Now displaying: September, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Takeaways
- Overcome the “Send Me Info” Objection: The goal of cold calling is not to just send information, but to get into a conversation. That said, I know every has to deal with the prospect who just says “send me some information and I’ll take a look.” One of the best ways I’ve dealt with this objection is to counter with, “I’d be happy to, but we have 347 different one-sheeters and I have no idea which one I’d send… can you tell me more about what you’re looking for?”
- Qualify Anyone Who Will Take the Call: What do you absolutely need to know from a prospect before you can move forward? All too often reps focus on titles thinking they can’t get a deal done without talking to the highest person in an organization. If you understand the true qualification criteria, you may realize you can use multiple people in the organization to not only gather that information, but also to build champions for you internally.
- Be Patient with The Process: Unless you sell a product that is conducive to a one-call close, realize you’re not going close a prospect on your first call. I say that because if you get comfortable with your process, you’ll start to see patterns form in the timing you're able to catch someone, you’ll see patterns in follow-up strategies, and you’ll see patterns in discovery and objections. These patterns can illustrate an opportunity to streamline your goals by practicing patience.
Full Notes
https://www.salestuners.com/carrie-simpson/
Book Recommendations
Sponsor
- What if every sales rep inherited the habits of your best rep? With Costello, they do.
Sep 5, 2017
Takeaways
- Teaching Can be Detrimental: Spending too much time educating your prospect and not enough time selling opens up what I like to call the “friend zone” of sales. Sure your prospect likes you, but that’s because you’re providing them with free consulting. You have to understand this balance and get comfortable setting the right expectations in the sales process.
- Sometimes You Need to Get Burned: Sales is a contact sport. All the training and coaching in the world can’t prepare you for the first time you actually get hit. Spending time with a prospect, getting “happy ears” as Katie called it, only to have them go dark on you at the end is one of the biggest lessons you have to learn on your own.
- Moving Up Isn’t Always the Best: While I’m not yet an old man yelling “get off my lawn” to every passerby, I am one to tell you that skipping rungs on the ladder of success is not always the right choice. I’ve seen way too many people think “if I can just become the VP of whatever,” I’ll fix all the problems and everything will be better — only to burn out before getting there or be completely miserable once they do make it. Enjoy the journey and put more stock in that than on the destination itself.
Book Recommendation
Sponsor
- What if every sales rep inherited the habits of your best rep? With Costello, they do.
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