Tag Archives: Sales

Sales Coaching During an Economic Downturn

“You can’t lead anyone else further than you have gone yourself.” – Gene Mauch

Four Critical Tasks for Sales Managers

1. Now, more than ever, sellers need to spend time on prospecting for new business. Sales managers need to set clear expectations with each seller about the need to do more prospecting. But, the manager needs to do more than just set expectations. A down economy is a great time to be more creative in your prospecting. Brainstorm with your sales team about the best products/markets/regions to target in your prospecting efforts.

2. Managers need to spend more time motivating the sales team. It is easy for sellers to get discouraged when customers are slowing down and reducing the frequency and quantity of their orders. Use positive feedback and reinforcement whenever possible. Celebrate a new piece of business. Congratulate a seller who retains a critical piece of business, because a business downturn is when you are most at risk of losing business.

3. Lead by example. Partner with your salespeople at current clients, especially key accounts. Now is the time to go on more joint sales calls, even if the purpose of the call is to simply thank a current customer for their business. Personally get involved in prospecting for new business. Spend some time each week calling or emailing new prospective customers. This will help to motivate the sellers, and shows them that you are willing and able to bring in new business yourself.

4. Influence other departments to get involved in the sales process. STAR has endorsed the concept of team selling for several years, but a down economy is a great time to communicate throughout your organization that everyone, not just the sales team, needs to work extra hard during difficult times. If every person at your company who interacts with current and new customers can do something extra to impress a customer, you will do a better job at customer retention than your competition.

by Bill McCormick

Sales Training And Results, Inc. (STAR) is a sales management training company, providing customized sales training workshops and one-on-one sales coaching and consulting. Visit our website at http://www.salestrainingandresults.com

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Empower Your Sales People With the Right Sales Coaching Process!

Nearly all elite athletes have a coach. Rarely do you see an individual or team scaling the dizzy heights of success without a well thought-out coaching structure, appropriate motivators, and when needed; soft or firm guidance in the right direction.

A successful sales coach aligns a team to a common objective by both individually and collectively coaching a team to work through common or unique problems and opportunities. A coach also helps a sales team prepare for competition via a relevant interactive sales coaching process. Designed by the coach this process is most effective when the sales coach applies her experience, relevant insight into what’s worked and not worked in the past towards the team’s objectives. Whilst also being open to change and coaching the team towards uncharted possibilities.

Effective sales coaching is not proclaiming to the sale person; ‘this is how things should be done’. On the contrary; successful sales coaches guide their students to ask ‘what do I need to learn? And ‘how can I do this better?’ And by exploring and answering the question the sales person develops his or her own capacity to think, solve problems and create opportunities. Much like sales theory: telling is not selling. Moreover, directing a sales person is not sales coaching. This type of interaction is simply micromanaging, this process weakens the sales person’s capacity to think for themselves.

A successful sales coach leads the sales person to a place where true growth and personal transformation can take place: from within.

For more information on BOOM Sales! and Sales Training and Development programs and Sales Seminars please go to http://www.Boomsales.com.au

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Trent Leyshan is the Founder of BOOM Sales! and the creator of BOOMOLOGY!™ inspirational Selling Methodology. http://www.Boomsales.com.au

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Do I Need an Insurance Sales Coach?

There are different views as to whether a sales person requires a sales coach.

They are people who have doubts if a coach can be of much help to improve performance of an insurance agent. Yes, there are many agents who are self starters and self motivators. They are fuelled by their burning desire to go extra miles in order to succeed in their business. Many insurance agents succeed through their hard work. They put a lot of efforts in their business. They reach out to as many people as they can.

However, if you are looking for a breakthrough in your performance, you need someone to challenge your thoughts so that you can form a new belief system that will change your performance . You need someone to tell you your blind spots so that you can see more clearly what is preventing from going beyond your perceived limitation. You need someone to hold up the mirror and give you an honest reflection so that you can see your whole new self.

These jobs are best performed by a coach. You need a coach to systematically guide you to overcome road blocks and conquer obstacles on your journey to greater success. A good coach will be able to use his practical experience to help you discover your performance gap and achieve breakthrough.

Yes, you have the choice to buy a book to learn how to enhance your performance. However, what you learn from the book, though may be helpful, is meant for the majority of the readers. The book will not be able to provide you with advice that is unique to your situations. Everybody has different levels of strengths, weaknesses and potentials. You need a personal coach to design an improvement system specifically for you.

