How to Use a Powerful Leadership Tool to Step Up Sales
Results
by Brent Filson
Published on this site: April 8th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Good sales people can close, but few "step up" for even
more sales from that close. Yet stepping up should be one of the
easiest accomplishments in sales that is if you know how
to build the staircase.
Do it by applying a leadership tool I have taught thousands of
leaders worldwide during the past 20 years. The tool is simply to
foster a particular viewpoint, which is this: Challenge people not
simply to do a task but to take leadership of that task.
The difference in results-producing effectiveness between doing
a task and taking leadership of a task is the difference between
the lightning bug and lightning.
This change in viewpoint may seem simple even simplistic; but when
put into action many times daily, it can work wonders.
For instance, I worked with a manufacturing leader whose workers
were constantly falling short of productivity goals. I told him
he was leading the workers in the wrong way; he was ordering them
to get productivity advancements. I told him that he should have
the workers sign on as leaders of productivity advancements. When
the workers began seeing themselves as such leaders, they started
hitting the goals consistently.
Now, let's apply this leadership tool to the sales process. I'll
show you how to get step-ups in results that go far beyond the results
achieved from closes. Here are three ways to do it.
(1) Don't Just Sell Products, Get Cause Leaders: Salespeople
often fail to get step-ups because they have a short-sighted view
of the customer. They view the customer as only a customer! Whereas,
if we want to get step-ups, we must see the customer not just as
a customer but as a "cause leader," one who can lead our
cause both inside and outside their company. Instead of aiming just
to sell a product, to get a close, aim to turn your customer into
your cause leader.
For instance, I consulted with a materials supplier that wanted
to acquire new customers in the computer industry. The salespeople
of the materials company not only worked diligently on closing with
the engineer-customers but also on creating step-ups by persuading
those engineers to be the cause leaders for their materials within
the company.
Here is the way that they enlisted that leadership. They discovered
that the engineers needed increased productivity and faster cycle-times
-- and to do it with fewer resources.
In response, the sales people developed a materials performance
package for the engineers that increased their productivity and
cycle-times. In addition, they brought in productivity experts from
their own company to help the engineers streamline their design
processes. They're not only selling their materials. They're selling
productivity as well. Seeing that the sales people were helping
them meet their vital needs, the engineers became the sales people's
cause leaders within their company unleashing a torrent of
step-ups.
(2) Start Early: George Burns said, "I had to work
hard for 20 years in vaudeville before I became an overnight success
in radio." That's a lesson in stepping up. Stepping up sales
results with my leadership tool doesn't just happen overnight. You
must prepare to get those step-ups starting in the early stages
of the sales process: when prospecting for new clients, identifying
decision makers, and making initial calls.
In this early stage, ask yourself: "What is the close in this
sale? And how can that close lead to the customer not simply buying
my product but also becoming the product's cause leader, both inside
and outside his/her organization?"
For instance, the sales people of the materials company I mentioned
aimed to replace their competitors' materials with their materials
in computer housing applications. With that focus, they would have
gotten closes but not step-ups. The differences between their
competitors materials and their materials were negligible in cost
and performance.
The sales people continued to develop the traditional channels
to their customers' purchasing departments. But they also began
building step-ups early by including design engineers in their first-stage
sales activities. They focused on being their customers' "design
partners" not simply showing them where they could save
costs and achieve performance advantages but also showing them how
they could get market share through the innovative uses of those
materials.
Getting in early as their customers' design partners, they not
only got closes but step-ups from those closes by integrating their
materials into new generations of housings.
(3) Link to "Must-Have" Results: Step-ups
happen only when you answer the vital needs of your customers
not the nice-to-have needs. Discover those needs by
asking and answering: "What are your customers absolute
must-have results?"
Those "must-haves" are your great step-up opportunities,
because when you are delivering on the must-haves, your customers
are more likely to become your cause leaders.
In the above example, the sales people were able to get step-ups
because they focused on their customer's "must-haves",
productivity and cycle-time.
Here's another example dealing with another busines sector: I consulted
with an insurance company whose growth had flattened out. We found
out a key reason why. Their products were not meeting the must-have
results of their customers. The must-have results of their customers
were that they absolutely had to grow their businesses. Yet the
company's products did not materially address the growth needs of
their customers.
Only when the sales people convinced their own company to develop
and sell products that met the growth needs of their customers were
they able to turn those customers into cause leaders. Once those
new products were offered to the customers, they far outsold the
old products.
Don't sell yourself short by focusing exclusively on the close.
Liberate the step-up opportunities that are embedded in most closes
by using this powerful leadership tool of challenging people to
lead not simply do. By getting customer cause leaders, starting
early, and linking to must-have results, you can multiply sales
far beyond what closes achieve.

The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are,
THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL
and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder
and president of The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. and has
worked with thousands of leaders worldwide during the past 20 years
helping them achieve sizable increases in hard, measured results.
Sign up for his free leadership ezine and get a free guide, "49
Ways To Turn Action Into Results," at www.actionleadership.com

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