Tag Archives: Business Growth

Winning Sales Coaches Don’t Manage

How would you like to coach a team that wins at the sales game like top-ranked teams win in the NBA, NFL, and NHL?

Why wouldn’t you? Who’s better at producing consistent winning efforts than professional sports teams?

Business?
Education?
Government?
Science?
You gotta be kidding!

Professional sports teams excel where business, education, government and science fail because professional sports teams invest in developing extraordinary coaches who develop extraordinary players.

And there’s a nugget of truth that ought to excite even the most jaded sales manager . . . don’t you think? If an extraordinary coach in the NFL can develop extraordinary players, why can’t you?
It’s no accident that successful professional teams win off-field before they ever win on-field. No team reaches the NBA playoffs, plays in the Super Bowl, or wins the Stanley Cup simply because it pays big bucks for talented athletes. To make it to the top of its sport, a winning team, like a winning business, has to play well in every facet of its operations or lose.

Don’t you agree that it’s tough in field sales these days? In fact, it may well be tougher today than ever before in recent history. You and your sales force work your hearts out, day in and day out, struggling against determined competitors to sell your products and services to prospects and customers who demand the impossible: low prices, discounted financing and instant, top-notch service.

How can you rise above the fray, how can you set yourself and your sales team apart from your competitors, and how can you achieve the consistent success you so richly deserve?
Simple . . . you need to find new business models, new strategies and new tactics to cope with these challenges.

Where can you find these new business models, strategies and tactics?

Like we said before . . . look no farther than professional sports teams.

When you compare the way business plays the sales game to the way professional sports teams play their games, you discover some interesting dichotomies.

First and foremost, business does not demand the best from its greatest asset: sales professionals. Because business doesn’t hold individual sales professionals accountable for their failures to perform, when you evaluate the win/loss record of the typical sales team in any company, large, medium, or small, you find it consistently loses many more sales than it wins . . . usually at a rate of about ten to one.

If you applied this win/loss record to the National Football League, which plays 18 to 20 regular season games a year, the typical NFL team would win 2 games a season.

Unlike professional sports coaches, sales managers typically stay out of the action on the sales playing field because they’re too busy sitting behind their desks managing the administrative affairs of the sales department. How can the average sales manager get in the sales game when he or she is too busy working on projections, profit and loss statements, personnel problems, factory politics, and company politics?

If professional sports teams played the same way most sales organizations play the sales game, NFL quarterbacks would run failed play after failed play, quarter after quarter after quarter, with no input from coaches. If professional sports teams operated the same way most sales organizations operate, Major League Baseball pitchers would walk player after player, inning after inning, while managers ignored the action and sat behind desks shuffling papers in offices far away from action on the field.

Business seems to be perfectly willing to put up with sales managers who consistently run bad plays. And, as if that isn’t bad enough, business is also willing to retain field sales people who consistently fail to achieve performance goals and sales projections.

Business doesn’t lead . . . business follows economic cycles. As a result, business gets sales people-bloated during good times and goes sales people-lean during tough times. Why?

Because when times are good, business gets greedy and tries to grab every dollar it can by sending too many people after what ultimately turns out to be too few opportunities.
And then, when the next economic slowdown occurs, business panics and cuts back.
And then, when the inevitable recovery comes along, business gets caught flat-footed and winds up throwing too few people at too many opportunities, creating a costly cycle that plays havoc with sales, profits, and people’s lives.

When business loses, it refuses to accept responsibility for its own failures. Instead of looking within to make necessary changes and improvements, business tends to blame outside forces including ad agencies, competitors, the government, even customers, for its problems.
Whenever a professional sports team loses a game or a season, it doesn’t waste time playing the blame-game. Professional sports teams take immediate responsibility for their failures. Nothing, not politics, money, and/or relationships, changes a professional sports team’s motivation to achieve defined performance. Failure to perform (Win) causes the team to make immediate changes in management, coaches, players, training, or whatever else it takes to turn the team around.

