Real Sales

Beer Salesman
What is “real sales” these days? My email is full of gimmicks and gadgets for avoiding cold calls, getting more followers, flooding myself with leads, and I assume closing more deals. The ironic part is very few of sales wins come from those gimmicky techniques.

Don’t read me wrong, I’m not anti-social Web. I believe these are increasingly powerful tools; however, you are probably in the business of closing deals. So, I want to talk about real sales. Techniques that really close deals.

Getting Involved

The fastest way to land sales is to engage lots of people. That means turning off the TV and getting up off the couch. Get involved in your community, in service organizations, in schools, and in athletics. Customers are people, surround yourself with prospects.

Giving back and helping make our world a little better is humbling and invigorating. It puts your attitude in the right place to generate trust in clients.

Being Nice

You know if you make smiling and being helpful your primary attitudes you will bring deals. Our world is full of hustle and bustle, people stressed out, and folks bee-lining from one task to the next. Your quick smile or a moment of pause to help a passerby will win you sales.

You probably won’t make a sale from that person, but someone else will catch a real glimpse of you–they’ll buy from no one else.

Getting the Word Out

Most first conversations start something like this: “…so what do you do?” Don’t be shy. Make sure you are ready with that one line pitch.

Not, “I sell enterprise software.”

But, something more like…”You know when you book a plane ticket online and you get all your dates picked, selected just the right seat, and entered your credit card? Then it pops up and says ‘unable to process your transaction’–I sell software that makes sure that never happens to a customer.”

They will remember that and tell someone.

Relationships

Nothing produces real sales like relationships. Taking the time to build meaningful relationships will net real long-term results. Relationships are built on things like:

  • Checking in from time to time, for no reason
  • Looking for opportunities for others
  • Putting yourself out a little to help
  • Doing things “on the house” occasionally

Relationships are built on action and engagement, not invoices.

Referrals

Relationships yield referrals and referrals close 90 percent of the time. The biggest mistake most sales people make is mishandling referrals. These are gold–they need to be handled as such. That means:

  • Immediately follow-up and contact with the referral
  • Immediately follow-up with the referrer (don’t forget to say Thank You)
  • Do back flips for the referral–they are the key to more

Nothing a theme here? Real sales come from real people, doing real things, making real contact. Virtual is not real sales, budget your time appropriately.

If you liked this post please sign-up to the RSS feed or get them via email and avoid missing the next Better Closer sales best practice.

Better Sales Techniques

Balloon SalesSales is getting harder as we trudge through the down stroke in the business cycle. Your sales skills have to be stronger than ever. Here are a few sales techniques to sharpen your edge today.

Getting Call Backs

Piercing the voicemail shield or corporate gatekeeper is tough. We know that talking to people always beats email and appointments trump all. But, how do you start the ball rolling to that sales appointment goal?

It all starts with the call back.

Most messages start with, “Hi, this is Bill Rice and I am from Kaleidico…” That is about as far as they get, and the response? Delete–”I don’t care who or what you are.”

The secret to a call back is hooking them with them. Start with a little hip pocket research. Find a like commonality between you and something on their LinkedIn profile, something you found in a press release, or a recent Twitter message.

This is going to have a higher probability of dodging the delete button: “Hi, Mr. Smith I see you just transitioned from EDS to SAIC and I think I might have a solution that would help you break into that new Homeland Security initiative.”

Keys to Getting Call Backs

  • Know something about the prospect
  • Start with them, then introduce yourself
  • Make it easy to connect

Audience Building, Not Networking

I am hear to tell you networking is a waste of time. However, before you start trashing your LinkedIn, Twitter, and email contact manager let me clarify.

Collecting business cards and online friends is fruitless if you are expecting them to throw referrals and introductions at you. Like the call back, the classic approach to networking has been to gather people and start asking for favors.

Try this instead–build an audience. This sales technique is one in which you share value and relationships in such a way that people are “watching” you. They want to know what you will share next, listening for what you think is important, and hoping they might be the next one to get your light.

When you build networks audiences in this way your request for an introduction feels almost like you are doing them a favor.

Keys to Building Audiences

  • Add value and content
  • Engage and participate
  • Lend a helping hand

Targeting Opportunities, Not Numbers

Often we get focused on the numbers game in sales we for how to target. Don’t get me wrong, surfing the web waiting for providence doesn’t land deals. However, a smart strategy of eavesdropping and monitoring for opportunities can strengthen your sales pipeline.

The key to making this sales technique work is setting up efficient listening posts. Social media and the dramatic shift to Web communities has delivered remarkable sales opportunity. Everyone is talking about their projects, needs, and pain point. You simply need to listen.

Smart Tools for Targeting Sales Opportunity

  • Google Alerts
  • RSS Readers
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed

Writing Great Emails

Email is still one of the most important sales tools, but how do you write a good one?

So many of our emails are basic communication–quick replies and simple updates–conversation stoppers. This causes problems when we switch gears, into sales mode. We are hoping to start conversations. This is a critical sales technique

Start with the subject line. This may be all they read. Make it count. I like to try to cram credibility and interest in that short line. For example:

  • “Bill Rice suggested I call about content management”
  • “Did you see the new EHR legislation? Will it impact you?”
  • “Quick question about HIPAA compliance–45% fall short”

Hopefully, you can tease an opening with specific and timely information in the subject line. It’s open. Immediately set the hook. I think the best way to do that is with a specific event or referral that makes your cold email seem, “Well timed.” Don’t waste the opening with an introduction. Suck them in with why you emailed them and how you are going to help them.

If you get them all the way through the email don’t forget to close with good (multiple) contact points for follow-up. Then close with one last pause and value statement. I still like to use a postscript for that job

Keys to a Great Email

  • Credible, interest generating subject line
  • Hook them with specifics
  • Don’t forget to close with contact information
  • P.S. them with one last nugget of value

What are your Better Sales Techniques?

If you liked this post please sign-up to the RSS feed or get them via email and avoid missing the next Better Closer sales best practice.

about |  contact |  disclosure