| Location | Date |
| Charlotte, North Carolina | Oct. 6th |
| Denver, Colorado | Oct. 11th |
| Boston, Massachusetts | Oct. 24th-25th |
| Dallas, Texas | Oct. 25th |
Sales Training:
Welcome to the Sales Training Center's comprehensive resource site for effective, performance-based sales training and sales development programs. Over the past thirty years, sales professionals and sales managers across the world have benefited from our highly interactive sales training seminars. We provide pubic open enrollment and private seminars at the location of your choice. We conduct in excess of 200 monthly sales training seminars throughout the world.
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Students of a Sales Training Center seminar will learn to:
Deal with multi-levels sales structures—users, authorizers, and purchasing agents
Use post-sales call measurement to assess their own performance and identify key customer issues by thinking and responding like a business consultant
Recognize basic styles of buyer behavior and determine how to adapt to each style to create positive "chemistry"
Analyze what sales people say, reducing the potential for misunderstanding
Effectively manage and control anger, conflict and difficult situations
Develop active listening skills to focus on what customers are saying
Be able to facilitate, guide, and close discussions in one-on-one and group settings
Build and give appropriate credit for other peoples ideas and avoid putting others on the defensive
Make a positive impact on the quality of teamwork and productivity within the work unit by effectively giving and receiving feedback
Sell long-term relationships rather than price
Incorporate interviewing skills into the sales process in lieu of pitching products
Apply the appropriate sales techniques based on the buyer and behavior type
For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.
Sales training and prospecting tips from the unbelievable sites I witnessed while watching window fitters working on my house. I recently had new windows fitted and while watching what happened I saw some fantastic sales prospecting techniques that just naturally happened because of how prospects think and act. Forget classroom sales prospecting skills you learn on courses, I saw a steady flow of sales prospects that would fill any sales person's diary and make their target for the month. I'm now adapting these techniques with my working sales teams and you can fill your diary or grow your small business sales by doing the same.
The front of my house is on a busy lane that leads to the local shops and throughout the day many people passed by and saw the two guys installing my new windows. I saw people slowing down and stopping to look towards the house and the work being done. Some took the contact details from the side of the window fitter's truck, and many others stopped to ask the guys questions about windows and for prices for repairs or renewals. I have to admit I cringed as I listened to the window guys responding to these passing sales prospects. They were excellent window fitters but not salesmen.
What I learned was the marketing power this situation created. This was far more effective than expensive T.V. or newspaper advertising. It triggered a reaction from anyone passing that had the slightest need for the guy's services. This was a sales person's dream, prospects queuing up to talk to someone. It got to the point where it was stopping the guys from working and they didn't have the time to deal with all these people. What a waste of sales opportunities, I bet there are home improvement direct sales people that work all month to get that many prospects, more on that later.
There are several reasons why these prospects stopped and talked to the working window fitters, and within these reasons we can find valuable sales training and prospecting ideas.
The main reason people felt comfortable was that someone else has taken the first action and decided these professionals were the ones to contact and employ. So the prospects follow someone else's first action.
Another reason is that these were working tradesmen not salesmen. When a windows salesman knocks on your door they are doing it for their benefit. When you stop a working guy in the street you are doing it for your benefit. Imagine what a sales person could have done with all those leads.
Buyers will always take the easiest actions. Which is easiest, searching through adverts, directories, and the internet and having to make a decision on which company to contact. Then speaking to someone on a sales line and waiting to be ambushed into agreeing to a sales appointment or even a sale. Or, stopping for a casual chat with a working guy that you can see actually knows what he's talking about? If you wanted information and advice about having new windows fitted who would you talk to. A guy in overalls that fits windows everyday or a smart suited salesperson that knows more about the credit agreement than the windows? So what sales training lessons can we learn from the actions of the passing sales prospects and my window fitters? Without knowing your line of business it's difficult to give precise sales tips. But consider the following ideas and think how you could adapt them for your sales role.
If you were a sales person for the company my window fitters worked for how about getting your hands dirty and spending some time with the guys fitting the windows. Put on some overalls and talk to all the passing prospects that want information. From what I saw outside my home I guarantee you will fill your sales diary.
Small business sales can be boosted by making all your front line people sales motivated.
Put a reward scheme in place and supply every one of your staff with sales and information literature. Give them a prospect pad to take details of any potential sales opportunities, and reward them for every sale that they generate.
Sales people are perceived as doing their job and contacting people for their own benefit.
Working people in non sales roles are viewed as being able to offer information that will benefit the buyer. If you're a sales person how do your prospects perceive you? What can you do to be seen as someone that can benefit the buyer, and how will you get a queue of prospects wanting to talk to you.
Source: Stephen Craine link
For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.