Business bounces from loss to win to loss because it is unwilling or unable to invest the resources necessary to train sales professionals to perform at the top of their sales games.
Professional sports teams, on the other hand, are more than willing to invest whatever it takes to prepare coaches and players to compete and win against their toughest competitors.
So, what does this mean to you?

It means this: If you’re serious about winning, you’ll study, adapt, and apply professional sports team performance strategies and tactics to prepare your team to win against your toughest competitors.

Sales managers will become sales coaches.

Sales people will become sales players.

And, sales meetings will become sales practices.

After all, if you can’t coach your sales team to renew and reinvent itself as well as a professional sports team so you can win more sales in changing market conditions, your team loses and so do you.

When all is said and done, your mastery of the skills and techniques we present in this article may be the most important contribution you ever make to your sales team, your business, and your profession.

We sincerely hope you agree.
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The old days when the typical sales manager was an authority figure whose primary responsibility was to manage the time and efforts of sales people are as far gone as black & white television, carburetors, and whitewall tires. Also gone are the wasted days when field sales people were forced to scramble around their territories, struggling to make arbitrary quotas just to keep the boss happy.

Those were baseless quotas that required sales people to make so many cold calls, personal calls, and telephone calls each day . . . all of which had to be documented with a wilting stack of call reports to be turned in every Monday morning to the Sales Manager who desperately needed to make sure sales people were working.

And sales people were working alright . . . writing up call reports every Sunday night to be turned in Monday morning!

Ah, the good old days.

The field sales game, like every other aspect of business-to-business business, has undergone incredible technological, cultural, and social changes over the past few years. Companies that insist on hanging on to outmoded, traditional sales methods and marketing approaches do more harm than good to their sales and marketing efforts. Restrictive policies (call minimums, call reports, arbitrary office reporting days and times, etc.) are a complete waste of time because they don’t do anything to generate sales or profits.

The more sales people put themselves in front of customers and prospects, the more they sell and the more they earn. Sales people need to get face-to-face with prospects and customers to develop relationships, to assess product and service applications, and to put a human imprint on the selling process.

What is important to today’s customer buyer is not whether a sales person claims his yellow widget will last longer or is more popular than someone else’s orange widget . . . what is important to today’s buyer is the answer to a critical question: Can I trust this person to sell me the right product or service for the right application for the right price?

Prospects want to trust that the sales person and the company he or she represents will make every effort to ensure the product or service purchased will minimize downtime, maximize productivity, and provide a fair return on the investment.

Whenever you create that level of trust with a prospect, you’re guaranteed a sale.

As you work your way through BOTH SIDES NOW©, you’ll learn everything there is to know about virtually every significant business strategy and technique – aligning priorities, benchmarking, competitive analyses, coping with culture change, cutting overhead, goal setting, improving quality, and managing resources effectively . . . you’ll need to effectively and quickly increase sales and profits.

This article will help you build, motivate, and lead a winning sales team, a team of sales professionals whose collective ability to win can be uniquely built upon compelling and profound knowledge, skills and understanding; fundamentals which are essential to all great human achievement.
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PREPARING FOR YOUR 1st PRACTICE SESSION

Suppose you ask Joe Gibbs, Bill Parcells, or Phil Jackson the following question: “Hey, coach . . . how important is it to prepare for the first practice of the season?”

What do you think he’d say?

One answer and one answer only: Preparation is everything.

If that’s true (and you know it is), what, specifically, should you do to prepare for your all-important first practice session?

Define your primary objective in your first sales practice . . . the questions: Be smart and start at the beginning: The main objective behind your first sales practice is to introduce the Sales Coaching Concept to your team. You know that you’ll introduce the Sales Coaching Concept to some folks who know nothing about Sales Coaching while others will know or think they know everything there is to know about Sales Coaching. So, what do you think? Will the Sales Coaching Concept be a tough sell to your team? Will the majority of your sales team understand and agree that Sales Coaching will generate more sales, more profits, and more income? If your team is skeptical, will the primary concern be about whether Sales Coaching will work as opposed to how it will work? How will you introduce Sales Coaching to your team? Will you simply drop the concept on the group and make a plaintive announcement with the expectation that Sales Coaching will be accepted and implemented immediately? Or, will you start slow, explain the concept, open a dialogue, and patiently work toward consensus? What are your performance expectations . . . for yourself, for individual sales players, for the team? How soon do you expect to see an impact on sales and how significant should you expect that impact be? How much investment of time and energy is the company willing to put into Sales Coaching to make it work for everyone involved? How much investment should the company make before it realizes a return? And, how do you think this article will impact the every day lives of individual Sales players and how do you think will it impact the team as a whole?

