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Most market leaders achieved their greatest success one step beyond what looked like their greatest failure.
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. 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.
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Notice What Is Working & What is Not…
Grow Your company’s Brand Identity
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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.
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Create a profile of the company’s Market
Tell people what your company’s 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. 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.
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. The way
you are perceived by your company’s customer determines how much resistance
you will encounter as you sell. Learn to project a positive feeling among
those you come in contact with. Write down specifically how your company’s
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. Create
an awareness of the psychological needs of your company’s 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. |
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. 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.
Best
of luck



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