Wednesday, 19 June 2013

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How to Be More Credible
How to Be More Credible

So, how do we create credibility with someone we don't know, or don't have a history with? Here are some ideas.

1."It's not bragging if you've done it." If you've earned your stripes in your business or industry, don't hide that fact under a rock. Trumpet it to add to your credibility! Drop in statements such as,

"In my seven years in this business, I've learned that ...

," or,

"I've worked with over 550 retailers, and I always find that..."

2. If you're not on commission, it doesn't hurt if they know that. Hey, I know most of...
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Inside Sales



Why Most Inside Sales Reps Fail – and What to Do About It

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Productivity - Inside Sales
Written by Mike Brooks   

If you’re in charge of hiring, training and developing inside sales reps, then what you’re about to read may shock you a little bit, but it will also resonate with you and explain why many of the reps you hire ultimately fail. 

In their book, “How to Hire and Develop Your Next Top Performer” by Herb Greenberg, Harold Weinstein and Patrick Sweeney, they compared results from hundreds of thousands of assessments that were conducted over several decades with actual sales performance measurements and concluded:

#1) 55 percent of the people earning their living in sales should be doing something else, and

#2) Another 20 to 25 percent (of salespeople) have what it takes to sell, but they should be selling something else.

Before you dismiss these results as far-fetched, think about your own inside sales team.  If you’re like most companies, you probably have the 80/20 rule where 80% of your sales and revenue are made by your top 20% producers.  What that means is that the other 80% of your reps struggle to make quota (or rarely do), and I’ll bet that over the course of a year or two, half of these reps have either quit, been fired, or you wish they would move on. 

I’ve worked with hundreds of companies that have inside sales teams, and I can attest to the accuracy of the stats above.  Every time I begin working with a new company, I assess the skill level, aptitude, desire and ability of each member of the team.  What I find is that up to half of the reps employed shouldn’t have been hired to begin with (or shouldn’t still be working at the company), and most important thing we can do is to replace them with better qualified candidates. 

If you’re with me so far, then let me make a couple of caveats before you start thinking about replacing half your sales team…

First, in order to give each member of your existing team the full chance to succeed, you have to make sure that you have invested the proper time and energy in identifying and defining your sales process (I call it a DSP – Defined Sales Process).  Next you need to design a sales training program – complete with specific scripts – that teach the best practices of your sales process and then properly train your existing team on them.  And finally, you need to teach your managers how to coach and train your reps to adhere to those scripts and best practices.  Assuming you take the time to do this first (I usually get companies through this process in anywhere from 45 to 90 days), then you are ready to begin recruiting and hiring more qualified candidates.

So, how do you begin to look for and eventually identify the other 45 percent of people who are actually cut out for the career of sales?  Here are 3 important guidelines to follow:

Inside sales1)    Slow hiring, fast firing.  If I were to ask you what activity college football coaches spend up to 70% of their time, what would you say?  Watching game film?  Coaching their players?  Preparing game plans?  The answer is none of those.  College coaches spend up to 70% of their time recruiting talent to play on their team.  Does that surprise you?  If you hire sales reps like most companies do, then it probably did.

Most companies hire sales reps the wrong way.  They hire reps quickly, and they hold on to underperforming reps far too long.  The first guideline you want to follow is to do just the opposite.  The best thing you can do is always be recruiting and have a constant flow of talent to evaluate and hire.  Your goal should be to hire slowly – after a structured and careful evaluation process – and then to be ready to let reps go who have not shown the improvement or performance that you’ve identified in advance is necessary (you’ll refer back to your DSP to arrive at this). 

The key here is that if you have a steady flow of talent and candidates to choose from (and in this market, there are many people available), then you’ll be much less likely to make quick and ill advised hiring decisions.  Plus, you’ll be less likely to hold on to underperformers who are likely to never make it in your selling environment. 

