Confucius observed, "He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger."
Learning and thinking are fundamentally linked. They need to be.
Let me state a working assumption, that is, people who choose to work in sales have been through a selection process to identify competencies and the individual has a realistic understanding of the sales role, responsibilities, and challenges.
When starting a sales career, sales training plays a critical role.
Development usually focuses on three key areas, technique, process, and
product. Layered over these are marketing components that address
networking, prospecting and promotion. Together they form the technical
components of sales training. Once mastered, they only improve with
practice and repetition.
Arguably, the technical learning described in the preceding paragraph
is not difficult. Product knowledge may be the exception as product can
be complex. The topics have been studied and presented over many years.
They have evolved and adapted but there have been few changes to the
fundamental concepts of selling. Perhaps the last major change was the
shift to needs based selling and the impact of a more informed consumer
due to greater access to information on the Internet.
So then, has the art of selling been perfected?
Perhaps, but some say it's all for naught if you haven't first tackled the way you think!
In fact my experience suggests that how think should be an "up front" consideration.
Before getting on the road to technical development, there are real
advantages to individuals and their organizations if both appreciated
the impact effective thinking has on learning. Imagine an individual
who is negative, pessimistic, lacks self-esteem, and procrastinates.
Compare that person to a positive, self-starting optimist who is full
of confidence and believes in himself or herself.
How you think, or your mindset, sets the tone for what follows in your
career. It sets the tone for how you learn, how you interact with peers
as well as prospects and clients.
In the perfect world, we would only hire those with a positive and
optimistic attitude. We attempt to avoid recruiting those with a
negative mindset who don't have a strong belief in self and who are not
achievement oriented. In reality, we encounter individuals all along
the spectrum.
The good news is someone with a negative or neutral mindset can learn
to be an effective thinker. In fact, even those with a positive mindset
can find ways to improve.
If one consciously understands their personal thinking style, and is
able to recognize such things as negative self-talk and
counter-productive behaviors, they are well on the way to affecting
their mindset. Similar to learning, practice and repetition will enable
and adjust the thought process. In time, the conscious re-framing,
positive self-talk, and awareness becomes the new mindset.
Imagine the impact a positive mindset can have during the training
event. The outcome can be significant. This permits an organization to
better leverage its training investment - and ultimately the individual
benefits from increased likelihood of personal success.
I'll close with a last thought on mindset from Confucius, "The will to
win, the desire to succeed, the urge to reach your full potential...
these are the keys that will unlock the door to personal excellence."
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