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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Straightforward Sales Steps

by Rick Baker
On Dec 28, 2012

In simple terms the Sales Steps are:

  1. Start: contact some Leads
  2. Qualify: determine if those Leads contain Opportunities
  3. Propose: when those Leads contain Opportunities, present Proposals
  4. Close: when it is clear the Proposals are embraced by your clients, Close the Deals
  
Start: We could add a whole bunch of details. We could try to anticipate every possibility around people's behaviour. We could philosophize at length about sales process and messages. We could let uncertainties baffle and stall us. We could weigh the merits of social-media this and traditional networking that.

But, if we want to make sales then sooner or later we will have to Start. That happens when we make contact with at least one other person. We have choices on how we make that contact. We need to consider some of those action-choices, predict some scenarios of how things might unfold under each of the action-choices, perform some of the actions to test the action-choices, measure the results, and keep doing this testing until the most successful Start action-choices are confirmed. Those most-successful Start choices should then serve as the foundation, your process to Start sales. Start is a distinct piece of sales process. And, it should be measured and tested that way.

Qualify is the sales step that separates possible/likely client-people from the people who will not be a client, for one reason or another. When we Qualify prospective client-people we must consider, at least:

  • Emotions - your emotions and the prospective clients' emotions. Some argue that emotions are not important...remove those people from your company because you do not have the time or energy to correct the problems they will create for you and your clients.
  • Relationships - yes, I recognize some people think relationships do not matter anymore...strike those people from your list of prospective clients because you cannot afford to serve them.
  • Needs - your needs and the prospective clients' needs. Needs will be heavily laced with emotions...that can make them very hard to understand. Start with yourself. Consider your needs and what drives them. After you take the time to do some introspection and you understand the complexity of your needs then you will have a better chance of understanding other people's needs.
  • Money - your money and the prospective clients' money. Money serves two roles: (1) it facilitates the exchange of value by providing a benchmark and (2) it provides a great excuse for not making purchases [and, similarly, a great excuse for not making sales].
  • Performance - what?, when?, where?, how?, quality, delivery, service, etc. These qualification details are the simplest part of the sale. Make sure they do not creep toward complexity.

Propose: A sales proposal is a process that informs, entertains, touches the emotions, and helps the client take purchasing action. A proposal should be clear, concise, pointed and it should include:
  1. What? - A statement of the problem/opportunity (the two sides of the same coin). This statement will include your Key Insight.
  2. Why? - Why it's worth solving/winning (dimensions things and puts them into perspective)
  3. Who? Who is the competition and the prospective clients' competitive status (quantitative & qualitative assessment of 'belief' systems - tangible and perceived - in play)
  4. How? How to address the problem/opportunity and beat the competition (the key elements of the value proposition and 'differentiators')
  5. The Plan - The roadmap (key activities and milestones over the next significant period of time)
 
 Close: In order to Close a sale the salesperson needs 4 things:
  1. Talent - each salesperson needs to spend time assessing and working to understand his or her unique talents
  2. Specialized Knowledge -  the company [through Strategic Planning & Marketing study] and the salespeople [on their own initiate] must gather focused specialized knowledge and insight
  3. Skill - each salesperson must practice all sales steps and actions until they become part of his or her nature
  4. Opportunity - timing is critical...sensitivity to 'best timing' can be intuitive ['natural-born salespeople'] and it can be learned by anyone who is truly committed to succeeding in a sales role

 

 


Tags:

Sales | Sales

Thought Tweet #639

by Rick Baker
On Dec 27, 2012

Thought Tweet #639 One thing I've learned about drawing lines in the sand: before you draw them, set your Master Rules

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Note to self...

Know the rules you want to live by....your Master Rules

Anticipate possible situations & predict a set of outcomes...'scenarios'.

Visualize how people will feel and act.

Visualize how you will feel and act.

Do these things before drawing lines.

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Master Rules | Thought Tweets

Getting the People part right

by Rick Baker
On Dec 27, 2012

Business contains only 3 things: People, Process, & Situations

And in this new era, if leaders don't get the People part right - their businesses fail.

That last sentence was qualified by the words "in this new era". In this new era, if leaders don't get the People part right then their businesses will fail. 

Q: What's changed? 

Q: What's escalated to importance of getting the People part right?

A1: Technology has changed & escalated. 

A2: People have changed & escalated.

Handful of examples & explanations:

  • Technology has changed: this point can be summed up in one word - Google. 
  • The pace of Technology has escalated exponentially - from slide rule to electronic calculator to PC to iPhone and in less than 40 years.
  • Technology & People have changed: from closed/corporate-created Encyclopedia Britannica to open/volunteer-created Wikipedia in less than a generation. [the "Information Free-For-All"]
  • People have changed: they read differently now...tending to scan and look for small bullets of information rather than wading through paragraphs. 
  • The pace of People's lives has escalated: from multiple cars taking-kids-to-sports-events-and-lots-of-other-after-hours-activities to 5,000 advertising hits per day, [the "Attention-Getting Dilemma"...the "Attention Free-For-None"].

Yes, Leaders need to know their People are experiencing:

  1. an Information Free-For-All
  2. an Attention Free-For-None.
These are New Things [in the context of People Only Do 3 Things: Good Habits, Bad Habits, & New Things].

People struggle with New Things.

Leaders are uniquely positioned to help People remove/reduce their struggles.

Helping People understand and handle the Information Free-For-All and the Attention Free-For-None situation as it applies to business, that's one way Leaders can get the People part right.

Tags:

Business Contains Only 3 Things | Change: Creating Positive Change | Leaders' Thoughts

Thought Tweet #638

by Rick Baker
On Dec 26, 2012

Thought Tweet #638 Ernest Seller's barber is an ex-boxer. Ernest is at the barber shop with him now...about to get an uppercut.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Not sure why we celebrate boxing every year...anyhow...it always reminds me of when I was a kid and wanted to try my hands at boxing...had a problem with my hands....the ref kept stepping on them.

 

Tags:

Ernest Seller | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #637

by Rick Baker
On Dec 25, 2012

Thought Tweet #637 MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Tags:

Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #636

by Rick Baker
On Dec 24, 2012

Thought Tweet #636 Last Christmas, two snowmen were chatting in Ernest Seller's front yard. One said, "You're right…I smell carrots too!"

Tags:

Ernest Seller | Thought Tweets

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.