2)    Be more willing to consider and to hire candidates who either don’t have your particular sales experience, or don’t have any sales experience at all.  If we go back to the results earlier in this article – that 55 percent of people in sales should be doing something else, and another 20 to 25 percent should be selling something else - then it means that the common practice of hiring experienced sales candidates will produce an unsatisfactory result as much as 80 percent of the time!

A much more effective way of hiring successful sales reps is to start with raw and motivated candidates and then train them properly right from the beginning.  Teaching new candidates the right skills and techniques is a lot easier than first getting an experienced sales rep to unlearn all their bad habits first.  Of course, you must have a solid sales training program that teaches effective sales skills and the best practices of your particular sale (these best practices will also come after you’ve defined your sales process – DSP). 

You can still interview and even hire experience sales reps, but just bare this in mind: The biggest predictor of future success in sales is what the rep has done in the past.  What a rep is used to producing and earning defines their comfort zone and in fact defines every aspect of their financial life.  In life – and in sales especially – we all tend to live up to or down to what we are used to.  If you want to know what an experienced sales rep might produce at your company, then just find out how much they earned at their previous company.  Divide this number by their commission, and you’ll have a very accurate idea of what you can expect they’ll produce. 

Then ask yourself if that’s enough.  If it isn’t, then take a chance on someone new to the profession of sales and instill in them a new comfort zone based on success at your company.

3)    Regardless of whether you hire an experience sales rep or someone new to the profession, what you absolutely must do is make sure your managers are measuring the right indicators of sales success and progress.  You would be surprised by how many companies measure and rely on metrics that don’t drive sales.  I’m talking about things like number of calls, time on the phone, etc.  Now don’t get me wrong – these are important metrics and they definitely play a role in the success or failure of your inside sales team.  But they don’t drive sales.  Let me explain the difference.

While it’s obviously important that your reps are making the most amount of calls and contacts with decision makers as possible, this alone will not drive sales.  You see, if your reps are not qualifying prospects properly, or if they are not handling objections or brush offs well enough to win sales, then if they simply make more calls, this won’t result in a lot more sales.  In fact, it will just waste more of their time, more of your resources and result in more frustration in your sales department.

The only thing that drives more sales is effective conversations that move the sale forward with qualified prospects.  Each contact with a qualified prospect must have benchmarks that are achieved and agreements must be made at every point of the sales cycle for that prospect to ultimately result in a sale.  Coaching and measuring the successful navigation of these benchmarks is what drives sales.  This is the crucial difference begin measuring quantity (make more calls) versus qualify (measuring what happens during those calls).

Once you understand and can apply that difference in your sales environment, and once you can teach this to your reps, then and only then will you begin building a more successful sales team and company.  Until then, you are likely to keep repeating the kind of performance you’ve had over the last few years – regardless of how many new reps you hire.

To recap these successful hiring guidelines, start with the philosophy of slow hiring and fast firing.  Always be on the lookout for new candidates, and turn each employee into a mini recruiting machine.  Offer hiring bonuses, referral bonuses, and other incentives to get your whole company looking for qualified and talented candidates that you can add to your sales team.

Next, expand your search of talent.  Don’t just run ads in the sales section of the paper or online source, but expand to college recruiting boards, acting blogs (actors often make great inside sales reps!) and other websites.  Be open to bring on someone fresh to the profession of sales and teach them the right skills from the beginning.

And finally, make sure you measure (and reward) the actions that drive sales.  Remember, it’s how your sales reps handle the brush offs and smokescreens and stalls that determine how successful (and empowered) they are more than how much time they spend on the phone.  It’s always “who” is in the pipeline that is more important than “how many.” 

Follow these guidelines and you’ll be on your way to building a highly successful inside sales team.

 

Inside Sales Whisperer: What It Means to Really “Get” Your Team

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Productivity - Inside Sales
Written by Josiane Feigon   

I’m heads down writing my second book on an epic topic- sales management. My writing goals for this second book are very exciting. I plan on loading it up with lots of unique and memorable content for managers: Everything from trends/predictions for the 3.0 “New Normal” landscape to a pinpoint focus on the human side of managing—including motivating, hiring and coaching talent to become disruptive sales warriors.

