| Location | Date |
| Phoenix, Arizona | Sept. 16th |
| Houston, Texas | Sept. 16th-17th |
| Chicago, Illinois | Sept. 20th |
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.
For free, no obligation information on how we can help
you please contact
us today.
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.
The sales prospect on the other end of the line was very interested. They were no different than some of the others. I suggested that I would put some pricing and information together on our upcoming programs and email it to her attention, and I hung up the phone.
All too often the decision to have interactions via email in an effort to save time can end up stalling the sales process if not done effectively.
So, "How do we correctly use email to save time and move the sales process along?"
First, you always want to ensure that there is some type of call to action. My email to the sales prospect included that I would love to share some success stories that other clients have had with the program, as well as offer some special pricing as an introduction to our company. Get your sales prospect to want to call you to discuss your product or service in more detail. Don't forget that having conversations with a sales prospect should still be your first approach. Very simply, you cannot understand people's motivations through email; you miss their tone and attitude toward your sales approach.
Second, make your subject attention getting. How can you generate interest in your message quickly and boldly to entice them to open it. Put yourself in their shoes, what would cause you to open an email?
Third, place the most critical information in the beginning of the message. This will keep the reader's attention. Be precise and to the point. People don't have time to read a long email message and they will appreciate that you took that into consideration.
Fourth, ensure that your message is direct and don't add extra unnecessary details that could potentially lose the impact of your original intent. You want to get your message across not muddle it with useless content.
Finally, don't lose sight of the fact that email is most appropriate for lengthy documents, company updates, meeting agendas etc. Phone contact is essential for the introductory and closing parts of the sales process. You cannot tell how someone is objecting to a price and why through an email, this is where face to face or phone interaction is critical to sealing the deal. Use emails cautiously and to relay information that does not need to be communicated over the phone or in person, and your sales results will reflect the change.
Source: Tim Hagen link
For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.