Goal Setting - Achieve Your Sales Goals by Focusing on
Activites
by Alan Rigg
Published on this site: December 16th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

When I broke into sales in 1986, I read several books that
talked about how important it was to set goals if you wanted
to achieve success. I bought into the idea completely and
started writing down extensive lists of goals that I expected
to achieve, along with due dates for each goal. Per the advice
in the books, I made my goals nice and lofty. You know, make
a six-figure income, buy lots of nice toys, go on fabulous
vacations, that kind of stuff. And, every day, several times
a day, I visualized what my life would be like after I had
achieved my goals.
So, how much impact did those goal-setting and visualization
exercises have on my performance? None - nada - zero - zilch!
During the next two years I didn't come close to achieving
ANY of my goals! In fact, I wasn't even making enough money
to pay my bills. I had to keep tapping credit cards to make
ends meet, and I was going further and further into debt.
I finally became so disgusted that I threw away the books
and tore up my pages of written goals. I decided that, from
that point on, I would focus on my daily activites. In other
words, I would work hard to do the right things at the right
time, each and every day. If I accomplished that, I figured
that I would at least be able to pay my bills and not go any
further into debt.
I became a fanatic about prioritizing my activities. I would
ask myself at least 20 times a day, "Am I doing the single
most important thing I could be doing right now to make a
sale? Can I push off what I'm doing right now to before or
after selling hours, and use this time to do something that
I can't do before or after hours?"
Do you know what I discovered when I started asking myself
those questions? I discovered that I was not prioritizing
my daily activities very well. In fact, a lot of the time
I was just responding to requests whenever they came up. For
a salesperson, that's suicide. After all, time is the only
inventory we have!
Because of my new focus on doing the right activities at
the right time, I started asking people when they needed the
things they were asking for, and why they needed them then.
Frequently we came to the joint conclusion that the tasks
were not as time-sensitive as the original request made them
appear to be. I could push off many tasks to late in the day
or early in the morning. That gave me more time for prospecting
and qualifying opportunities during selling hours.
Yes, I worked a lot of ten to twelve hour days because of
the amount of work that I pushed off to before and after selling
hours. But, you know what? It was worth it!
After one year I had increased my income by approximately
45%. I could finally pay all of my bills each month, make
more than the minimum payment against my credit cards, and
still have some money left over for fun. The second year I
doubled the prior year's income and achieved the six-figure
income that I had never approached when it was one of my written
goals. I was able to pay off all of my credit cards, make
a down payment on a new car, save some money, and begin to
enjoy "the good life".
Conclusion
If setting goals has worked for you, by all means, keep doing
it! However, if you have been less successful that you want
to be in achieving your goals, try the alternative approach
that is described in this article. Focus on your daily activites.
Ask yourself 20 times a day, "Am I doing the single most
important thing that I could be doing right now to make a
sale? Can I push off what I am doing right now to before or
after selling hours, and use this time to do something that
I can't do before or after hours?"
Be honest with yourself when you answer these questions,
and hold yourself accountable. Become a master at prioritization.
Switching your mental focus from goals to activities could
be your path to success, just like it was for me!

Sales performance expert Alan Rigg is the author of
How to Beat the 80/20 Rule in Selling: Why Most Salespeople
Don't Perform and What to Do About It. His company, 80/20
Sales Performance, helps business owners, executives, and
managers double sales by implementing The Right Formula
for building top-performing sales teams. For more information
and more free sales and sales management tips, visit http://www.8020salesperformance.com

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