PSYCHOLOGY OF SELLING:
A well-planned script is one of the telemarketer's most powerful tools. Enthusiasm combined with a strong presentation will motivate a prospect to buy. However, as the customer becomes more savvy and competition mounts, top telemarketers must find ways to stand apart from the pack. To create a presentation that motivates, you must go beyond clearly conveying the benefits of owning your product. Psychological selling elevates taking a qualified contact to new standards in professional telemarketing skills.
The telemarketers must focus on studying the clients needs and how they can satisfy the individual customer. To minimize call resistance the prospect must be allowed to buy what they want and get the benefits which fulfill the values they perceive are necessary. By incorporating ten powerful psychology of selling tools into your sales presentation you will strengthen your customer relationships and shorten the sales process.
1) Interview the prospect to learn their needs.
An interactive dialogue is a more complicated and skilled presentation than simply reading a one sided pitch but the results are significantly more profitable. All high-ticket items and any manager interested in improving their close rate must involve the prospect beyond simple yes or no answers.
2) Proper questions reveal what the client really wants and why they want it.
To gain closing ammunition the telemarketers want to know how the prospect knows they have satisfied their needs and what must happen for the client to realize they have it. As questioning skills develop the salesperson will learn to understand the prospect as a person and individual.
3) Understand key motivation for owning your product.
Every purchase comes down to people needing to satisfy the emotions of greed, ego, fear, love, or self-development. People buy emotion! Top producers challenge old habits such as selling common facts and benefits. Top producers sell to satisfy emotion.
When ego, fear or one of the other key emotions are sold the prospect is rapidly moved to the close. There is a strong psychological need to satisfy and protect those emotions. People spend their money to get the pleasures of satisfying those needs. It is a priority to protect themselves from the pain of having a void in those emotional areas.
4) Logic pales to emotion.
The initial reason a prospect considers buying is for the emotional satisfaction your product offers. The owning of features is only a tool that helps fulfill a greater psychological need. The motivating force that propels people to buy is the need to attain intangible values and the specific psychological needs owning your product satisfies. Remember: people will use logic to justify their purchases but they buy for emotional reasons.
Trigger emotions by carefully planning your questions. Concentrate on tapping into the emotions that are touched by owning your product.
5) Get Them Talking!
A simple statement such as "Can I ask you a few brief questions to save time and see if I can satisfy your needs" will get the prospect into the right frame of mind to answer all of your probing questions. That brief statement offers two benefits, saving time and satisfying the prospects needs. Secondly, you tear down defensive walls when you allude to the fact that your product may not be appropriate. Lastly, it is a powerful question because the prospect feels they are in control even though you are the one guiding them.
6) Are they ready to buy?
As you support your case with facts and benefits you want to test if the prospect is ready to be closed. You can minimize fatal closing objections if you test the prospects buying readiness with a trial close.
The average person hates to make a decision. They often can't decide on which movie to see Saturday night. Getting the prospect to commit to a major purchase is even more difficult. On the other hand they will add their two cents when it's not their decision. Human nature encourages people to want to share their opinions and thoughts. People feel important when they are asked their opinion and they feel good giving it.
By specifically asking the prospect your closing question with the words "in your opinion" preceding it, you turn a decision making formal close into a comfortable trial close. The trial response tells you how ready the person is to making a buying decision. If you get a highly favorable answer to your trial close you can ask a formal closing question. If you receive a cold or mildly warm response you still need to do some desire development.
7) Create a buying mood with the word yes.
By getting your prospect to say yes six times during the presentation you greatly increase the odds of getting a favorable response to your closing statement. Six yeses get the person into an agreeable state of mind. They become comfortable saying yes to you. The prospect's yes responses breakthrough negative defenses. Most importantly the prospect is now psychologically in the right mind set to allow themselves to say yes to a purchase decision. How many simple questions that can elicit a yes response can you structure into your presentation?
8) Enthusiasm and smiles.
Enthusiasm is contagious. If you are enthusiastic about your product, you will be more successful. This is crucial in telemarketing. Your voice is your greatest asset in conveying the attributes of your product or service. If you are excited, your prospect will sense that there is something good here. It is your enthusiasm that brings a script to life.
Smiling is one of the most natural ways to bring your enthusiasm to the surface. When we simile, we are friendlier, more energetic and enthusiastic. Even when you don't feel like smiling, do it. Your mind will automatically be triggered into a happier state of being.
9) Script and pad.