Knowing the essence of each team member and customizing your coaching is the greatest gift you can give them.Once you understand their core character—the reason they show up every day, how they work, what they need to be motivated—you can begin to change behavior and drive the results you want to see.

With all the technology advances and changes taking place today, no one has yet managed to create an app that can give you a quick insight into your team members as individuals. You have to learn to do it the old-fashioned way: by watching, listening, reflecting—and understanding what to do with the information you just gathered. But if you manage to pull off this trick, your team will love you and people will call you the “Inside Sales Whisperer.”

The good news is that more managers are coaching more—walking into the cubicle and observing what reps do on the job, and then giving pointers. The better news is that they can be even more effective by remembering and using some basics.

Here’s a check-list to prepare you to be the inside-sales whisperer in your organization. When you sit in the cubicle with your team members, be sure you review their performance on each of these points:

Whisperer1. Seating: Where do they sit? Who do they sit next to? How long do they sit for? How ergonomically comfortable are they?

2. Visuals: What do they have around their desk? Any hanging pictures/prints? White board? Cubicle toys? Is their cubicle cluttered?

3. Work pace: Do they work fast? Slow? Are they detailed? Erratic?

4. Prospecting momentum: How’s their prospecting muscle? Are they warmed up? Is there an ease and fluidity in their outreach efforts or are they rusty?

5. Time management: Are they efficient with their time? How are their multi-tasking skills? Can they quickly shift from one skill to another or are they singular in their approach? How balanced is their workload? Are they slow and hanging in the “comfort zone,” or do they look frazzled?

6. Tool IQ: Do they have lots of programs/screens open? How are they utilizing their tools? Are they productive? Do they have templates designed? How are their keyboard skills?

7. Pre-call Research: How much time are they spending on sales intelligence before making the call? Are they using this as an avoidance measure?

8. Outbound skills: How well is their call objective determined? Do they take control of the call or do they chase their prospects away? Are they ambitious with what they want to accomplish? How focused are they? What is their level of concentration?

9. Vocal presence: What do they sound like? Is their voice authoritative, clear? Is their tone pleasant? Interesting? Do they have power in their voice or is it muffled?

10. Qualification: How brave are they when it comes to questioning? Do they have good questioning instincts? Do they follow a roadmap or are their questions out of sequence?

11. Solution knowledge: Are they clear when explaining and educating? Do customers understand them?

12. Active listening: How’s their note-taking? Do they capture the right amount of information when documenting it into the CRM? Are they really hearing what the customer is saying, or just what they want to hear?

13. Customer relationship skills: Do customers like them when they are talk with them? Do they have the ability to quickly establish rapport and gain trust? Are they friendly? Are they understood or do customers struggle?

14. Partner worthiness: How well do they negotiate partnerships? Do they establish two-sided partnership with strength or do they sit back and wait?

15. Attitude: Are they open to being coached? How self-aware are they? Are they motivated? Enthusiastic? How do they handle feedback? Do they improve after being coached? Are they diligent about it?

 

Inside Sales Managers: Wake up and Press “Refresh” on Your Management Approach

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Productivity - Inside Sales
Written by Josiane Feigon   

Inside Sales managers are getting paid more, and they should. They manage a unique, complex system of CRM, tools, processes, talent, and technology that powers the organizations. They must make sure their organizations run on all cylinders and at maximum capacity. But if your survival strategy is to just keep moving ahead while looking in your rear-view mirror at what was done in the past, you’re asleep at the wheel.

Wake up, managers! It’s time to press refresh on your approach. Here are 10 new realities:

1.    Coach Like a Leader:    Managing, to a great degree, is coaching. Fully embrace your inner leader and coach like you mean it. Remember, coaching is not a 1:1 forecast review meeting talking about numbers, nor is it about jumping in and rescuing your rep to close a deal, nor is it about telling them how much of a sales stud you used to be, nor is it asking them to bring in the deal by offering an additional discount. It’s about developing your teams unique talent and strengths.

