Why did I choose this resource?
I chose this resource to learn different sales methods and how they were developed.
What did you learn from it?
I learned different sales methods, how they were invented, and which sales scenarios they work best for.
Key Knowledge
- The Four Basic Sales Groups
- Process Oriented
- Most used
- Specific steps
- Easy to explain and measure
- Works well with complex products or teams
- Relationship-driven
- Bond formed with client
- Relies on salesperson, not product
- More repeat business
- Works well for selling commodities or intangibles, consulting services
- Linguistic
- Specific words and phrases used during the sale to influence a buyer’s decision
- Communicate messages more effectively
- Tactical
- Sales techniques
- Performance boosting skills
- Training targets the sale person’s weak areas
- Process Oriented
- Joseph Crane’s Process – “Consultive”
- Identify the customer’s problems.
- What is there biggest woe?
- Develop a specific value proposition.
- Know your potential client!
- Show how the solution fits.
- How does your product or service solve the clients problem?
- Ask for the order.
- Do not wait for the client to tell you they want your product or service.
- Identify the customer’s problems.
- Dale Carnegie’s “6 Ways to Make People Like You”
- Become genuinely interested in other people.
- Smile!
- Use the person’s name.
- Listen. Encourage the person to speak about themselves.
- Converse about the person’s interests.
- Make the person feel significant while being sincere.
- Elmer Wheeler Sales Pointers
- “Don’t sell the steak, sell the sizzle”
- What is your products main appeal.
- “Don’t write – telegraph”
- Spark a customer’s interest quickly and with few words.
- “Say it with flowers”
- Don’t just say it, explain it.
- “Don’t ask if – ask which!”
- Offer a choice instead of asking an open ended question.
- “Watch your bark!”
- Use more than your words, communicate with your voice, delivery, body language, and facial expressions.
- “Don’t sell the steak, sell the sizzle”
- Joe Girard “The Greatest Salesman in the World”
- Likeable
- Mirrored clients speech and dress
- Listened intently to prospects
- Made use of his entire day
- Offered “samples”
- Nurtured every lead
- Kept in touch with clients, sent greeting and birthday cards
- Invented the “Law of 250”
How are you using what you learned?
I am using what I learned to improve our sales process and client relationships.
Key Changes / Key Actions
- Develop a sales pitch
- Send greeting and birthday cards to clients
Source
- Name : The Giants of Sales
- Author : Tom Sant
- getAbstract.com: Link to Book