Creating Trust

Paul McCord has a great article
on How To Develop Client And Customer Trust.

One of the best ways is
to give the right advice for the client
even if that may not be the right advice
for the salesperson.

“Once the client knows that
you are willing to sacrifice
an immediate sale
for the sake of maintaining your integrity,
your reputation with that client is sealed.”

Consumer Packaged Goods companies
know this.
There’s a coveted position
of category captain
at grocery
and manufacturers compete for that honor.

The category captain leads shelf redesign
and is expected to put the needs
of the grocery store ahead of
the needs of her company.

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Getting To Yes

Seth Godin has a great post
on how people accustomed to saying no
will continue to say no.

The opposite is also true.
People accustomed to saying yes
will continue to say yes.

A common sales “trick”
is to start the prospect off
with easy yes answers.

Have you thought about getting a new car?
Yes (or else what are they doing on the lot?)
Do you have some models in mind?
Yes (again, they are on your lot).

Those types of questions.
Working, of course, up to the big yes,
the yes to your sale.

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Kings And Pawns

I love this cartoon by Hugh
at Gaping Void.

The pawn thinking that
all his hard work will allow
him to be King
and the King thinking that
all the pawn’s hard work
will allow him
to remain King.

A wonderful illustration of two people
thinking “what’s in it for me.”

That could be you and your client
or you and your boss.

When you frame your pitch
to appease her concerns
while satisfying your own goal,
you’ll have success. 

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No Invulnerable Egos

On the weekend,
I made a comment about
being an arrogant ass.
A friend turned to me
and said
“But even arrogant asses
cry sometimes, don’t they?”

Too true.

As Harry and Christine Clifford Beckwith
state in their new book
You, Inc.
“There are big eogs.
But there are no
invulnerable egos.
All people are fragile.”

Make a person feel important
and you’ll make a friend
or make a sale.

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The 8 Elements Of Voice

Screenwriter Nika Rylski ‘s recent seminar
covered the 8 elements of voice.
They are;
-vocabulary
-grammar/syntax
-accent
-slang
-jargin
-speaking style, sentence length
-verbal ticks
-subtext

Why are these elements important?
Each tells a good saleswoman
more about her prospect.

For example:
vocabulary tells us class
grammar tells us level of education
slang tells us age

The more we know about our prospect,
the easier we close sales.

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Street Tricks

Mirroring is a powerful sales technique,
matching the saleswoman’s actions
to the prospect’s.

Some street people looking
for hand outs know this.

They know that if they walk
beside the prospect,
they’ll get more money
because they become
one of us.

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