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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Do you hire Lieutenant Columbo or Sherlock Holmes for your sales role?

by Rick Baker
On Apr 7, 2011
Lt. Columbo Sherlock Holmes
 
 
To outsiders: he was a real sloppy guy with a terrible memory. Always writing stuff down, always bumbling around, always confused…never threatening…easy to talk with…a little annoying after a while.
 
Inside: a clever stalker who never lost track of what made criminals tick....greed & fear.
 
 
To outsiders: he was really intelligent, dealt with facts. Not afraid to let everyone know how brilliant he was. He was assertive, intimidating, and aloof. Often, he chose to look the other way rather than maintain eye contact.
 
Inside: He dealt with facts and logic. But, when he had to do it...he could get down and dirty and think and act like a criminal. He could fight well. And, he had good informants.
 
So, Columbo or Sherlock Holmes: who is the better sales candidate?
 
Both can succeed in sales roles.
 
Sherlock Holmes is a super analyst. He will know all the details of his services and all the ins and outs of his products. He will be logical and his selling process will be well thought out. He will ask questions with a stern, challenging voice. He will succeed when selling to some technical buyers…people who say things like, “Just give me the facts”.
 
Lt. Columbo is an actor. Proof: he had his own, long-running TV show. He doesn’t take opium like Sherlock Holmes. He never gets stressed out because he performs his role with humility and tremendous people-reading ability. He will observe and listen as clients talk themselves into buying. He will just ask strings of fair, reasonable, and simple questions…until the deal is closed.
 
So – you better hire Lieutenant Columbo.

Tags:

Sales

Sales Tweet #186

by Rick Baker
On Apr 4, 2011
Sales Tweet #186 A salesperson without enthusiasm will be, at best, an order taker.
 
The Thinking Behind the Sales Tweet
A Baker of sales would say, "Enthusiasm is the ingredient that causes sales to rise". Which reminds me…you know why Bakers tend to succeed at selling?...because they sell what is kneaded.

Tags:

Humour | Sales | Thought Tweets

Sales Tweet #179

by Rick Baker
On Mar 24, 2011
Sales Tweet #179 Instead of saying "Thank You", prove your gratitude by delivering a Client to your Client.
 
The Thinking Behind the Sales Tweet
Is there anything your Client would rather receive than a custom-picked Client? For example, would your Client rather have...a piece of your sales literature?...a phone message where you introduce your new product?...a thank you card?...a gift fruit basket?

Tags:

Sales | Thought Tweets

Competing – using a low-Price strategy

by Rick Baker
On Mar 18, 2011
At our Leaders’ workshops we tie two marketing concepts together. The two marketing concepts are ‘the PQS Triangle’ and ‘Differential Advantage’. Both of these concepts are ‘vintage’ marketing thoughts…..things we learned a few decades ago.
 
PQS Triangle is a picture, designed to make it clear businesses can set its marketing strategy based on a combination of Price, Quality, and Service. Rarely, if ever, can a business succeed if its marketing strategy is designed to win at all of P, Q, & S. Put another way – it is virtually impossible to deliver the lowest Price, the highest Quality, and the b set Service all at once. Something has to give. For most of our Clients the thing that has to give is Price: most of our Clients are not in a position to offer the lowest Price.
 
Differential Advantage answers the question: Why do our Clients buy from us rather than do nothing or buy from one of our competitors?
 
When the PQS Triangle and Differential Advantage are combined we have the essence of the marketing strategy.
 
For certain businesses the marketing strategy does contain Price – ie, the business can compete by offering better prices than their competition.
 
We think this is rare [even though we recognize many of our Clients’ Clients want it or demand it].
 
We think many businesses struggle and fail because they use a low-Price strategy when that is a doomed strategy.
 
However, there are 2 scenarios when a business can compete using a low-Price marketing strategy.
 
Those 2 scenarios are:
  1. Volume Leadership scenario: when your business has massive volume you can use your buying clout to reduce your supply costs and you can use ‘economy of scale’ to reduce your operating costs. Then you can reduce your Prices, hold a Price advantage over your competition, and grow your business. Big-box stores can always offer better Prices than boutiques.
  2. Educated Entrepreneurship scenario: when you have obtained specialized knowledge [for example, from being an employee at a big business] you can draw on your specialized knowledge to compete with bigger, less-entrepreneurial or more-bureaucratic businesses. This is how many entrepreneurial businesses get started.
Now – there may be other scenarios where you can use a low-Price marketing strategy and run a profitable and sustainable business.
 
If there are then we would really like to know them.

Tags:

Entrepreneur Thinking | Marketing | Sales

Sales Tweet #174

by Rick Baker
On Mar 17, 2011
Sales Tweet #174 Do you sometimes act like a 6-yr-old soccer player, focusing on the ball instead of the goal?
 
The Thinking Behind the Sales Tweet
Not a bad metaphor. While it is a joy to watch those little players do that in sports games it is no where near as enjoyable watching sales people do it. Just ask a sales manager.

Tags:

Humour | Sales | Thought Tweets

Sales Tweet #171

by Rick Baker
On Mar 14, 2011
Sales Tweet #171 Some sales people are like ship captains in the fog...repeatedly blowing their horns.
 
The Thinking Behind the Sales Tweet
Don’t blow your own horn. That's an old piece of communication wisdom. It appeared in popular-quotes books almost 100 years ago.

Tags:

Humour | Sales | Thought Tweets | Wisdom: Surviving the Test of Time

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