12 STEPS TO IRRESISTIBLE SALES POWER
Wow! Last
week’s TGIM (#417) really clicked with you guys. The feedback has been
rewarding.
And I thank you for
it. It’s made me think that perhaps further review of some “classic” sales
strategies might be mutually beneficial.
So I’m going to try again -- inspired by you all and
especially the recent outreach from an old publishing acquaintance who recalled
a memo we both received in – gulp! --
1971.
Richard Prentice
Ettinger.
From time to time I have alluded to RPE (as he was known) and his protégé and my early boss Richard Neill (and, yup, he was tagged RN and I was GS) here.
From time to time I have alluded to RPE (as he was known) and his protégé and my early boss Richard Neill (and, yup, he was tagged RN and I was GS) here.
RPE built Prentice-Hall, Inc. from a struggling
two-person outfit in 1913 into a publishing giant with annual sales in excess
of $120 million when he died in ‘71. (By some calculations that’s equivalent to
roughly $2 Billion today).
Clearly --
He knew something
useful about selling. And those of us who were fortunate enough to have
worked for him/with him would regularly receive some resurrected and
re-released memos he had penned across the decades to guide our thinking and
behavior.
I’d like to share one with you. As I said,
my version is from 1971. Its origins could go back as far as, perhaps, 1913.
It’s classic RPE.
But by 21st Century standards the language – bosses assumed to be “him” … receptionists assumed to be “her” … sales “man” -- may be distracting.
Don’t be diverted or
misled. I think RPE was simply profit-focused and didn’t think that he was
being sexist, just generic. In 1971 a good, well-respected part of the Prentice-Hall
sales force and upper level staff were women.
This is powerful stuff.
In its day this memo was distributed by managers throughout the
organization to employees at all levels – editors, design and production
personnel, the operational folks, maintenance crews, printers, financial types,
cafeteria staff -- not just to “salesmen.”
The instruction to the management level was:
“See that your people keep the basic rules always in sight.”
I guess it was
effective. When I was reminded of it, I was able to dig back and find my 40+
-year-old copy which I will share with you – word for word – now:
***
12 Steps To Irresistible Sales Power
No matter how long a man’s been selling, or what sales
tricks he can call on during his presentation, his success boils down to the
use of basics.
- Don’t let the receptionist turn you away. You’ve got to get past her if you expect to make the sale. Convince her that what you have to offer could mean a big cost-saving for her company.
- Know how to sell an appointment. You must sell that before you can sell a product. The harder a man is to see, the better a customer he is likely to become.
- Get the facts. Before you attempt to sell a prospect anything, find out what he wants or what he needs. Then find a way to fill that need.
- Sell time and/or money and/or avoidance of trouble. Show the prospect how he can save time. Show him how he can increase his profits by using your products.
- Be brief, confident, positive. Don’t stoop to knocking the competition. Sell your product on what it CAN do, not what the other product allegedly can’t.
- Present information honestly. Avoid tricks, exaggeration. Or false claims. Be ready to back up your claims. There is nothing more convincing than the truth.
- Answer questions. Get the prospect involved. By answering your questions, the customer helps to sell himself.
- Field any objections cheerfully. Chart the answers in advance. The prospect who voices objections is “ventilating” in preparation to buying.
- Be a name dropper. If big and successful companies have enough confidence in your product to use it, their confidence can inspire others to buy.
- Know how to spot a buying signal. Be alert when the customer asks to take another look at the product or when he asks about delivery. He’s really saying, “I’ll take it – ask me.”
- Don’t wait for the order. Ask for it. Then when you get it, escalate it. Many a salesman walks away without an order simply because he didn’t ask for it.
- Don’t be discouraged by a call that ends up without a sale. Failure’s not a signal to give up; it’s a signal to work harder. Use the events of the meeting to cement your relationship so you can prepare for the next call.
IMPORTANT: Don’t
blame the prospect when you lose a sale. Consider what you did wrong – or what
you failed to do.
And profit by your experience.
***
Wow! (again). That’s
a real blast from the past for me. A true golden oldie, full of significance
and emotion -- if a little light on precisely how-to-do-it.
But, of course, Prentice-Hall and its subsidiaries published
many now legendary books and seminal authors with sales and self-improvement
substance. Norman Vincent Peale … Frank Bettger … Elmer Wheeler … Charles Roth
… Maxwell Maltz … W. Clement Stone.
Woe betide any sales-minded, would-be career employee who
didn’t become familiar with the substantial content set down by these
luminaries in their classic guides.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: Always be learning. Always be building your
skills and your library. Get wisdom. And get understanding. Put what you acquire into practice.
Finally: Share
your successes as we try to do via this TGIM.
Hope you “profited by
this experience.” I’m looking forward
to sharing more next Monday – if not sooner.
Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P.S. “I still work hard to know my business. I'm
continuously looking for ways to improve all my companies, and I'm always
selling. Always.” Celebrity “shark” and businessman, investor, and philanthropist Mark Cuban said that.