2.    Get to Know Customer 2.0:  Don’t bother jumping on a sales call with your team to chase this customer down  —  Customer 2.0 doesn’t want to hear from  anyone.  It’s time you get to know this elusive and independent customer, find out why they are mad as hell, and learn how to make them happy. 

3.    Seize the Hidden Sales Cycle:  Are you spinning your wheels aligning lead generation efforts with the sales cycle, but to no avail? That’s because Customer 2.0 is in control of the buying process! Listen to how they want to do business and what they want to pay. Then seize the hidden sales cycle they have created, and make it your own.

4.    Stop the Blitzing Madness!  Do you really believe that the only way to get your teams to make calls is to hold call blitzes a few times per week? You will not only groom the new sales androids of the future, but your customers will officially tag you as sales stalkers on steroids. Today’s customers want a relationship and don’t want to speed-date.

Refresh5.    Social Media Is Not a Fad:  Get on board: Social selling is not “just a trend” that will disappear sometime soon, it is here to stay. There are even some ROI metrics to go with it. BTW, those double monitors should all include social media.

6.    Geographic Territories Are (Almost) Over:  - In today’s social world, geo regions may not have as much meaning as they used to. Salespeople work virtually now, from home or from satellite offices. Social proximity beats geographic proximity hands down.

7.    Smart Hiring Strategies:  As the job market continues to heat up, talent is in demand and different cultures and generations are the norm. Sorting through the Millennial talent pool for the gems can be tough —  including stronger interview questions can help.

8.    Metrics Are Filled with Melatonin: Most metrics are not measuring what really matters today  —  and they may actually be putting your teams to sleep! Forget counting calls, because the old productivity rules no longer apply. Instead of thinking about outbound dials and talk time, start thinking about influence and building a strong digital footprint that has real clout.

9.    Net New Logos:  The last few years, you scrambled to get your teams to close anything they could so your run-rate business with existing customers far exceeds your new business. The pressure is on to get net new business. This requires a completely different strategy that involves more committee decisions and more sales intelligence.

10.    Vote4Video:  It’s time to check the dress code in your office  —  especially from the waist up. Everyone wants to look good on camera, and video is quickly becoming the new high-impact sales medium. By 2020, 85% of buyer-seller interactions will happen online through social media and video.

 

5 Steps to Achieving the Tele-Prospecting "Zone"

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Productivity - Inside Sales
Written by Jim Domanski   

Aaron Rogers and Tom Brady have been there. So have Justin Verlander, LeBron James and Sidney Crosby (when he's not concussed). They've all been in the "zone" at one time or another throughout their careers.

The Zone

The "Zone" is that almost mystical and magical place in time and space where their athletic performance is extraordinarily focused, where they seem to perform with perfect mastery, where their passes, shots and hits simply and utterly boggle the mind. Everything clicks. It's like magic. When the athlete describes the Zone, he or she talks about being swept away, losing track of time, and becoming completely absorbed in the activity.   Some experts have speculated that some athletes (for instance, Wayne Gretzky) can actually see events unfold a second or two before they take place.

Whatever is behind the Zone, the end result is typically astonishing.

The Tele-Prospecting Zone

But here's the thing: the Zone is not just reserved for those in sports.

This place of seemingly effortless productivity and success can be achieved by virtually anyone in any area in life, including tele-prospecting. The trick to achieving a zone-like state is to have a process or method that when applied consistently and with discipline produces superior results.

Prospectings5 Steps to Reach the Tele-Prospecting Zone

While the results of being in the Zone can be almost mystical, getting in the zone is not so mysterious or profound. There are five steps you can implement that will lead you to the Zone when prospecting or selling:

Step #1: Be Zone Ready

Aaron Rogers does not walk onto the field seconds before the game and start throwing completions. He gets ready for the big game long before that time. Before you pick up the phone and begin dialing, make sure you have your 'master' list of decision makers, their names, numbers, extensions, and e-mails. Like Aaron, do your 'homework' well before you get on the phone so you are game-ready. Have your notes, call guide, job aids - whatever you need- ready to go.

