|

21
Ways To Increase Sales This Year
by Jim Cathcart, CSP, CPAE
(Excerpted
from The Eight Competencies of Relationship Selling)
1.
Prepare Yourself To Excel.
Use
a checklist to prepare your attitude, appearance, customer information,
company and product information and the selling environment, so
you can be at your best on every call.
2.
Notice What Is Working.
Study
yourself, your product or service and your company to know what
is working now. Reinforce the actions and tools, which are generating
results. Learn from your successes as well as your failures.
3.
Know Your Competitive Advantage.
Study
your company and your products and services in relation to what
your competitors offer. Know where and how you stand out, and where
you don't. Be prepared to discuss these comparisons at any moment.
4.
Improve Your Sales Skill, Not Just Your Product Knowledge.
Don't
rely on product knowledge to make you more persuasive. Sharpen your
skills in reading people, describing your offer in compelling ways
and in asking for the order at the right time.
5.
Target The People Who Are Your Best Prospects.
Best
customers have patterns. Most will fit the same pattern, so prospect
among those who fit the pattern. Calling on people with similar
needs, circumstances, and interests makes you more likely to create
another best customer.
6.
Know What To Be Curious About.
Know
in advance what questions to ask by knowing what answers you need.
Cultivate a strategic curiosity. Learn to be curious about the things
that will advance your chance of making a sale.
7.
Realize Who Is In Your Market.
Create
a profile of the ideal market for what you offer. Define who they
are, where they can be reached, what they care about, what they
fear, what they read, whom they admire and more. Know them well.
8.
Understand The Person And Their Situation.
Create
an awareness of the psychological needs of your prospect as well
as knowing what their technical needs are. Sometimes the way someone
wants to feel has more influence on their decision to buy than what
they actually need.
9.
Find The Diamonds In Your Own Backyard.
More
business exists around you than you know. Look among your friends,
neighbors, existing customers, past customers, colleagues, competitors
and coworkers for the opportunities that others overlook.
10.
Ask For Specific Referrals.
Tell
people what your ideal customer or prospect looks like. Ask them
who they know who fits this description. Then ask them to take a
specific action to help you meet the prospect; a telephone introduction,
a testimonial letter, arrange a luncheon or coffee shop meeting,
etc.
11.
Manage Your Sales Reputation.
Determine
today how you want to be thought of tomorrow. Specify the reputation
you want within each group of which you are a part, and then work
a plan to earn it piece by piece.
12.
Grow Your Brand Identity.
Get
yourself and your company known within your market area. Write articles,
letters to editors, offer expert input for reporters and publishers,
conduct surveys, provide free services to key people, donate your
time to worthy causes, put your photo on your business card, share
valuable ideas via email. Create a broad awareness of yourself as
an authority on what you do.
13.
Build A Fortress Of Great Relationships.
It
is not only who you know that determines the value of your relationships;
it is whether they know you as a valuable business resource. Define
who you need to know today and five years from today. Start now
to cultivate the relationships and the reputation, which will expand
your possibilities.
14.
Learn To Manage Points Of View.
Half
your job is keeping yourself and others in the right frame of mind.
Cultivate your ability to keep the focus on the things that matter
most. Become a person who can put everything in perspective for
others.
15.
Manage Tension Throughout The Sales Process.
As
tension rises, trust falls. Be aware of the ebb and flow of tension
as the sale unfolds. Learn to reduce it when it gets in the way
and to momentarily increase it to add urgency to the decision process.
16.
Look Like Good News To Your Customer.
The
way you are perceived by your customer determines how much resistance
you will encounter as you sell. Learn to project a positive feeling
among those you communicate with. Become a partner in problem solving,
not a sales persuader.
17.
Cultivate A Selling Style That Uses Your Sales Strengths.
Use
the combination of online communication, in person calls, telephone
contacts, trade show attendance, and public speaking, which allows
you to shine. Build a mix of activities to diminish your sales weaknesses
and amplify your strengths.
18.
Give Samples Of The Experience You Represent.
A movie
ticket doesn't just buy you a seat in the theater; it buys you the
experience of enjoying the movie. What experience does your product
or service bring to people? Give them a way to sample that experience
through your presentation.
19.
Stay Conscious Of The Meaning In What You Do.
When
a person doesn't find much meaning in what they do, they don't bring
much value to what they do. Write down specifically how your product
or service makes life better for those who buy it. Read this description
every day briefly, to keep in mind the reason behind the purchase.
It's not about buying; it's about benefiting from buying.
20.
Know When And How To Ask For The Order.
Learn
to recognize buying signals, how to ask differently with different
people, when to let the customer sell himself, how to negotiate
details and when to walk away. If you don't ask you don't get. But
how you ask often determines success or failure.
21.
Deserve To Have Loyal Customers.
Know
how to cultivate dedicated clients. Become competition-proof by
delivering more than people expect. Overfill your client's needs
and be their business friend, even when they are not buying from
you. Be the kind of person people rave about.
This
article is distilled from 130 powerful sales ideas in The 8 Competencies
of Relationship Selling
by Jim Cathcart. Mr. Cathcart is also the author of Relationship
Selling, and The Acorn Principle.
For
information on these topics or to book Mr. Cathcart to speak to
your group, call 1-800-222-4883. Or inquire via email to: info@cathcart.com. Visit our website at www.cathcart.com.
©2002 Jim Cathcart, Lake Sherwood, CA
About
the Author
Jim Cathcart, CSP, CPAE, has long been a trendsetter in the business
community. He is author of The
Eight Competencies of Relationship Selling: How to Reach The Top
1% in Just 15 Extra
Minutes A Day, built upon 17 years of success with
his bestseller Relationship Selling and
30 years of working
with over 2,500 of the top companies in the world.
His
breakthrough work, The Acorn
Principle is the result of a two-decade long study of applied
behavioral science and achieved bestseller status online as well
as through traditional channels.
Mr.
Cathcart's weekly e-Letter delivers
concise, inspiring weekly emails, offering very specific self-development
tips and exercises, with crisp calls to action.
He
is president of Cathcart Institute, Inc., a research and consulting
firm in Lake Sherwood, California, and is one
of the nation's leading professional speakers. Among keynote
speakers Jim Cathcart is a world leader and past-president of the
National Speakers Association (NSA) and winner of numerous awards
including the 2001 Golden Gavel Award
from Toastmasters International.
Mr.
Cathcart's presentations consistently receive rave
reviews and are customized for your audience.
|