The first sales practice . . . the answers: Without pointing fingers, let every Sales Player know precisely what your performance expectations are . . . for yourself, for each individual, and for the entire team as a group. Prepare a list of prioritized expectations, edit the list carefully and thoughtfully, and, even though you should take your list of expectations to the first Practice Session, we suggest you take the time to memorize it. Why? Because you’re likely to get peppered with questions in the first sales practice and you don’t want to struggle for answers, get sidetracked, and forget to cover something important.

Paint an honest but positive picture . . . Nobody likes change, least of all, sales people. So, let’s face it; you’re likely to get passive, perhaps even aggressive resistance from your Sales Team to the Sales Coaching Concept. So, consider how individual personalities might shape the group’s reaction as you decide how best to present Sales Coaching to your team positively, honestly, to get broad support. Clearly communicate the potential for growth and success that comes from utilizing the Sales Coaching approach. Talk about the fact that Sales Coaching is more than theory . . . it is a proven, incredibly positive tool each Sales Player can use to increase sales, profits, and income.

Explain the technical stuff . . . Don’t pull any punches here. Be honest about why you need to make a change. Talk about specific reasons behind the lack of acceptable sales, profits, and income the team should be generating. Spell out specific techniques that individual Sales players – and the team as a whole – can use to improve sales skills. Though you want to be completely honest, don’t allow this part of your practice session to become personal. You won’t gain anything by slamming individual or collective feelings. The team will respect your honesty and will at the same time appreciate your sensitivity. Nevertheless, we caution you . . . if and when you’re forced to make a choice between honesty and sensitivity, the respect that comes from honesty will be far more important to your ability to coach than appreciation will be . . . so tell it like it is.

Eliminate negatives with positives . . . Let Sales players know that you have absolutely no interest in criticizing individual mistakes, errors, or shortcomings. Make it clear that your only interest is to equip each Sales Player to sell more, more profitably, more often. Build consensus by actively soliciting viable solutions to any obstacle that may threaten the team’s overall ability to increase sales, profits, and income. In every conversation, maintain your focus on the primary goal: To build a winning sales team.

Establish new relationships with sales players . . . You are now someone you’ve never been before. You are no longer the Sales Manager. You’re not the VP of Sales and Marketing. You’re not the General Manager. Because you are now the Sales Coach! And, as Sales Coach, your first responsibility is to emphasize the human side of coaching. By that we mean never criticize, put down, or put a Sales player on the spot – even if you think you’re kidding – in front of anyone else. Make sure that every dialogue develops communications not confrontations. Though you’re still the boss, you will find that a new dimension will have been added to the relationship, a leveling of positions that, handled properly, will allow you and Sales players to work more closely than ever to achieve common goals.

EPILOGUE

There is an old saying in professional football that applies to Sales Coaching: The will to win is meaningless without the will to prepare to win.

As Joe Gibbs, one of the all-time great NFL coaches, once said, “A winning effort begins with preparation. The game may be played on Sunday, but it is won on the practice field during the week; in meeting rooms, where coaches and players prepare the game plan; and in the weight room where the best players do a few extra repetitions.”

How is this any different from your Sales Game? Your Sales Game is played on a prospect’s field every time a Sales Player gets in front of a prospect to ask for an order. How does your Sales player get on the playing field? How does your Sales player get in the right position, in the right place, at the right time, to ask for the order and score the win?