What this does is ensure that you have 'flow.' Flow is that steady, almost rhythmic process of calling that is uninterrupted by stops, pauses and delays. Watch Tom Brady when he's in the Zone. Typically, he goes into a hurry up offense. No major delays. The flow is there. His job is to maintain it. Do the same. Pick up the phone and dial. No answer? No success? Dial again. Don't lose the 'end zone' focus.

Step #2: Create a Zone Friendly Environment

Watch Justin Verlander in the dugout when he's pitching for the Tigers. Watch how closely his fellow Tigers leave him alone. They don't want to distract him and disrupt his concentration.

To be in the Zone you have to stay focused on the task. Find or create a spot to make your calls that is free of distractions and temptations. Turn your back away from your fellow workers to avoid visual distractions. Post a sign called "Zone Calling" outside your office or cubicle that tells everyone that you are not to be disturbed. You're in the zone.

Step #3: Be Zone Wise

Ever watch LeBron James on the court? He has an innate ability to exploit weaknesses in defenses. He makes the most of time and space he is given.

Same thing in tele-prospecting: there are good times to make your prospecting calls and there are not-so-good times. You want to exploit those good times like LeBron exploits his defenders. For instance, the best time to reach higher level decision makers is earlier in the morning or later in the day. To get into the Zone you may have to start calling at 7:30 a.m. or continue calling after 5:30 p.m. You increase your odds of success.The best time to reach your decision makers may vary. Test times. Look for a "Zone Wise" time. Keep track of your results. If you discover a good time, exploit it.

Step #4: Have Goals and Deadlines

You can bet your bottom dollar that Aaron, Tom, Justin, LeBron and Sydney don't start their seasons or their games with "well... I'll do my best and see what happens." Pitchers know what they want to achieve as an ERA. Quarterbacks have ratings stats they would like to achieve because it gives them perspective on where they are and what they must do. Zone-ready athletes are goal oriented.

Give yourself an objective that is meaningful. It's not about the number of dials, it about the number of contacts. If your goal is to reach twenty decision makers, dial until you reach twenty DECISION MAKERS not until you reach your quota of 80 dials set by your manager. If that means fifteen more dials, then make fifteen more dials (Step #4.) If you reach your twenty in less than a day, you're in the Zone, keep dialling. That's when you achieve superior results.

Track your efforts. Track those dials and decision maker contacts. Track the ratio of decision maker contacts to sales or appointments. Track the time that you called to see if there is a better time (Step #3).

Step #5: Just Do It

Nike has it right when they say, "Just Do It." Get in the game. Pick up the phone and dial. Don't stop. Be relentless. Do what it takes. At the height of his game, Sydney Crosby did it all. He skates...all the time... he doesn't dog it. He back checks. He hits. He takes hits and gets up. He fights for position in front of the net. He's tenacious. Sometimes he's chippy. He does it all and he doesn't stop until the game is over. He does not quit.

Go through your master list. Don't stop. Dial. Don't leave messages if there is no answer. If you go through your list in a half an hour, start dialing again. If you haven't reached your target objective, don't quit. It's sometimes grinding and tiring but ... just do it!

Summary

The truth of the matter is that great athletes aren't always in the Zone. Tom Brady sometime throws five interceptions. Verlander sometimes lobs balls that get smacked out of the stadium. Sid the Kid and LeBron have missed easy shots and lost games because of it. You'll have those off days too. That's okay.

The point here is that you go into every call session with a Zone plan. You do everything you can to get into the Zone. You don't hope the Zone shows up. You do everything to make it happen. You are in control. Apply these principles and you'll hit the Zone, not all the time, but some of the time. Either way, you'll be a heck of a lot better off than you were without this process. Just do it.

 

21 Actions You Can Take Today to Improve Your Tele-Sales Results

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Productivity - Inside Sales
Written by Jim Domanski   

Want to kick start some life into your telephone selling efforts? Want to get out of that rut? Achieve more? Sell more?

