bookmark.com
Home About Us Privacy Terms of Service Add Your Link Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Drink & Food

Jobs & Employment

Computers & Networking

Policies & Law

Property & Estate

Children

Research & Science

Adventure & Sports

Society & Issues

Recreation & Entertainment

Banking & Finance

Malls & Shopping

Healthcare & Medicine

Online & Board Games

Automobile & Automotive

Hotels & Travel

Art & Culture

Home & Garden

News & Events

Education & Reference

Hygiene & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Self Help

Business & Services


 

Home –› Business & Services –› Sales
 

The Sales Training Series: Know What You're Selling

 

Author: Duane Sparks

No, You Don't Know What You Are Selling - Yet!

You know your product, its features and its benefits. You have a well-rounded presentation that explains all of this, complete with visual aids. So why waste a prospect's time with chitchat? Shouldn't you launch straight into your presentation?

No, you shouldn't, and here's why. No matter how good it is, your generic presentation casts your product or service as a commodity, not as a solution to the particular customer. Customers don't care about your products; they care about their own problems and opportunities. They want to know that you understand their problems before you start talking about how your wares can "solve" them.

You think you have a cool product presentation? So does every competitor you've got.

When salespeople understand their customer's needs before presenting their products, the presentation can be tailored to hit specific hot buttons. This also avoids many objections that commonly arise later in the sales cycle.

To find out "what to sell," you need to exercise good questioning skills and gather information about the customer. The things you want to know fall into four categories:

Need: Ask open-ended questions to uncover problems and opportunities likely to be addressed by your products and service. Examples: "What is the biggest problem with the current method you're using?" "What are the consequences of not solving this problem?"

Company Issues: What is the customer's company or department trying to accomplish with this buying decision and why is it important? "What goals has your company set regarding this?" "What will it mean to the company if you are successful?"

Personal Issues: What's at stake for the customer himself/herself - professionally or personally? "What will it mean to you if these goals are achieved?"

Money Issues: Find out about the budget that exists for the purchase or how the expenditure would be justified. "What kind of budget have you established for this project?" Or, "What areas would you look at to justify a purchase like this?"

Once you know this, you are in a position to present your product as a solution, not just one more alternative in a sea of commodities. Instead of a classic data dump, your presentation now can be aimed at specific needs that this customer actually cares about.

In The Field:

Why do so many salespeople launch straight into their product presentations before investigating their customers' needs? Usually it's because they're flying by the seat of their pants. They lack a strategic framework to follow throughout the entire sales cycle. Sadly, delivering a canned presentation is all they really know how to do.

An account executive with Delta Industrial in Minneapolis, MN, recently summed up the advantages of adopting a coherent, unified, step-by-step approach to the sales process. "The most important thing the Action Selling Sales Training has done for me," he said, "is to really make me think and strategize about what I am trying to accomplish in every sales call in order to move the process forward."

Author Bio:

Duane Sparks

Duane Sparks is chairman and founder of The Sales Board, a Minneapolis-based sales training company that has trained and certified more than 200,000 salespeople in the system and skills of Action Selling. He has personally facilitated more than 300 Action Selling training sessions.

In a 30-year career as a salesperson and sales manager, Duane has sold products ranging from office equipment to insurance. He was the top salesperson at every company he ever worked for. He developed Action Selling while owner of one of the largest computer marketers in the United States. Even in the roaring computer business of the 1980's, his company grew six times faster than the industry norm, differentiating itself not by the products offered but by the way it sold them. Duane founded The Sales Board in 1990 to teach the skills of Action Selling to others.

You can also reach this article by using: The Sales Training Series: Know What You're Selling, Business & Services, Sales, business sales
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Ecommerce: Mashups And Future Site Function
 
How to Look After Your People so They Look After Your Business
 
MLM can overcome its problems!
 
Limited Time Only (Shh! It's A Secret)
 
Creativity Management: the Role of Knowledge
 
Ten Tax Planning Ideas for Small Businesses
 
What Are Genuine Work From Home Jobs?
 
Why Market Research Will Help Your Business
 
Why Be A Volunteer? What's In It For Me?
 
A Look at Incorporating a Business in Florida
 
 
 
 
 

What Qualities Do You Need to Start-Up Your Own Small Business?

Statistics tell us that over 45% of small businesses fail within the first two years of starting up ... - Terry Frerker
 

Auto Insurance Leads Cost Too Much

If you're like a lot of insurance brokers you buy internet auto insurance leads from online sources. ... - Tino Buntic
 

What Every Manager Should Know About How to Conduct Successful Meetings

Do you announce a meeting and find either no one shows up on time, they come with their own agenda, ... - Etienne Gibbs
 
 

Budget Your Branding

It is very important to regularly monitor your advertising activities in the process of brand buildi ... - Dev Bhatia
 

Franchise Agreements and Opening of Business

Many people do not understand that it takes months of preparation to open the franchised outlet. I c ... - Lance Winslow
 
 
Home -> Privacy -> Terms of Service
© 2006-2008 www.bookmarkedcontent.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.