Practice. And where do Sales Players practice? In sales practices in your conference room and in your office where you and each Sales Player prepare and practice each individualized game plan. And, where will you find your best Sales Players? Like coach Gibbs said, you’ll find them practicing . . . maybe not in the weight room, but perhaps in front of a mirror at home to improve their ability to win by doing a few extra repetitions as they practice presentations.

Copyright © 2008 by l.t. Dravis. All rights reserved.

If you have questions, comments, or concerns, Email me at LTDAssociates@msn.com (goes right to my desk) and since I personally answer every Email, I look forward to hearing from you soon.

Regards,

l.t. Dravis

Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/L._T._Dravis/204600

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1148150

When to Bank on YOU to Increase Sales – Sales Coaching

Break the chains holding you down keeping you in the land of mediocrity, and unleash the success within you. Working as a captive agent is holding you back and keeping you from ever getting the success you could have as an independent agent. Are you ready to break free of those chains and write your own path for success?

Let’s face it. After a few years working as a captive agent and surviving you’ve come to realize the very things you thought you’d be getting didn’t materialize, and the way the deal is structured you’re the big loser. No need to be bitter.

It’s simple: you learned a valuable lesson you needed to learn through personal experience. I’ve had three friends who dreamed of owning a Jaguar. None of them still own one because, as they explained to me, the fantasy of owning one didn’t match the reality of owning one. Where do you go from here?

You’ll be glad to know that because you’re one of the successful ones you have options. You have the option of re-aligning with an independent agency, or starting your own independent agency where you call the shots and craft your own deals. There are only three things you need to take advantage of your options.

You start by developing superior selling skills. It didn’t take you long to figure out that presentation they had you memorize wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on. Now that you’re ready to move into the real money you need to hone the skills you’ve developed on your own into the skills of a true professional. A true professional not only makes more sales, the buyer doesn’t feel like they’re being sold.

With that said the most important skill is the ability to acquire your own leads. You know from experience, the leads you got from the captive agency and the ones you buy from list merchants are about one step above worthless if they’re even that good. Real leads reach out to you because you have something they want. Those leads can and will buy from you.

Vitally important last and final piece: the confidence you gain from knowing what you’re doing and how to do it. This confidence comes from knowing how to run a business not represent a business. As an entrepreneur you stand to have all the gain because you take all the risk. Smart entrepreneurs reduce their risk by aligning themselves with others who can help them to get where they want to go faster with fewer mistakes along the way.

Although you would think the best source for learning how to develop a successful agency would be an agency mentor this can be a misguided perception. It’s great to have a mentor show you how they do things so you can emulate them and do those things too. The danger comes from making the same mistakes the mentor makes and trying to duplicate a business model that doesn’t match your strengths.

Indeed, the success that got you where you are isn’t what will get you where you want to go. You understand that. Others, like you, have found coaching is one of the quickest ways: to develop professional sales skills helping more prospects buy from you, develop the means to acquire your own qualified leads, and develop a successful and sustainable business.

Put more money in the bank by counting on yourself. Identify the areas you want to improve, and reach out and get the help you need. As the success you have today has proven the quicker you take action and the quicker you take right action the quicker you get what you want.

Yes, now you can discover the “7 Secrets” [http://increasesalescoach.com/]

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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1132404

You Now Almost Effortlessly Increase Sales – Sales Coaching

It’s painfully obvious to you the prospect needs your service. You’re excited because you know you can immediately help your prospect get exactly what they want. For some odd reason though, the prospect doesn’t seem to see things the way you do.

Rather than being perplexed or frustrated by this recognize you now have the power to make an easy sale. That is as long as you don’t blow it by trying to push for a sale the prospect isn’t ready for. At the moment you have a little misalignment issue to overcome.

Even though you:

 

  • understand the prospects problem
  • know exactly how your service will remove or eliminate this problem
  • and know the tremendous benefit your service provides for your clients

 

Your prospect doesn’t have any of this clarity, yet.

