1. Act as if you don't need the
business. Desperate salespeople come across to the buyer as less effective. Be
blase. Don't beg. A direct relationship exits between their confidence in you
and the amount of confidence you have in yourself.
2. Know your target's
industry inside and out. Be able to speak the jargon by the final interview.
Knowing insider terminology is a heavily used persuasion technique by the top
sales professionals.
3. Never use the word
"no" during the final discussion. When combined and verbalized in a
business atmosphere, those two meager letters hold a negative power and can
turn a check signing meet-up into a different meeting altogether.
4. Keep your prices
where they are supposed to be. Giving discounts is a bad habit for sales
professionals to get into. Salespeople start cutting prices when they get antsy
about the close. Many times, to a customer, cheap means inadequate or possibly
defective.
5. Become a necessary
evil. Networking and getting clients to like you is a big part of being a
salesman or saleswoman. However, being the best in your field means that a
client can dislike you yet feel compelled to keep signing on the dotted line.
6. Gain what I call
the "Goldman Swagger." Yes, Goldman Sachs has nearly the best people
in the banking industry, but that is not their one and only reason for success.
Their massive success comes equally from ego. Think that you're going to close
the potential client and more likely than not that confidence will morph itself
into a wire transfer.
7. Don't ever think
of yourself as a salesperson. Think of yourself as a cultured, intelligent and
knowledgeable business professional.
8. Base salary is
important. Lack of salary turns into desperation and clients get turned off by
first hint of neediness. What's more, desperation can lead to ethical
misconduct. Keep your expenditures low at first. There is an inverse
relationship between the need for funds and the client's desire to use your
services.
9. Research, research
and research some more. When you are attempting to close another individual and
persuade him or her into writing a large check, you should know everything
there is possible to know about that person, his or her company, and that
company's place in its industry.
10. You are the
expert, not your client. Most B2B transactions are the result of the failure by
a competitor of yours to provide your potential client with a needed product or
service.
Therefore,
you should operate on the assumption that you have broader, deeper knowledge
about that product or service you aim to sell. People buy expertise. Bring
fresh ideas into the meeting. Make the buyers think. The buyer thinks, then
buys.
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