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High Achiever Sales Professional Tool Kit: 5 Tools to Advance Your Sales
Income
by Bill Caskey

Published on this site: September 2nd, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

To become a high achieving sales professional, you must first become an
expert communicator. Ask any sales person if they would like to make $250,000
a year and they universally say "yes." But then look at the
tool kit they use to pursue clients, and more than likely you will find
that the sales tools are dull.
After 19 years of working with sales organizations in general, and high
achieving sales professionals specifically, I've found that there are
many tools that are prerequisite to advancing your income. These five
that I will cover here are words and phrases that will create an environment
with your prospect where they are telling you the truth. And since your
most precious commodity is time, you can't afford to waste it with people
who lie to you.
- "What would you like to accomplish today?"
I get called on by many sales organizations (some of them household
names) and rarely, if ever, does a sales person start a meeting with,
"What would you like to accomplish today, Bill." This one
question will save you hundreds of hours a year from working on things
that don't matter. It's a way for the prospect to begin to share their
problem with you. Just because the tool sounds simple, doesn't mean
it's used.
- "Is there any financial impact to this problem?"
I'm assuming that you're not giving away your solution for free.
And that in fact, there is a price the customer pays to buy and a price
the customer pays not to buy. I want to understand the difference. By
asking this question, you will start to learn what the financial consequences
are for "not buying." Then whenyou talk about your fee, the
prospect will be comparing your fee to the cost of the problem. Sales
amateurs will very rarely help the prospect make that connection. High
achieving sales professionals deal with money more elegantly and eloquently.
And this question will help you put money on the table without it just
being about "your price."
- "Let's do this."
Get advances if you can't close. "Lets do this" is a proven
technique that allows you to talk about the next steps in the process
while you move your prospect forward toward a final decision. Let's
suppose you're an hour into the sales call and the prospect has shared
with you some of the problems he has, but he's still unsure of your
product or service's value. You want to go back to your office and study
them prior to giving a proposal. In this case, you would say, "Let's
do this. I'm going to go back and put some thought into this and then
let's set a time we can come back in a week and take it a little further."
The better process manager you are, the better sales person you are.
- "Here's how we (I) typically work."
Use this on the very first call where you're laying out your process
for getting them a solution. The high achiever needs to be thought of
as an expert, not just in sales, but in the industry domain that you
play in. Experts have processes and procedures. If you don't have a
sales process, get one immediately.
- "I have a sense that..."
The elite sales executive pays close attention to their feelings.
The "gut instinct" is a powerful internal communication device
for you. If something doesn't feel right, it probably isn't. If something
does sound right, you've got to call it.
"I have a sense that..." are words in your sales professional
toolbox that you can use to begin this conversation. I encourage my
clients to use this if they are thirty minutes into the first call and
the prospect hasn't shared any problems or pains that he wants to fix.
You might say, "In the first thirty minutes of our discussion today
I haven't heard anything that's really a compelling reason for you to
change from your current source. I kind of get this sense that if things
just continued on it wouldn't be all that bad."
Give the prospect an opportunity react. It's a way for the prospect to
come back to you and either say yes, you're right and it's over (which
is OK because as I said earlier, time is your most precious commodity,
so move on) or he will convince you that he does have a problem worth
exploring. And then, you will have control.

Bill Caskey: During his 19+ years of experience as a leader, experimenter
and coach for hundreds of B2B sales teams, Bill Caskey has discovered
that most sales organizations perform poorly in expressing their value
to their prospects and customers resulting in severe underachievement
by their sales force, long selling cycles, constant battles with clients
and prospects and pressure on margins. To evolve into a higher achiever,
increase your income you must first become a pioneer who dares to be different.
To learn how, check out Bill Caskey's High Achiever Resource Website:
http://www.elitesellerblog.com


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