A coach is another pair of eyes that tell you things you don’t see yourself. A coach provides you with insight, objective critique and actionable feedback from an outside vantage point. You need a coach to combat your greatest enemy i.e. complacency. We are creatures of habit. We tend not to look for alternatives and we choose to do things that we can do without giving much thought. We need a coach to shake us off from the chair, take us out of our comfort zone.

If you are already in your peak performance, do you still need a coach?

The answer is “Yes” if you are not contented with what you have achieved and always looking for ways to perfect your skills. Even tip-top athletes like Tiger Woods and Michael Phelps use coaches. They need coaches for one simple reason. They need a breakthrough to bring themselves to the next level. In order to do so, they need experienced coaches to tell them what else they can do to push the limits.

A good coach places his interest before yours. His success is dependent on yours for both of you share the same goals. He can be your good friend who listens to your joy or sorrow. He motivates you when you get discouraged and alerts you to get ready for the next challenge every time you triumph. He shares both your heartbreaking and record breaking moments.

Your coach and you form a powerful partnership where both of you take each other seriously. Both strive to give the best in order to achieve your common goals. A coach to you is like the wind beneath your wings helping you soar higher ground and see things in broader perspective.

I am an insurance sales coach who has been in insurance business in the past almost 2 decades. I have an website i.e. http://www.stories-connect.com and my blog is http://xoseph.wordpress.com

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From Performer to Coach

In the professions of dancing, music, sports, and acting, as in selling, it is not uncommon to see someone who moves eventually from ‘performing’ into teaching. In the first four professions it seems a natural enough progression and performers generally welcome someone with experience, especially if that experience was successful. The best of those teachers eventually graduate to become professional coaches, and again, it is not unusual to hear professional performers extol the virtues and merits of their coaches, especially when those performers are receiving awards or accolades. This is, however, with the notable exception of salespeople who appear from my research to have a less than charitable view of their managers.

In selling, there’s a phrase that is often used – “Those who can, do. Those who cannot, teach. Those who can’t teach, administrate”. There is an attitude of mind in selling that training is a soft option. The way to corporate fame and success is through the sales management channel. This attitude fails to realise the power and strength of sales coaching. It is primarily because of this attitude that many of the best potential sales coaches never consider joining the profession of coaching in the first place. Sometimes the average performing salesperson is moved into the training department rather than the best salesperson. It underlines the confusion and misunderstanding that there exists between coaching and training. In the vast majority of sales forces, the way that a salesperson most often moves from a selling role into a potential coaching role is via promotion. On Friday evening the best salesperson in the team leaves work to resurface, almost butterfly-like on Monday morning into what used to be a sales management role, but now in many companies is called coaching.

We have heard for the last twenty years that the skills needed to be a successful salesperson are not necessarily the skills needed to be a successful sales manager. However, the practice of promoting salespeople into management positions on the assumption that because they were good at selling they will be good at sales management continues unabated. That’s not to say that assessment, development, and selection processes have not replaced the ‘tap on the shoulder’. It is however only cosmetic. I have been on enough selection panels and met enough salespeople turned sales manager to know that the “tap on the shoulder” still exists but the process now takes longer. The game of objectivity still has to be played but the outcomes are the same. It usually starts by someone saying, “Look, you can have who you want. It’s just that we have to go through this to make it appear fair” No wonder so many new sales managers fail at the first hurdle. The pain of this failure is most acutely suffered by the poor unfortunates in the sales team who have to pay the consequences of an untrained sales manager. By the time the average sales manager has built up some semblance of sales success they have left behind them battalions of sales casualties. I should know – I was that sales manager.

And now? Now sales managers are supposed to be coaches. Yet I see as much preparation for this role as there generally has been for sales management, with about the same level of success. In the fields of sports, dance, music and the theatre, the job of the coach is clearly defined, understood, and respected. In simple terms, the role of the coach is to elicit the best performance possible from his or her charges. They have no other function. In the world of selling, this coaching role is completely misunderstood and expectations are simply not realistic. Many ‘coaches’ have a variety of responsibilities of which coaching is merely one. If coaches have additional responsibilities such as:

· Personal sales targets

· HR responsibilities

· Administrative duties

· Budgeting

… then they are not and never will be effective sales coaches. Being a sales coach is a full time occupation. The sales coach has to be able to concentrate on and dedicate their time to the following areas: –

· Creating and selling a successful vision of the future

· Creating a positive learning environment in which the team feels free to experiment

