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Home –› Business & Services –› Sales
 

Prospecting - Lo K S (Low Key and Simple), the Easiest Way to Learn

 

Author: Bill Truax

When it comes to training sales professionals, I have found that the eventual implementation of any training is linked to one key factor; how easy the new skill is to make part of our daily routine.

Sales professionals, in general, have more information available to them today than ever before. With the internet, books, tapes, CDs, videos, articles, workshops, seminars, motivational speakers, and training programs, we are literally overwhelmed by what we should do. There is just so much great stuff out there; it is really a blessing. Anyone can learn what he needs to know to be the best he can be.

Why then do so many sales people attend training yet never implement the new skills? Some people simply dont want to change. As a trainer I just have to accept that fact and move on.

But for the majority who want to improve, we trainers sometimes make it harder than necessary. This leads to what I refer to as Lo K S - Low Key and Simple.

When I go into the field with a salesperson to help implement training, I find that there are many "things" going on in that persons career and life. Anything new I want them to do is going to have to be easy. Think for a minute. How many of you have time to commit to a new learning experience? If you are like me, when I have a few free moments, I want to shut off my brain and relax, not try to learn something new. That would require me to think, yuck.

When I first confronted this situation I thought that my ability to focus the individuals attention to their new learning would be the only important element in their implementing new actions. They would see the critical importance of what I was teaching and then take all the necessary steps to change their lives. Wrong!

I feel the most important responsibility we have as trainers is to break the training down into "easy to learn" bits.

Just make the material simple. The development of training should be designed with the idea of having the material implemented by the field sales force as soon after the training as is possible.

A key element in Lo K S is segmented learning. You have probably used segmented learning for years, especially in sports or music. You take an overall activity; break it down into easy to learn actions then, when they are all learned, put them together for the complete activity. Why not use this for sales training?

In our prospecting workshops we segment the prospecting skills into simple steps for the participants. This makes actual field implementation easier.

An additional tool we have to assure training gets implemented is to work with the sales managers to get them to support the training effort. This can be a great training reinforcement, but can also bring more burdens to many overloaded managers, so we have made the managers part of our training Lo K S, also.

By Low Key I mean that the sales team should not be required to make a major adjustment in their daily activities as a result of the training. [Unless, of course, a dramatic change is needed.]

Also, as much as is possible, the workshop should be a complete learning experience, not just the start of learning that needs to be pursued afterwards.

I refer to these as "skill based training" workshops. In this type of workshop the participants leave with skills they didn't have when they entered or with enhanced skills that they brought into the workshop.

We use this method in workshops for our BLITZ CALL System of prospecting.

Many sales people do not like to prospect, regardless of their experience. But with the new global economy, we find that even many "old pros" have to open new markets, penetrate new territories, or even increase their customer bases.

I find there seem to be three universal feelings about prospecting: it is essential, not taught, and painful.

Prospecting requires that we expose ourselves to the greatest opportunity for rejection. As a result, many people think that sales people are really aggressive and outgoing. I have found that salespeople are no different than anyone else. That is probably why most of us do not like to prospect. It is not pleasant to be rejected.

We are faced with a dilemma. We know we have to grow our business and that prospecting is the basic tool we have, so how can we overcome this conflict of knowing what we need to do, but not liking doing it?

A Low Key and Simple method of prospecting is the answer. The fact that the method we suggest has proven effective for everyone who has implemented it also helps.

The BLITZ CALL System takes into account some simple facts about Prospecting.

First, sales are made after the 3rd call. Therefore, initial contact need only be an introduction.

Second, you need a system that is easy to learn, repeatable, and measurable.

Third, follow up is critical. So a system for follow up must accompany any Prospecting program.

Fourth, systematic Prospecting will keep your pipeline full and your customer base growing.

Fifth, the more you Prospect the better you will get at it. Therefore, you will find it easier and easier to do. So you will actually Prospect regularly.

That is all there is to Prospecting our way. So learn a system and keep using it.

Copyright 2006 WJ Truax

Author Bio:

Bill Truax

Bill is President of TRUFIELD ENTERPRISES, Inc. a firm specializing in Sales Operations Consulting and skill based training programs for Managers, Sales Professionals, and Sales Managers. One of Bill?s unique qualities is that he spends a lot of time in Field Implementation ? working with sales professionals and managers in the field.

Bill holds a degree in Marketing from Indiana University where he also earned a Commercial Pilot's license and flew part time as a charter pilot.

After graduation he spent three years as an officer in the U.S. Army where he logged 3500 hours of instruction as Committee Group Chief in charge of demolition and booby trap training at Fort Lewis, Washington.

In early 1972 Bill moved to Cleveland as a salesman with the H.J. Heinz Co. and was selected by Heinz to be a member of their National Sales Training team.

He left Heinz and joined a Cleveland insurance firm prior to founding TRUFIELD in 1978.

Bill and his wife, Sue, co-authored the book, The BLITZ CALL?, A System for Fear Free Prospecting and Making Cold Calls. The book became an international best seller. They have published two more books on Prospecting, two CDs, and they developed and conduct BLITZ CALL Workshops, Seminars, and Train the Trainer programs.

Bill has spent literally thousands of hours in the field making cold calls with sales professionals to teach his BLITZ CALL System. When Bill is in the field he actually makes many of the BLITZ CALLs himself, regardless of the industry. This is to demonstrate that anyone can prospect you just need to know how.

Bill and Sue have also copy written several skill based training programs in the areas of Sales, Public Speaking, and Manners, Courtesy, and Etiquette, which they conduct for corporations throughout North America.

Along with consulting, Bill's focus is in skill-based training, designed to enhance the skills, performance, and promotability of the people with whom he works.

Bill frequently addresses Sales and Marketing classes at universities in Northern Ohio.

When Bill is not consulting or conducting programs he is involved in sales either for TRUFIELD or in the field with client salespeople and sales managers or working with managers helping to develop and share ways to increase effectiveness, motivation, and goal achievement. He has been actively involved in Selling, Speaking, Consulting, and Sales Production since 1972.

You can also reach this article by using: Prospecting - Lo K S (Low Key and Simple), the Easiest Way to Learn, Business & Services, Sales
 
 
 

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