Sales Conflict Vs. Cooperation
by Frank Rumbauskas
Published on this site: October 28th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

There are two main types of communication that take place
in selling situations: conflict and cooperation. Which type
of communication you're using will have a profound impact
on whether or not you get the sale.
Conflict takes place as the result of the vast majority of
sales processes and especially as the result of these taught
in traditional sales training, which usually goes as follows:
The salesperson initiates the sales process through a cold
call. Because the prospect does not expect or anticipate the
call, sales resistance automatically exists and the salesperson
is forced to overcome it. This is conflict. When the first
appointment takes place, the prospect again has his defenses
up in anticipation of a pushy sales pitch. As a result, frivolous
objections are thrown out that the salesperson must overcome.
More conflict. At the end of the appointment, the salesperson
must secure a time for a second appointment in order to present
a proposal. The prospect says to call next week for a time,
but the salesperson wants to secure it now. Even more conflict.
The second appointment takes place, the proposal is presented,
the salesperson asks for the order, and now the prospect really
has objections. Conflict. The salesperson works to overcome
them and then uses a sleazy technique such as the infamous
alternate close to again ask for the order. Conflict at its
worst.
Now let's take a look at a sale where the state of mind is
not conflict but cooperation:
The prospect learns of the salesperson's offering through
the salesperson's thoughtful, organized self-marketing plan.
The prospect contacts the salesperson and asks for a meeting,
to which the salesperson of course agrees. Cooperation. During
the first appointment, the prospect willingly explains the
need that exists and the salesperson listens and takes down
all pertinent information. They mutually agree to a time to
review a solution. Cooperation. The day for the proposal appointment
arrives and the prospect is excited to finally learn of a
way to solve his problem. The salesperson presents it and
the prospect agrees that it looks great. More cooperation.
There is no need for the salesperson to engage in any ethically
questionable closing tactics because the prospect sees the
value in the proposal and simply buys. Cooperation at its
finest.
Ask yourself, do your sales processes look more like the
first or second example? If you're experiencing conflict instead
of cooperation with your prospects, perhaps it's time for
you to drop the old methods of prospecting and selling and
learn a new way that fosters goodwill and cooperation. The
answer is self-marketing. Instead of annoying people with
cold calling and pushing them to buy with tacky closes, it
will induce qualified prospects to call you and simply agree
to buy.

Frank Rumbauskas is the author of Cold Calling
Is A Waste Of Time: Sales Success In The Information Age and
The Sales Mastery Program. His focus is on teaching salespeople
and sales organizations how to stop cold calling and replace
it with smart self-marketing that will bring in a steady supply
of qualified, eager-to-buy prospects. For more information please visit
http://www.nevercoldcall.com

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