and integrate all of your sales knowledge into a cohesive
whole that you will automatically adjust in each new situation.
This means more sales! And more satisfied customers!
How ICTech® works:
You're a salesperson whose Natural Style is 'Single.' What
do you do with a 'Multiple' style prospect?
*Don't bore her with too many details; give her the overview
of the product and its effects on her. Be sure to ask her
what this product could do for her or in some way let her
think this whole thing is her idea.
*The fastest way to lose this prospect is oversell - too
many details. You are 'telling' not 'selling.'
Now reverse the example. You're a 'Multiple' salesperson
and your prospect is a 'Single.' What do you do?
*Don't overpower him with too many examples or applications
of the product. Let them apply to him. Again, 'sell' don't
'tell.' Concentrate on the strongest feature of your product
and give as many details as possible.
*Give him plenty of time to think; don't rush him. The
fastest way to lose this prospect is to appear too vague
because you're trying to give him an overview and he wants
an explicit example.
Just a couple of simple examples, but Paul practices the
simple strategies of ICTech® and it has made him one
of his industry's 'hottest' sales people.
Many sales people who use ICTech® close 5 to 7 of
ten presentations. What would happen for any salesperson
who could cut through the mental baggage of a prospect and
give a presentation with a 50% to 70% chance of closing?
Simple. Revolutionary!
At Nelson is an entrepreneur and consultant in various areas
of media organization. He found ICTech in a public workshop,
and since has been learning more about it and applying it
in his businesses Linda Blew Carlson, is President of FOCUS
I, Inc. a company dedicated to supporting American businesses
by helping them find innovative ways to individualize their
service. Reach her at http://www.styleworks4u.com/pages/home-page.html
or lbc@styleworks4u.com
note: For additional articles that may be published (many
not yet published), go to http://styleworks4u.com/pages/home-page.html
and click on “articles.”
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