RES-O-LU-TION

Never make your boss look bad.  Most bad bosses are capable of accomplishing this all on their own.
~ Jamie Fabian


Time is upon us to reflect upon the past year, for some, but for many it is the time to clean the slate and resolve new goals.


SALES:


  1. I shall not  over promise and under deliver
  2. I shall value each hour and each appointment
  3. I shall not fill my day with "look busy" activities 
  4. I will ask more questions and listen often
  5. I will take care to understand what it is that I can do to help my customers reach their goals
  6. I will use problems as a means to gain better solutions
  7. My sales manager is not my mother, teacher or babysitter -- I will do what is expected with little cause for nagging, reminders nor will I whine or make excuses  
  8. I shall not point the finger at anyone other than myself I will take responsibility for my own actions
  9. I will not make commitments of which my team will have difficulty on delivering
  10. Integrity, trust and knowledge are my guiding principles


MANAGEMENT:


  1. I will not ask of others that of which I would not do myself
  2. I shall  not project what the team cannot deliver to save face
  3. I should trust the people whom I have hired, exchange their loyalty with loyalty of my own
  4. I am no bigger than the people whom I represent
  5. My personal goals are not to the detriment of those who report to me
  6. I trust that I am in this position based on my expertise
  7. When failure happens I will point inward
  8. I will coach, guide, mentor my team
  9. Directives and mandates are replaced with buy in, engagement, and input from my team
  10. I will take care of the customer, who will take care of the bottom line

TIME is MONEY

We are all getting busier, with less resources or personnel support while expectations are sky rocketing, attention fleeting while the need to generate more revenue is critical.

Like many of my Blogposts, there is a common theme evolving -- how organizations and sales professionals should collaborate to achieve BOTH of their objectives  while striving to gain  RESULTS.

A challenge is typically asserted on which accountability metrics are important to operations and sales.  Typically, for operations it is profitability and for sales it is revenue.  In order to drive revenue, sales professionals should have realistic activity mandated.  All top sales organizations have various activity metrics to ensure that even entry level sales reps can achieve some success.  There are a few factors that could be taken into consideration to establish perameters :
  1. Sales Cycle
  2. Geographic territory
  3. Vertical targets
  4. Cost of product or service
  5. Level of decision maker required
  6. Seasonal variables
  7. Competition
  8. Pre-Sales support
  9. Marketing program
  10. Lead time between sale and delivery
  11. Budget, plan, quota or target
I will get into the 11 points above in future blogs.  However, before you ask sales to meet the minimum activity metrics, after examing the parameters, your organization should next ask itself what tools or considerations are being taken into account to boost productivity or demand results.  For example:
  1. Training (Company provided or endorsed)
  2. Skill Level (Experience in sales or industry)
  3. Compensation (Commission versus salary plus bonus)
  4. Marketing Program (sales material, advertising or leads)
  5. Sales Timeline  (from sale, to implementation, to commission or bonus payment)
  6. Tracking Tools (CRM system, manual, activity reporting)
  7. Sales Management (Coaching, mentoring, meetings)
  8. Support (proposal template, clerical, analysts, diagnostics)
  9. Territory (geographical or verticle/by industry)
  10. Sales Budget
  11. Communication (customer service, computer, e-mail, wireless, cell phone or iPhone/Blackberry)
It is easy for organizations to hire and plunk sales reps in territory and cross their fingers that they've found a superstar.  Yet, without analysis of factors that could impact success or inability to provide the necessary tools it shouldn't be surprising there may be a  lack of results.

So, before you kick your rep out the door and ask him/her to sink or swim, examine what you are doing to facilitate their success?  After all, time is money!



Cool calling




 I am an advocate of cold calling.  Cold calling IS necessary in today's uncertain, competitive climate. To rely on warm leads aka referrals is simply unrealistic. My cold calling techniques change based on who/what I am targetting, but I'll try to give you some ideas on how to tackle it and take the COLD out of CALL:

1) INTERVIEW  existing satisfied customers

  • Your best source of informaton is already using your services
  • Take the stance that your are new and interviewing them
  • You'd be amazed how many time you hear from them how nobody else has taken the time to ask
  • They may ask you why you are doing this, and end up offering referrals
  • They will want you to succeed now that you've taken the time to understand their success
  • Don't forget to ask for that "testimonial"
  • Make sure you put some of those quotes on your website
  • Ask for examples of ways your company/service/product has helped them
  • Use those as "case studies" on your website on how you solved business issues
2)  NARROW your targets
  • Visit website, pay special attention to company announcements, "in the news" areas
3) PERSONALLY visit prospect's office/place of business
  • Hand business card right away - Be upfront about who you are and state that you are just doing research or there to ask questions
  • 9/10 times the receptionist knows more than anyone what is going on in the company
  • Be respectful of the gatekeeper, their time, be pleasant, avoid sales pitch, be confident
  • Use their nametag or nameplate or ask for their name, people are always more receptive if they hear their own name
  • Observe if they have to take calls, are hurried, act accordingly
  • Go with the attitude that your objective is not to sell something TODAY
  • Be honest:  you are there to drop off information and confirm your information/contact
  • Ask questions in an interested, non-threatening manner
  • Observe (i.e. Trade Magazines) and/or gather material ( i.e. Annual Reports
  • Share some of the information you've gathered  to create comradery
  • Confirm point of contact -- where so many reps fail -- another gatekeeper is not who you're looking for -- ask very specific who makes the "decision" for your product/service is helpfu
4)  Have a MARKETING kit with you
  • A flyer is not a marketing kit
  • No need to have a letter
  • Information on your company
5) Give kit, saying you want to drop it off in advance to follow up with whomever is in charge of what you're looking for, asking for confirmation whether it is the person you sourced -- specifically ask for a business card, if not, their full name, title, telephone and e-mail
6) E-Mail contact that you're following up the package that you left off because you appreciate how busy they are and respect their time, what you want to share (remember 1?  share those stories or how you helped them)... then say  you will follow up by telephone at a certain time to arrange a meeting.  If you haven't been able to access e-mail, resort to snail mail ... except hand write the envelope (greater chance at it being opened) and mark it CONFIDENTIAL.
7) CALL them at that time (don't fail at this)
 
8) They may be EXPECTing your call or ready to refer you down the ladder.  This depends highly on how you've done so far.  Sometimes there is someone else that does make that decision.  If they have a subordinate, you want them to refer you down the ladder.
9)  If they are REFERRing you down, confirm that they will be passing your package over to that person.  Also ask when would be best to follow up, if you can push your luck ... have them tell that person you will be calling at a specific date or time.  They may offer to have them call you back (best).
 
10) They may AGREE to meet with you at that point or ask you what your value proposition is over the phone.  The higher up you are, the more direct they are because they despise people who waste their time or can't help them.  Remember 1 again?  You can clearly articulate  your value proposition (solve their business need, fix a problem, give them insight,  etc.)
 
11) The  person who has been "topped down" will  meet with you because their boss handed your package to them, told them you would be calling or have them calling you (best).  This all points to a direct request from the boss.
 
12)  If you get their voicemail:  State who you are (you don't have to say company), that you are following up after leaving information with *insert name* to pass on and that as promised you are calling  to schedule a brief 20-30 minute meeting (if you ask for more, you're nixing your chances) to share ideas that will improve (what benefits have you come up with?).  If you have to call two or three times, don't worry.  Keep reinforcing that you are following up, what your benefits are, and also express empathy for how busy they are after the 2nd or 3rd call.  I spend more time on this on my other Blogpost:  "How many times do you call?"
 
13)  Up until this point, you really haven't even attempted to sell anything.  You're objective in cold calling:
  •  Pre-qualify (have a general idea they will benefit from your "pitch")
  •  Confirm who the decision maker is (not another gatekeeper)
  •  Create enough interest that they will agree to meet with you
There are several steps in cold calling.   There are numerous hypothetical situations that haven't been addressed.  The point is, statistically most sales people give up after one drop in or telephone call, maximum three at most.  That is why only 20 percent of all sales people are successful.  The other 80 percent won't bother to even follow up, want a magical formula to guarantee results or may just be too lazy. 

I will share my biggest secret for free:  The attitude is about having FUN!   Imagine you're a bumbling inspector or searching for the key for endless wealth.   Your finesse will come from practicing, failing, trying a new approach, failing, trying something else, failing ..... THEN  noting what has worked and why.

If you want to give up after 3) you may want to reconsider your occupation .... because treasures can only be found after DIGging!