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You will make more friends in a week by getting yourself interested in other people than you can in a year by trying to get other people interested in you. -Arnold Bennett

 
Brian Sullivan
Brian Sullivan, President of PRECISE Selling

Think of somebody new who you recently met who you now call friend. Why did you like them when you met them? How did they communicate with you? Chances are, you connected with them because they showed more interest in YOU than themselves. Before they started telling you all about their job, family and favorite hobby, they first asked you about yours. And they REALLY cared about the answer. They didn’t ask the question then look down to their iPhone to see who just Twittered or texted.

So the formula is simple. If you want more friends, customers and more rewarding relationships, begin every conversation this week with a question. Replace the “I think…” with “What do you think?” When selling, remove the “My product will make your life easier by…” and replace it with, “How do you think that feature will help you?” (even if you know the answer) By replacing your statements with questions, you will learn, solve, sell, lead and connect with more people than ever. And those relationships you create will become your most valued and precious asset.

To download Brian’s FREE iPhone Application of his popular sales book, 20 Days to the Top, go to www.preciseselling.com.

NEVER TELL THE RECEPTIONIST WHAT YOU ARE SELLING

 
Peter Ebner
Peter Ebner, The printing industry’s leading sales trainer

When prospecting for new business are prospects always saying “I’m not interested, I’m happy with my printer”? If so, it’s because you’re making a common prospecting mistake. Here’s how to eliminate this objection forever.

Click here to hear Peter’s weekly tip.

For more information on Peter Ebner and Ebner seminars, visit www.ebnerseminars.com.

“Successful people ask better questions, and as a result, they get better answers.” -Tony Robbins

 
Craig McConnell
Craig McConnell, President PrintGrowPro, Inc.

You’ve developed and adhered to your prospecting plan religiously. You’ve worked your way through the gate keeper. You’ve avoided voice mail hell. You’ve actually gotten the prospect on the phone, established some rapport, qualified him, gotten some personal information, uncovered some pain and he has indicated a willingness to take some time to talk with you. You’ve successfully set up that all important ‘face to face’ meeting. You’ve brushed your teeth, shined your shoes, brushed the lint off your shoulders, checked your ’gig’ line, made sure you have business cards, and you’re sitting down in front of the prospect.

Now what???????????

When you are in these early stages of the relationship you’ve got to have 10-15 good questions prepared, written down, and ready to go. The quality of your questions will dictate the quality of the relationship.

You’re looking for pain and problems.

All great sales people are smart, and smart sales people ask smart questions. In an ideal situation, they ask questions a prospect has never been asked before.

I try hard to do that in my business. Here are some of the questions I ask; the goal being to get my prospects to think about their current situations and perhaps uncover some pain.

*How successful is your sales team in converting cold calls into face to face meetings? How do you measure?
*What are you doing to insure the professional development of your sales team? How do you measure their progress?
*What percentage of your sales team made their numbers in 2009? How much new business did they develop?
*Are there things you are doing differently in 2010?

Just for kicks, I went on line to see if I could find any examples of what might be considered ‘bad’ (dumb?) qualifying questions. A few of the ’best’ are attached below. Hopefully, you’ve ever used any of them. What kind of answers might they generate?

*Would you like some information on our company and what we do?
*If you thought our company could help you improve efficiency and quality at the same time, would you want to know more?
*Can you tell me a little bit about your business?
*Can I quote on some of your upcoming projects?

Always put yourself in the prospects shoes. If you heard one of these questions would you open up (“WOW, I glad you asked; I was hoping to take the time to share this kind of information with someone that I am meeting for the very first time.”), or, would you very politely move to terminate the meeting?

If you don’t already have them, start making your list of SMART questions today; questions that find pain, get personal data, identify needs, and differentiate you from the competitors.

Have a great week, go sell something and remember, the answer to any question you never as is always going to be ‘no’.

For more information on PrintGrowPro, Inc. please visit www.printgrowpro.com.

Five Real Ways Salespeople Waste Time—and Lose Money!

 
Linda Bishop
Linda Bishop, President and Founder of Thought Transformation

What separates “best of the best” salespeople from the rest of the pack? It’s how they chose to use their time! Eliminate these time wasters and sell more.

• Stop calling on accounts with teeny-tiny payoffs. You know who I mean. That’s likable Bob. He’s the part-time designer who works out of his basement and still hasn’t upgraded from the original version of InDesign! He’s also the guy who has ten alternates on the business card job and needs sixteen papers samples—cut to size and dummied up—and after all that will tell you with great regret that he bought the job on VistaPrint because they were cheaper.

• Stop looking for leads from 8AM to 5PM, Monday to Friday. Those are prime selling hours. Use them to sell. If you need leads, look for them on the weekend or after hours.

• Stop spending hours on useless research. By useless, I mean stuff that is interesting to know, but won’t help you get an appointment or make a sale. To become a better researcher, write down the specific question you need answered in order to take the next specific step.

• Stop calling people 100 times without leaving a message. You have to call five to eight times before people believe you’re relentless. The faster you prove that by leaving a message, the faster they pick up the phone.

• Stop calling people who demonstrate by their actions they are satisfied with their current solution. If you have called a prospect twelve times in 90 days, mailed three times and sent five emails—TAKE THE HINT! They’re not interested. Let them go. Move on. You’ll sell more in the long run when you stop wasting time on people who obviously don’t want to buy.

Want to read more from Linda? Visit her blog by clicking here!

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