People sometimes say “There’s a born  salesman!” But I’ve never yet read or heard in the news of someone who  gave birth to a sales person, writes Robert Clay of Marketing Wizdom.
Nor  have ever I heard of someone who gave birth to a lawyer, or a doctor,  or for that matter a criminal. Birth is given to boys and girls;  everything after that is down to choices that are made and skills that  are learned. And sales skills are life skills.
Many  people would never view themselves as a sales person. Yet any time  you’re in a conversation in which you try to express an opinion or  influence an event, you’re actually selling.
In  reality everyone is constantly trying to sell an idea, a belief, a  proposition, an opinion or a goal. We all use sales skills throughout  the day, every day. You use it on your spouse or partner, your kids,  your colleagues, your neighbours, your friends, your parents, people you  meet, when you buy different products or services, or when you go out  for a meal.
There isn’t a single area  of your life where you cannot benefit from sales skills. Teachers use  sales skills every day. Preachers use sales skills. Police officers use  sales skills. Mother Teresa used sales skills. And sales people use  sales skills. Regardless of what you do, sales skills will increase your  probability of success and your ability to motivate, instruct,  encourage, coach, communicate and reach people.
Increasing  your skill and awareness, and doing the same for everyone in your team  can therefore boost your business to new heights of success. It is  relatively easy to do this and it can produce an instantaneous  improvement.
The amazing thing is  that hardly anyone in business has ever had formal training in selling  technique or strategy. Most people don’t understand the psychology of  how people make decisions. Nor do they understand the dynamics of  persuasion and influence. Yet they’re invariably in a business where  persuasion, influence and selling are critical factors for the success  of that business.
It’s as if they  think that by divine guidance everything will be OK for them, and  they’ll suddenly wake up one morning with these supremely competent  selling skills. Of course, it doesn’t happen that way, does it?
Don’t blindly do what’s always been done
It  starts with sales training. But that’s where things often start to go  wrong. Most businesses are guilty of using a “tribal” method of  training, i.e. passing information from person to person in the company,  which leaves you at the mercy of knowledge and expertise that becomes  weaker, more watered down and less relevant each time one person passes  it to another.
Granted, experience  can be an excellent teacher. But doing what has always been done is  often not the answer, especially in today’s fast-changing world.
To  make the point, I love a story related by Chet Holmes about a woman  whose husband was watching her prepare a roast. At one point, she took a  large knife and sliced off the two ends of the cut of meat. He asked  her, “Why do you cut the ends off the roast?” She replied, “My mother  always did it this way.”
But the  question stuck in his mind. He really couldn’t see any reason why  cutting off the ends would make a better-tasting roast, and it certainly  wasted plenty of perfectly good meat.
That  night it so happened that his wife’s mother was joining the couple for  dinner. As they sat down and his wife brought out the roast, the husband  asked, “Why did you teach your daughter to slice both ends off of the  roast?” The mother, a lovely lady over 90 years old, replied, “Well,  when we were young we could only afford a tiny little apartment and a  tiny little oven. We could never fit the whole roast in that tiny oven,  so we just lopped off the ends.”
By  learning how to sell from your predecessor you may be just blindly doing  what’s always been done and throwing out a large percentage of your  prospects or business.
Yet developing  your selling skills and those of everyone in your team can be one of  the easiest, most powerful and most significant instant transformations  your business will ever embark on. It all starts with an understanding  of what constitutes effective selling.
What is effective selling?
Effective  selling is NOT just a matter of learning a sales spiel, having the gift  of the gab or using clichéd or manipulative techniques.
Instead  it is the process of leading, guiding, educating and directing your  buyers more than anyone else might do to help them solve a problem or  achieve a desired outcome.
The finest  sales people in the world are helpful, not pushy. Some of the highest  performing sales people are introverts, not the stereotypical  extraverts. The most important attribute of any sales person is their  attitude. The best sales people believe in the value of what they do and  in their product or service … and their most important skill is to ask  the right questions and listen to their buyer’s responses.
The  right questions will vary depending on the product or service, but in  general terms they will work with their buyers, nurturing and learning  about them to identify exactly what those buyers are looking for, what  problems or concerns they want to solve and what outcomes they’re  seeking.
Then, and only then, a good  salesperson will provide meaningful recommendations, suggestions,  counsel, direction and advice on the buyer’s buying decisions and the  products and services they should choose and the strategies they should  use based on their personal experience of what actually works.
This  allows their buyers to make an informed decision based on what is in  their best interest. And of course a good salesperson also needs to know  how and when to ask for the order!
None of this is particularly mysterious or difficult … and anyone can be trained to sell effectively in this manner.
Learning  to sell this way is probably the easiest, most powerful and most  significant instant transformation your business will ever embark on  because the moment your staff are better trained in selling principles,  methods and understandings, they’ll handle every prospect, lead or  enquiry they ever deal with more effectively.
Do you agree with this definition of effective selling? Please rate the article and add your thoughts and comments below.http://marketingwizdom.com/archives/1588
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