· Making time available for everyone to learn and to practise

· Reinforcing positive behaviours

· Planning a long-term skills strategy for success

In 1992, I completed a coaching programme delivered by David Hemery (of Gold Medal Fame) and Susan Kaye. With ten of my colleagues I had just scaled a wall, which stretched endlessly skyward, or was it really only fourteen feet high? ‘Scaling’ implies some kind of professional approach, when in fact most of us, men and women, had been hauled over the wall quite unceremoniously. It was at the end of three long days, where we had climbed mountains, crossed ravines, walked along dangerous obstacles, and care-freely thrown ourselves from great heights into the waiting arms of companions. Our journey was along the ‘Challenge of Excellence’ during which our course had sparked our imagination, stimulated our desire to succeed, and watered the seeds of our greatness. It was David who first told me about the seed of greatness. He believes that each one of us has that seed within us. On completing the Challenge of Excellence, whilst my sense of achievement knew no bounds, I was unsure about the greatness of the seed. In hindsight, he was right. We all have it. For me it was one of the major milestones in a long project to discover a better way of managing and of training and developing people. I had been working for nearly two years previously, convinced that coaching from the athletic world could be combined with managerial motivational psychology, to form a more effective style of developing and managing salespeople.

The seed of greatness exists for all those who say they can improve, and even within those who say they cannot. Coaching can release that seed, not just for the person being coached, but also for the coach. Coaching has represented for me a model upon which personal performance issues are clearly defined, structured, and acted upon. It could do the same for you, and for the people you seek to develop. It is the missing piece of the development jigsaw.

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16 Reasons Why Your Sales Teammates Will Love You

Everybody loves a winner!

Don’t you?

And, you obviously have a number of strong qualities that make you a winner. If you didn’t, you wouldn’t have made the career choice you made . . . you wouldn’t be playing the sales game, now would you?

Review the following 16 reasons to see how many of them fit you. If you’re not quite in synch with any reason for whatever reason, work on it . . . and, if you need help becoming the Sales Player you need to be, don’t hesitate to ask for help . . . that’s what Teammates are for!

1. You don’t sit around the office waiting for the phone to ring; You work as hard as any of your teammates; you’re in your territory every day, selling, quoting, taking care of existing customers, and prospecting for new customers

2. You are confident and self-motivated, willing to pitch in and help any teammate, any time, to win any order, every order

3. You work hard to earn and maintain the trust of customers, teammates, and management through honesty and reliability; people see you as a friend, not a foe

4. You work with prospects, customers and teammates because of what you can do for them, not because of what they can do for you

5. You anticipate customer needs and closely coordinate each deal with teammates whenever there might be an overlapping trade or sale

6. You understand and promote the overall sales goals of the team and earn the respect of your teammates and other key people in the company

7. You’re a skilled business person and you apply your experience, training, and talents to each sales presentation; you protect teammates by not competing with them; you consistently protect and promote profitability for the company, not just yourself

8. You consistently pursue new business opportunities and share leads with teammates to increase sales volume, profits, and personal income for all concerned

9. You work to develop and maintain good communication and listening skills and you include teammates in every meaningful conversation about sales opportunities and leads

10. You have a positive attitude about yourself, your territory, your Sales Coach, and your teammates; you refuse to accept no for an answer without exhausting every meaningful approach to close each sale

11. Your customers, Sales Coach, management, and teammates know you to be a tough competitor with the will to be the best and a seasoned desire to win

12. You are committed to your team, to your Sales Coach, to your territory, to your company and you are committed to continual personal and professional development and growth

13. You accept responsibility for your own mistakes; you never blame teammates and you never hold back when it comes to helping solve team problems

14. You are a consultant to your customers, teammates, and your Sales Coach with the goal of helping them become more efficient, effective, and successful

15. You use your time wisely, making room in your schedule for team activities, teammates, your Sales Coach, prospects and customers

16. You never hesitate to negotiate acceptable trade-offs with customers and teammates to sell more, more profitably, more often

EPILOGUE

Sales professionals can be an odd bunch . . . for one thing, though nothing could be farther from the truth, we tend to play our cards close to the vest for fear of somehow losing something if we open up with colleagues. We also have this nutty tendency to resent the success of others. Neither of these behaviors do anything to help anyone sell more, more profitably, more often.
What is more important than trying to grab all the glory for yourself is to do your part to develop a strong sales team to build a strong business for everyone involved.
Make your best effort for the team and you won’t have to worry about sales . . . they’ll come faster and more profitably than you could ever have imagined.

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.

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