Your prospect is thinking:

 

  • “I better be careful what I say here before this sales person starts to try and talk me into buying something I don’t want to buy”
  • “I’ve tried to solve this problem before and it didn’t work, so I have no reason to believe your solution will work either”
  • “I’m not sure how your solution has much to do with resolving my problem anyway”

 

Now before you allow all this to make your guts churn and your head pound take a deep breath and prepare to remove the prospects concerns. Let’s put this in perspective. What if you were in the prospects seat?

You already know a confused mind will not buy. The buyer is simply confused about how this solution you’re so excited about matches up with their situation. They don’t “see” it working or they don’t “see” it working for them.

Aha, now you’re beginning to “see” the real problem. There are actions happening or not happening for the prospect, and those actions are inner twined with the prospects problem. You also have the problem that buying requires an action on the buyer’s part. So how do you align these actions?

Do you remember when you were a child and your parents told you “what you need to do is…?” Do you remember your reaction? I’ll bet you didn’t like it. Guess who likes it even less when a sales person tells them what they need to do? Yep, your prospect hates to be told “what they need to do.” Telling a prospect what they need to do immediately angers them, and makes them more likely to take an action exactly opposite the action you recommend.

Add to this negative response you’ve just triggered the confusion they have about your solution and, uh oh, you’ve set yourself up for “no sale” now or ever. So let’s back up a little bit and get you in the right position. The right position is a position that helps the buyer to buy.

Here’s how easy it is to increase sales and have your prospects eager to buy. Once you recognize your solution is a match for the problem the buyer faces instead of moving in the direction of selling move in the direction of discovery. Your objectives are to discover the current actions and uncover the desired future actions.

Make no mistake: problems and solutions are both about actions. Get the prospect to tell you about the actions or inactions happening now, and the outcomes those actions or inactions are producing. Then instead of telling them how those actions would be different if they’d just use your solution, ask more questions.

Ask your questions in a way that helps the prospect “see” a new more desirable future. Let’s use an example you can easily relate to as a buyer yourself. You want to take a vacation. You’ve already chosen the location and established a budget.

You have the choice of going on-line and booking and planning the entire trip yourself, or you could use a travel agent. You’ve done all this yourself in the past, however; you’ve sometimes been disappointed by the choices you made because you missed out on some things. You responded to an ad you saw about vacationing in the location you desire.

As you talk with the travel agent the agent asks,

 

  • “What if you and your family could spend 5 days in Hawaii within the agreed upon budget and everything was completely taken care of for you?”
  • “What if when you arrived you would already have reservations to do all the things you most want to do on your trip?”
  • “What if you could secure the dates, prices, and reservations now and wouldn’t have to think about it from this moment forward?”

 

The travel agent is getting you to “see” what it would be like to have their solution.

Not only that, but the agent is also helping you to see who takes what actions and when. The details of these questions are helping you to mentally see into a future you desire. Your desire to have that solution increases the more you can mentally experience having the outcome you want. It makes you “see” how this solution is possible. You understand how it benefits you, and you already know you want it.

Look into the future with your prospects. Yes, both you and the prospect will win as you almost effortlessly increase sales because you’ve made the confusing simple. You’ve made the impossible possible. Take advantage of the 7 Secrets report below and discover even more ways to increase your sales.

Yes, now you can discover the “7 Secrets” [http://increasesalescoach.com/]

Turn yourself into a Sales Genie [http://increasesalescoach.com/marketing-article]

Increase Sales Coach Gets Results Sales Training Can’t because “it’s never just a sales issue”

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1129834

When Top Sales Professionals Get Stuck – This Is What They Do

I’ll bet you think those sales professionals in the top 20% never get stuck. Well, they do just like you. The difference is in how they handle getting unstuck and how you handle it.

The sales environment is never static. When you make the mistake of thinking it is, that’s the exact moment you get hit by the proverbial truck. In most cases there are warning signals that things aren’t going the way you want them to. Top sales professionals don’t make the mistake of ignoring these signals pretending they will go away. Instead they have their radar on high alert detecting and monitoring any and all potential changes in the sales environment.

