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Selling
In The New Millennium: Old School vs. New School
by
Ronald E. Karr, Karr Associates, Inc.
Are you
still using the old sales techniques that you learned when you
began selling? Do
they not seem to be working for you anymore?
The truth is, in order to keep up with the new
millennium’s fast-paced competition, we need to leave our old
sales techniques behind. These
new school selling concepts are the wave of the future — you
need them to save your business, to retain your existing
customers, and establish new ones.
In the old
school of selling, sales representatives were taught skills that
dealt more with tasks than with purposes.
Their training and levels of expertise were in the areas
of prospecting, influencing, demonstration techniques and dozens
of nifty closing statements or ploys.
From my early days selling copiers, I can remember having
to memorize a script on how to demonstrate the copier --
complete with hand motions!
And who can
forget those famous "closing scenarios"?
Closing is important, and you still need to ask for the
order. However,
closing today is not a single statement event.
It is a process that starts the very moment you introduce
yourself to your customer.
For the
most part, the old school sales representative is weak in the
areas of qualifying and first impressions.
We used to be taught that to make a good first impression
you needed to strike up a conversation about the latest football
game, or talk about something relative to pictures hanging on
the wall. This was
supposed to help develop a personal relationship.
The truth
is that most customers today don't have time for that.
Their time is so valuable that if you don't instantly
prove to them that you have the potential to become an
invaluable resource, you're history.
If you've gone out to dinner with a prospect or customer,
of course, social conversations are important.
But in the workplace, stick to business.
So -- how
do you develop an invaluable relationship in today’s world?
The answer lies in the way you attract the interest of
your customer, and in the kind of qualifying you do early on in
the sales call. Attracting
attention is not simply a matter of making arresting
"opening statements." Intriguing and interesting
questions will also attract the customer's attention. The right kinds of questions will dramatically and
effectively raise the possibility that you just may be that
invaluable resource.
For some
reason, we salespeople feel most comfortable when we are
speaking. We feel
we are in control. The
truth of the matter is we are less in control of the
relationship when we are speaking. The strength you need comes from being attentive to the
answers from the questions you ask.
The old
school of sales also concentrated on closing new business,
rather than on nurturing existing business so that they would
provide greater sources of revenue.
That's why many industries, including the
telecommunication industry, are suffering from the
"churn" syndrome: a constant influx of new customers,
while existing customers are heading in another direction.
Here, customer is loyal only until a better offer comes
along.
Imagine
what could happen if you created your own "positive churn
effect" by luring away your competitor's customers?
Not by lowering your prices or providing monetary
incentives, but by acting as the invaluable resource they’ve
always needed? Your
existing customers will be likely to stay put, because the
relationship they have with you – a trusted professional ally
-- will be so important that they won't want to give it up.
Your business in this case will only become susceptible
to competitive pressures when your competition offers a better
overall relationship than you offer.
By relentlessly monitoring your customers' needs and
wants, you will be able to the make the appropriate
modifications to your service offering, and stay ahead of your
competition.
In the new
school of selling, the most effective salespeople are
concentrating more on purpose than on task.
They are more interested in what happens on the sales
call than in simply carrying out the act of making them.
They concentrate on aligning themselves with their
customer's goals and challenges, in order to be perceived as
being an invaluable resource -- someone the customer wouldn't
switch from unless a better overall relationship emerged.
The results are an increase in sales from existing
customers and an increase in profitability, as the buying
decision moves away from being commodity-based and toward a
value-based model. This of course does not mean that you can charge exorbitant
prices; you still have to be competitive.
But you won't always have to be the lowest cost supplier.
Building
your business by aligning it with your customer’s goals, by
finding out where your customer is going, and by giving your
customers what they need, in the way they want it, works for all
sectors in our economy today, period. That’s one of the most profitable concepts you can adopt
for the new millennium — for yourself and your customers.
©
1999, 2000 by Karr Associates, Inc.
This
article is excerpted from Karr’s Titan
Principle™- The Number One Secret to Sales Success.
Ron Karr is a professional speaker, consultant, trainer
and author who specializes in helping organizations to dominate
their marketplace and assisting individuals to get closer to the
people they serve. Ron’s Titan
Principle™ has generated tremendous results for his
clients in the areas of sales, negotiations and customer
service. Call 800-423-5277, fax 201- 461-5621, or visit Ron’s
website, http://www.ronkarr.com,
for information on results-oriented services and learning tools
(including his books, The
Titan Principle™-The Number One Secret to Sales Success
and The
Complete Idiot’s Guide to Great Customer Service).
To receive a free subscription to Ron’s monthly
Titan E-Report, go to www.ronkarr.com
and click on free subscriptions.
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