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Be Direct!
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| Guest post by: Craig James |
Article Overview: Sometime in sales, getting what you want is simply a matter of asking for it.
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Free Download - Revitalize Your Referrals By Craig James |
Be Direct!
The Rolling
Stones had a hit tune back in the day called, "You Can't Always Get What
You Want". Many of us in Sales can relate to that. We don't always get
the call back. We don't always get the appointment. We don't always get
to meet the decision-maker. We don't always get the order. Now it is, of
course, unreasonable to expect to always get what we want. But wouldn't you
agree that it is reasonable to believe that we might get what we
want more often than we do if we changed the way we asked for it?
The sad fact is one of the reasons we don't get what we want more often is
because we simply don't ask for it - or don't ask for it directly. We sort of
kind of ask for it, but we don't really ask for it. For example, I was debriefing
a sales rep one day who had just finished an initial exploratory meeting with a
prospect. I asked him, "How did you end the meeting?" He
replied proudly, "I asked, 'Do you think we could arrange a meeting
with the other participants in the decision process?'" I really didn't
want to burst his bubble, because some reps wouldn't even ask that - but I
couldn't in good conscience applaud that response. "And?", I
said. He replied, "She said, 'Yes, I think we could.'" I then
asked him if asking something like, "The typical next step that
customers take is to get all the decision makers together for a meeting in
order to evaluate our solution for themselves. How about we pencil in a date -
say, next Thursday? might not have been a better response. (A better
solution, I have since discovered, is to use a handy, free, web-based tool
called Doodle)".
Do you see the difference? The rep's response was not one that took control of
the next step. Can you guess what followed for our rep over the next ten days?
Not having attempted to pin down a date right there when he had the
opportunity, he spent those next ten days chasing after his contact. He finally
did get her, but only after wasting all that time - not to mention losing
valuable momentum.
This begs the question - why not just be direct more often? Why not ask for
what you want? In this example, if you were the rep, is knowing whether or
not a meeting could be arranged with the other participants really what you
want to know? No! It's the meeting itself that you want. So ask for it!
How about "closing" a sale - or as I prefer to say, asking for a
commitment to do business together? When you sense the time is right (gee, that
sounds eerily like an overplayed TV commercial I know!), are you bold enough to
ask for what you want? And do you then ask for it - directly? Or do you dance
around it and serve up some wishy-washy kinda, sorta request to maybe do
business some day? Or worse - do you fail to ask at all?
ACTION ITEM
You can't always get what you want. But you will get what you want more often
if you start asking for it directly. Start by writing down phrases you could
ask at the end of different kinds of interactions - a cold call, an initial
meeting, a multi-participant presentation, responding to an objection, and closing
a sale. Then practice with a buddy (or with a microphone, if you have no
buddies - which is something I'm not qualified to help you with!), having him
or her be the prospect, and you be the rep. First use responses that are not
direct, and have your buddy respond. Then use the direct response for the same
situation, and see how your buddy responds this time. I'm pretty certain those
responses will, more often than not, get you what you want- the Rolling Stones'
contention notwithstanding.
Good selling!
Craig
Article Tags: closing, cold call, commitment, objections, presenting
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About the Author: Craig James RSS for Craig's articles - Visit Craig's website Sales Solutions Founder and President Craig James has over 12 years' experience in sales and sales management, primarily in technology and software. An accomplished speaker and presenter, Craig is President of his local Toastmasters chapter, teaches at New York University’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies, and has lectured at Columbia University’s School of Continuing Education. He also volunteers as a Discussion Leader with the Workshop In Business Opportunities, a "boot camp" for entrepreneurs whose mission is to enable small business owners and budding entrepreneurs in under-served communities to obtain financial success in starting, operating, and building successful businesses. He's been published and quoted in Business Week, Sales and Marketing Management, and Selling Power, and been interviewed by Sales Rep Radio. Craig earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, and his MBA from the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business. Click here to visit Craig's website Five Questions Salespeople Need to Ask but Rarely Do The Power of a Thank You Jump start stalled sales four steps to help close faster Be Direct Warm Up That Cold Call |
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