Achievement of selling “excellence” is most often earned rather than learned. Outstanding professionals continuously seek to hone their skills from mistakes made and lessons learned in pursuit of success. Professional sales people in search of extraordinary selling competence are no exception.
There has been an ongoing philosophical argument among sales professionals whether extraordinary sales people are “born or made”. Most think born, because few people can maintain consistent sales generation performance within the same span of time needed to achieve financial and motivational stability.
Since most sales people’s compensation is based on actual sales orders
obtained, not good intentions or positive attitudes, the selling
profession’s relatively high rate of job turnover is most often
validated fraught with intense frustration and an insurmountable
learning curve that crosses many industries, products and services.
Selling “skill” is best achieved via real world practice not sales
training theory, supported by guidance from others who have taken the
same career path previously and are generous enough to share their
learning experiences. This article attempts to guide you past the
“potholes” on the road to selling success. Like most professions, the
most common mistakes made can be boiled down to a short list of
avoidable choices many of us naturally make in our pursuit to make a
living.
10 SELLING MISTAKES YOU DON'T HAVE TO MAKE!
1) Exhibiting Little Self Confidence:
There is no direct place to send you to get more self confidence. The
more you have in selling the better. Most importantly, the more you
exhibit to your existing or potential customer the better your product
or service is perceived by them, the greater your probability of
continued selling success.
2) “Stretching” the Truth:
No one likes getting lied to, especially someone who is about to spend
their hard earned money based on factual liberties told to them from
the sales representative. Maintain your reputation first and foremost;
it supersedes you in every sales call. Honesty should be the first
adjective you want most of your customers to describe you with.
3) NOT Saying “I Don’t Know”, When you Don’t Know:
This is a classic selling mistake! Discipline yourself to admit to your
customer that you don’t know about something … anything! It is most
credible to say, “I don’t know, but I will find out for you”, than to
try to sound like you know what you’re talking about. As you continue
to practice this principle, your knowledge base and your client’s
perception of your expertise will continue to increase.
4) NOT “Looking the Part”:
Selling involves approaching strangers, people who have never met you
before. People naturally base purchase decisions on first impressions.
Look the part you are playing, or better yet, exceed the common “image”
expectation in your industry. Always dress and groom one level above
your targeted audience. It portrays success and gives you an opening
edge over your competition. The least you can do is look like you know
what you are doing!
5) Not Knowing Your Competition:
Any business owner, much less a sales person, should know this common
mistake! Think about it, all you have to be is slightly better than
your most effective competitor to get the order. Proactively research
your competitive companies, but more importantly, master your knowledge
of the specific sales representative you actually compete with – their
habits, strengths, weaknesses, pricing history and selling tendencies.
6) Not “Knowing” Your Product or Service:
Believe it or not, depending most on your product or service knowledge
to get the order is one of the most common mistakes made in selling.
Understanding the common application benefits and associated features
of your offerings is critical, but constantly regurgitating nebulous
product and services details to a customer will quickly send them to
your competitor. Mastering knowledge of your competitor’s offerings is
also critical to selling success.
7) Not “Filling Your Sales Pipeline”:
No matter what you sell, there evolves a consistent selling time cycle
that must become an integral part of your selling process. Knowing how
long it typically takes to get a sales order from initial contact with
the target customer equals your sales pipeline. To maintain a
consistent earnings flow you need to have a constant injection of the
correct number of new sales opportunities going into the front end of
your sales pipeline to get the guaranteed % of orders that will close
coming out.
8) Not Clearly Understanding “Rejection”:
Selling is rejection intensive. It is absolutely critical to understand
and learn to appreciate that a larger percent of potential new
customers will reject you and your offering more than accept it.
Selling is a numbers game and unfortunately to be successful at it you
have to learn that customer rejection is not personal and “no’s” can be
as valuable as “yes’s”!
9) Ineffective Use of Your “Selling Time”:
Many average sales people spend most of there prime selling time every
day, “getting ready to get ready” … filing, driving, typing or sitting
in meetings. Typically from 8AM to 5PM a sales person has only
approximately eight hours to be in front of customers or doing what is
necessary to get in front of customers. Anything that can be done
“after business hours” should be done then and only at that time.
10) Not Having a “Selling System”:
Selling is a DIS-qualification process. If you have not developed a
methodical selling process of disqualifying potential customers, by
systematically defining their problems, their level of commitment and
financial resources to solve the problem, and addressing the purchase
decision process involved, you should stay home! Develop and use a
selling system, refine it continuously, and eventually master it so you
can leverage it over and over without needing to think about it!
Many seasoned sales professionals believe learning from your own “real
time” selling mistakes contributes more to eventual career success than
anything that can be learned from someone else’s experience or
teachings. That may or may not be true, but, if you avoid these 10
common selling mistakes your path to selling success will be much
shorter!
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