Most sales people are far more reactive than proactive. You wake up in the morning hurriedly dress and run out of the house. All day long you chase after prospects and clients allowing them to dictate what you’ll do and when you’ll do it. Unfortunately, when you’re so wrapped up in the moment you focus on symptoms mistaking those symptoms for the cause of the problem. Top sales professionals recognize that it’s far easier to react to symptoms than it is to proactively get to the source of the problem, and focus on resolving the real problem.

Whether things are really good or really bad it’s dangerous to take either situation and treat is as though it’s the real circumstance. Top sales professionals realize you have to step back and identify the facts in every situation. Pretending things are different than they really are, is a dangerous and slippery path.

Most sales professionals ask why things are happening to them. This sets you up for a victim mindset. You never want think of yourself as a victim because no one is going to come in and act as your savior. You have to be your own savior. Thus those at the top of their field ask how they can turn their current situation into the outcome they want.

When you want to increase your sales you either try to go it alone, or you turn to your peers for help. Top sales professionals turn to guides who can help them get where they want to get quicker. They don’t typically turn to their peers because their peers aren’t experts providing the help they need. Peers are often:

  • too sympathetic rather than empathetic
  • too afraid if they help you that you’ll surpass them to provide any real help
  • too narrowly focused on what everyone else does to have an innovative approach that will really make a difference for you

 

You tend to look at what your peers are doing and imitate them. Top sales professionals look at what others outside their industry are doing and ask how they can use those ideas in their business. They then adopt those ideas, adapt them to fit their business, and then act on those ideas.

You try things for a while and then abandon them when you don’t get the results you want. Top sales professionals try things they know work for others, adapt those ideas, and then consistently implement those ideas adapting them as needed until they produce the outcomes they want from those ideas. Plus they only adopt ideas that are in alignment with what they’re doing and what they’re trying to accomplish.

Yes, now you can discover the “7 Secrets Top Producers Know that You Can Put to Use in the Next 9 Days” [http://increasesalescoach.com/]

Turn yourself into a Top Producing Sales Genie [http://increasesalescoach.com/sales-genie.html]

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Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Cheryl_Clausen/56791

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Which of These 5 Sales Struggles Would You Like to End? – Sales Coach

Working with many salespeople from top producers to those struggling to exist it’s clear there are five areas of sales that hold the greatest potential for improvement. Top producers work to fine tune their effectiveness in these areas. And others struggle to gain competence. These five areas include:

 

  1. Prospecting
  2. Overcoming objections
  3. Closing the sale
  4. Time management
  5. Consistency and momentum

 

The first part of your struggle comes from knowing what to do. Yes, many salespeople think they know what they need to do because of the sales training they’ve had. However, that sales training isn’t as effective as it could be because it’s event based making it impossible for you to absorb and apply the information you need, your prospects haven’t had the same training consequently they don’t play by the rules, and it isn’t specific to you and your exact challenges. Another mistake is doing exactly what everyone else in your industry is doing. Bottom line, if what you’re doing isn’t producing the results you want it’s time to figure out what to do to get those results.

The next gap is knowing how to do what you know you need to do. If you’ve ever watched professional sports you may have noticed that the difference between how the super stars do things and how the others do things isn’t easily observable. The same is true for the sales professional.

The only way to increase sales is to take action. Although most salespeople are great at taking action they aren’t great at taking the right action. Right actions are the actions that consistently produce the results you want in the way you want.

There are more opportunities around you each day than you could ever fully take advantage of. The first step is opening your eyes to those opportunities. The next step is opening the door to taking advantage of those opportunities that are in alignment with your sales objectives.

Finally, if you want to overcome your sales struggles you must allow no excuses from this point forward. Everyone has things that are getting in their way, and if you let them they will keep you from getting what you want. In spite of that fact, you don’t have to allow them to keep you from getting what you want. You do have to develop plans for working around those obstacles, and then immediately implement your plans.

Yes, now you can discover the “7 Secrets Top Producers Know that You Can Put to Use in the Next 9 Days” [http://increasesalescoach.com/]

Turn yourself into a Top Producing Sale Genie [http://increasesalescoach.com/sales-genie.html]

Increase Sales Coach Gets Results Sales Training Can’t

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1023114