The secret to improving your success is to stop wishing and to start DOING. DO SOMETHING!  Take action. Get moving. Shake things up a bit. Get the ball rolling.

In the spirit of the strategy here are 21 ACTIONS you can take today and every day to create momentum and increase your sales.

1.    Send 5 handwritten thank you cards to existing clients. Tell them you appreciate their business; that you don't take them for granted.  This builds equity in you ... and improves loyalty

2.    Ask your manager to monitor some of your calls and provide you with feedback.  Additional perspective might provide you with a tip, idea, technique or perspective to give you an extra sale or two.

3.    Get into your office and at your desk 15 minutes earlier each day this week. That amounts to 2.5 extra hours of dialing ... and that means more opportunities.

4.    Revamp your opening statement. Try a new approach to your opener.  Make sure to include a strong benefit. Practice it. Implement it. Stick to it. Change can be very good.

Actions5.    Invest in yourself. Go out and buy a book on selling.  Then crack it open. Get new ideas, new perspectives, new ways of doing things. It can only help.

6.    Stay 10 minutes later every day this week. That's just under an hour more per week. See what happens when you make time for opportunities.

7.    Ask 5 customers for a referral. Referrals close at a higher rate and in less time. And they're a lot easier than cold calls.

8.    Find an industry related article on the web or in a trade magazine that your clients might find valuable. Send/e-mail this article to 10 clients.  By doing this, you become a value added resource.  It builds your equity and improves loyalty (see Point #1).

9.    Swap 5 of your prospects who are not returning your call with 5 prospects from a co-worker. Sometimes a new voice and new approach generates a sale or a lead. It works! Do it now.

10.    Eat lunch at your desk and explore the internet looking for selling articles, blogs and newsletters that can help improve your sales game. Subscribe to those you like and read them every day.

11.    Call 5 of your best clients and ask them what you are doing well from a sales perspective ... then ask them what you could do better.  You'll be amaze at the little things that mean a lot.  And they'll be flattered.

12.    Create a master list of 30 top prospects on a spread sheet or a yellow legal pad. Put their names, companies and phone numbers. Use  the list as a fast way to make cold calls when you have a few minutes here and there.

13.    Monitor 5 calls of a top performing co-worker. Get additional insights on what they do and how they do it.

14.    Make a conscious attempt to cross sell or up sell every time you get an order. Use a Post-It note to remind yourself and prompt the effort.  This increases the value of your sale ... and that's a good thing!

15.    Check your e-mails at 8:00, 10:00, 12:00, 2:00 and 4:00 ... And not in between. Constantly checking e-mails destroys focus and concentration and distracts you from your calling effort. Be disciplined.

16.    Ask 5 customers for a testimonial.  Ask them for a simple quote that you can use in an e-mail or letter. Send them an e-mail, confirm the quote and start using them.

17.    Change your voice mail ... daily. It takes about 17 seconds but it tells callers that you are there and attentive to messages they might leave.

18.    Compliment one or two or three of your co-workers on calls they have made.  It creates a positive atmosphere. Typically, they return the favour ... and that can give you an extra 'boost' when you need it.

19.    Start keeping a sales journal. Get a 'black book'  and record your victories and triumphs. Note your 'losses.'  Jot down a good idea  or technique. Use it at meetings. Make it a selling job aid. Review it every week on Monday and remind yourself of the things you learned.

20.    Check your voice mails at 8:05, 10:05, 12:05, 2:05 and 4:05 (i.e., after you have checked your e-mails- Point #15).  Batch non-urgent activities like these so that they don't interrupt the flow of your call.

21.    Establish a set of specific personal goals every day. Set activity goals (dials, contacts) and set performance goals (sales, leads, revenue).  Post them and drive.

Summary

These are simple but highly effective actions that can impact your bottom line. They are positive efforts that drive you towards success! Start using them today and see for yourself.

 
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