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Harvey Mackay
Column for the week of August 3, 2009
Harvey's
Short Course in Salesmanship |
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Selling is not easy, even in
the best of times. In a downturn like we're in right now, the
sales force still has to write orders just to keep the doors
open.
Professionals have mastered skills
that survive tough times. I've learned many techniques over the
years, none more important than learning about your customer,
for which I developed the Mackay 66 Customer Profile. I've written
about this many times.
You have to use your time wisely,
use available technology tools and software. You need to be creative,
listen, work hard, have role models, be a self-starter, set goals,
plan, be passionate, personable and persuasive, use proper body
language and not procrastinate.
Do all those things, and you
should be writing orders all day long. But there are a few other
things you need to understand in order to be a real competitor. |
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- The law of large numbers. In sales, if you can't be number one,
the best position you can shoot for is number two. Position yourself
as number two to every prospect on your list and keep adding
to that list. I can promise you that if your list is long enough,
there are going to be number ones who retire, die, are terminated
or lose their territories for a hundred reasons. What I can't
tell you is which one. That's why I say if you're standing second
in linein enough linessooner or later you're going
to move up to number one.
- Know the gatekeeper. Any peddler worth her expense account
tries to reach up as high as she can on the corporate ladder
on the theory, usually correct, that orders from headquarters
tend to carry the day. But those of us who use that tactic have
also learned that the higher up we go, the more likely that the
decision maker we're trying to reach took the same sales course
we did, aced it and will have a trusted assistant trained to
block our access. Make gatekeepers your friend. Treat them with
dignity. Respect their power. Try and work with them to get your
mission accomplished.
- There's no business without
show business. No one
ever sold anyone anything by boring them to death. There are
a lot of similarities between showmanship and salesmanship. A
first-rate salesperson has to deliver a helluva performance.
Look at all the industries that rely on showmanship. Restaurants
often hype their atmosphere more than their food. But what if
your product isn't glamorous, like envelopes? During a Photo
Marketing Association trade show in Las Vegas, our PhotoPak Division
had a Black Jack table at its sales booth. The give-away? A deck
of cards that said, "MackayMitchell has a deal for you."
- Yes, no or maybe. When you're selling, obviously, the best
thing your prospect can tell you is YES. But do you know the
next best thing? It's NO. Many times the worst thing he can say
is MAYBE. The person that says NO frees you up to go on to the
next prospect. I've seen a lot of young salespeople spend inordinate
amounts of time chasing after the prospect that says MAYBE, when
the Mr./Ms. Maybe isn't ever going to buy. He's what we call
a "Porcelain Egg"an egg that's never going to
hatch. Every salesperson has prospect lists full of Porcelain
Eggs. An exercise that has helped me is to review my last 20
or so sales calls. How many were closed on the first three calls?
The next five calls? If my average is around five calls, and
I'm still carrying some prospects that I've called on 20 times,
it tells me it's time to quit calling.
- Ask for the order. Even the best hitters in baseball can't
hit the ball unless they take a swing. Many salespeople excel
at making their presentations but when it comes to crunch time,
they have a lump in their throats bigger than a nerfball. They
pussyfoot around hoping the prospect will say "yes"
without even being asked. What a wonderful world it would be
if that were the way it was. But it isn't, so you not only have
to ask, you often have to ask two or three times.
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Mackay's Moral: |
There are no jobs until someone
sells something. |
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The Author  |
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Harvey Mackay is a nationally
syndicated columnist for United Feature Syndicate. His weekly
articles appear in 52 newspapers around the country, including
the Chicago Sun Times, Rocky Mountain News, Orange County Register,
Minneapolis Star Tribune and Arizona Republic.
http://www.mackay.com/
Copyright, Harvey Mackay. All rights reserved. |
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