Even the simplest of presentations should be written out. A script allows you to select the most appropriate wording to move your prospect through the sales process and to use that wording on each and every call. Even more important, having a script in front of you allows you to put your energy into listening to the prospect rather than thinking about what to say next.
When you uncover an important need, problem or interest of the prospect's, jot it down. Writing it down assures that you will remember the point, work it into your presentation and leaves your mind clear to listen for more vital information.
10) Going beyond words:
To establish trust and likability the telemarketer must speak in a manner that makes the prospect comfortable. People like and trust those folks that are similar to themselves. By carefully monitoring your words, speech patterns and voice tones you can create an environment that quickly establishes positive rapport.
People have different definitions for the same words. For instance, one prospect may say they want to buy a mutual fund with a great track record and the representative says they have a fund with an excellent track record. Unfortunately by the prospect's definition great may be better than excellent, therefore resulting in some uneasiness. The prospect may feel that there are different connotations to the word 'excellent' compared to 'great' which results in the two parties being on slightly different wave lengths. The simplest solution is to carefully listen to the words your prospect uses and adopt them into your conversation on a case by case basis. You will be viewed as someone who understands the prospect's viewpoints and that 'speaks their language.'
Speech patterns are equally important. Are you a fast talking Yankee or a slow talking robot? The only right answer is to be in synch with your prospects. If they speak slowly and you speak rapidly you may be viewed as a smooth talking hustler. On the other hand the slow talking telemarketer may make the fast talking prospect very uncomfortable. The prospect may become impatient and feel the telemarketer is not being responsive. As you verbally dance with your prospect you must gracefully follow their pace.
Tone of voice often communicates more than the words selected. Do you convey excitement with words such as terrific, fantastic and great? Does concern come through in your message as you ask about goals, objectives and challenges facing your prospect? Does your voice resonate with confidence as you make recommendations, state facts and benefits and ask for the order?
In telemarketing your voice becomes your body language. Similar to the way we select our words and pace of speech is the use of voice tone. We must speak in a manner that our customer can relate to. Does your voice tone over power or comfort the soft-spoken prospect? Are you portrayed as confident and competent in the eyes of the prospect who uses a commanding tone?
As you develop the psychological rapport building technique of modeling the prospects' words, speech pattern and voice tone you begin to melt the icy reception that greets many telemarketers. When you develop the habit of building your clients' trust by appealing to their emotional needs and values you create a loyal customer base. By structuring your presentation and speech to the individual prospect you are better suited to guide your customer to the appropriate decision. Your staff's telemarketing success can be further leveraged as each member of your team takes stock of their daily communication habits and evaluates each of their strengths and weaknesses. When a quality script is combined with sincerely meeting the needs of the prospect you are an organization that communicates genuine value. The reward is a motivated sales team, happy customers and a profitable bottom line.
PSYCHOLOGY OF SELLING - To learn more about this author, visit Mark Anthony's Website.
Like this article? Share it with your friends
![]() | |
| |
No article feedback found. |
| |
Leave Your Feedback |
|
| |
| |||
George LudwigGeorge Ludwig is a recognized authority on sales strategy and peak performance psychology. An international speaker, trainer, and corporate consultant, he helps clients like Johnson & Johnson, Abbott Laboratories, Northwestern Mutual, CIGNA, and numerous others improve sales force effectiveness and performance. Though it's George's strategies and processes that help corporations increase productivity and performance, it's his tremendous energy and dynamism that spark the transformation. Again and again, clients remark on his amazing ability to unleash human capacity and inspire men and women to break out of their comfort zones. The result is a whole new type of salesperson. His customized presentations teach achievers to make stunning advances in their lives. From helping salespeople realize cherished dreams to helping corporations exponentially accelerate revenue streams, George Ludwig leaves audiences and individuals empowered, emboldened, and clamoring for more. George is the best-selling author of Power Selling: Seven Strategies for Cracking the Sales Code and Wise Moves: 60 Quick Tips to Improve Your Position in Life & Business. - Visit George Ludwig's Website |
|||
Dave KurlanDave Kurlan is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development. Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit. He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine. He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball. He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2. - Visit Dave Kurlan's Website |
