| Location | Date |
| Houston, Texas | Nov. 4th-5th |
| Los Angeles, California | Nov. 8th-9th |
| Ft. Lauderdale, Florida | Nov. 16th |
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 classes. We provide pubic open enrollment and private classes at the location of your choice. We conduct in excess of 200 monthly sales training classes throughout the world.
For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.
Students of a Sales Training Center class workshop 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.
Everyone talks about strategy, but do we really understand it?
There are two types of strategy-business strategy and sales strategy.
Strategy, at its core, is "how will we accomplish our goals?" But
business strategy is very different than sales strategy. I'll leave
business strategy to the big boys-Tom Peters, Jim Collins and the rest.
We'll talk about sales strategy today. Because in our sales training
business we find companies have spent very little time on sales
strategy. Yet, it is the very thing that can propel enormous sales and
revenue growth. Sales strategy is the "how" of "how will we approach our
clients and acquire them?" Cold calling is a strategy. Direct mail is a
strategy. Neither are optimum, but both can work. I prefer companies
have a multi-point sales strategy. And "referrals" should ALWAYS be a
component of it.
Here's an example of one of our clients who came to us for help.
They had 3500 customers across the Midwest. Their chosen strategy
though, was to ignore a "referral" strategy and focus on prospects they
didn't know-commonly known as a "cold call" strategy. Absurd.
My Suggestion:
My belief is that a sound sales strategy should make things easier-not
harder. So if you have 3500 customers, I wouldn't make even ONE cold
call. I would do several things:
1. Do a Case Study ("white paper")
Go back to those customers and do a "white paper" on how the solution
impacted their business. Have a professional interview several contacts
at the client, then get it transcribed and put it into a 3-5 page
"study." Then take that study and offer it on the website (get emails
before you let people download it) and it becomes your brochure. Throw
out all the brochures that puff about how good you are-and use the white
paper to do that for you-in the words of your clients. There are even
companies who do white papers (for about $2000).
2. Have a Seminar (User Forum) for Your Clients and Invite Prospects
Or have your customers invite their associates. I have yet to see a
company who is selling their current customers EVERYTHING they could.
There seems to be so much "testosterone" around conquering the new
account that we forget about easy ways to do it.
3. An Educational Strategy
I would say one half of your prospects don't know the scope of what you
do-nor do they know how to think about your category of solution.
Therefore, education is in order. You must educate them-not to how great
you are (that's a common blunder) but to what kind of pain they may be
feeling without your solution. Every marketing book says that people are
on a continuum from UNAWARE to ACTION. One stop on that continuum is
COMPREHENSION-meaning, they comprehend that they have a problem worth
solving.
These are a few of the many sales strategies that we use in our practice
of helping sales teams increase revenue. I hope these can help you do
the same.
Source: William Caskey link
For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.