|||
Linda RichardsonLinda Richardson is the Founder and Executive Chairwoman of Richardson, a global sales training and performance improvement company. As a recognized leader in the industry, she has won the coveted Stevie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Sales Excellence and she was identified by Training Industry, Inc. as one of the “Top 20 Most Influential Training Professionals.” Ms. Richardson is credited with the movement to Consultative Selling and is the author of ten books on selling and sales management, including Sales Coaching — Making the Great Leap from Sales Manager to Sales Coach, and Stop Telling, Start Selling. She teaches sales and management at the Wharton Graduate School of the University of Pennsylvania and the Wharton Executive Development Center. Linda is a frequent speaker at industry and client conferences, has been published extensively in industry and training journals, and has been featured in numerous publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Nation’s Business, Selling Power, Success, and The Conference Board Magazine. Learn more about Richardson's sales training and performance improvement solutions at http://www.richardson.com web - Visit Linda Richardson's Website |
|||
John PowerJohn Power, founder of Biltmore Franchise Consulting, has extensive experience developing and marketing franchises and business opportunities. He has been in and around franchising for over twenty years. From 1980 through 1990 he conceptualized, organized, and developed the American Video Association. He grew AVA to 2,000 national members, before selling the company it 1990. It was later merged into another home video marketing company. From 2000 to 2005 he worked as a contract marketing and human resources consultant to several local and national companies. In 2005 Mr. Power began working as a franchise development consultant on a full-time basis. Since that time he has helped more than three dozen companies initiate and develop their franchising program. He notes that there are many companies interested in developing a franchise program, and who need his specialized assistance. Mr. Power is a “hands-on” franchise consultant. He said, “I am the ‘nuts and bolts’ person who tends to the details for my clients.” Mr. Power holds a B.S. degree with a major in Marketing. See: www.biltmorefranchise.com You may contact Mr. Power at: jpower@biltmorefranchise.co - Visit John Power's Website |
|||
Staging DivaDebra Gould, aka The Staging Diva®, is President of Six Elements Inc., an internationally recognized home staging company. Inspired by many requests from aspiring home stagers wanting to start similar businesses, Gould created the Staging Diva Home Staging Business Training Program. Gould has trained over 1000 Staging Diva Graduates worldwide to start staging businesses. Buying decorating and selling six of her own homes in four years lead to an interest in real estate staging which she turned into a career with the launch of sixelements.com in 2002. Since then she has staged hundreds of homes in addition to teaching home staging training. Gould is the author of several home staging resources including a series of popular ebooks made up of a Design Guide, Color Guide and Portfolio Guide. For more information about Debra Gould visit stagingdiva.com. - Visit Staging Diva's Website |
|||
Jay Kubassek(Jay's Full Bio: EvanCarmichael.com/jaykubassek) In five years, Canadian-born entrepreneur Jay Kubassek went from selling mufflers at a Midas franchise to revolutionizing Internet marketing with the 2004 launch of CarbonCopyPRO, a online marketing education company, now worth over $20 million with customers in over 160 countries.
As an independent film producer, his upstart film fund Aliquot Films is currently producing a films with Spike Lee and Abel Fererra (starring Ethan Hawke and Dennis Hopper.)
Jay's entrepreneurial spirit is irrepressible. He’s the owner of five companies, a professional speaker and trainer, international real estate developer/investor, extreme sport enthusiast and emerging philanthropist. Jay resides in NYC with his wife Jamie, son Milo and dog Cooper. Visit Jay's official website: www.JayKubassek.com - Visit Jay Kubassek's Website |
|||
|
To learn more about the Evan Elite Author Program please contact us. | |||
![]() | |
![]()
| |
![]() | |
|
| |
![]() | |
|
| |
![]() | |||||||
|
![]() | ||
|
| ||
![]() |
| Have you written articles that would be of value to entrepreneurs? Become an expert on our site by publishing them! Expose yourself to a wide audience, drive more traffic to your website and get more sales! Click Here for details. |
|
|
![]() |
| Modeling the Masters: Learn the true secrets behind Walt Disney's business success factors & grow your company! Video produced by Phanta Media |
|
|
![]() |
"Learn straight from Evan how you can Make a Full Time Income (And More) from a Website"
Click Here To Learn More |
|
|
|
|
Get advice & tips from famous business owners, new articles by entrepreneur experts, my latest website updates, & special sneak peaks at what's to come!
|
![]() |
|
|
![]() | ||
|
The Top 10 GTD Times Posts
Best Posts for Productivity | ||
|
Top 50 Productivity Blogs
Top Blogs To Watch In 2009 | ||
![]() | ||
![]() | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|











Subscribe to Mark's articles











