How To Be A Great Sales Professional by Nido Qubein

By | May 20, 10

How To Be A Great Sales Professional: Sell Your Products, Serve Your Customers, Succeed In A Competitive World by Nido Qubein

No doubt, a pivotal aspect of business success is the ability to sell more of your products. More sales bring in more money, which is the life-blood that keeps your business alife. Nido Qubein’s book: How To Be A Great Sales Professional: Sell Your Products, Serve Your Customers, Succeed In A Competitive World will help you achieve great sales of your products and stay on top of your competition.

This is an unquestionably great material to have in powering your sales and growing your business. Here is an excerpt from the book, enjoy it! Please leave your comments below after reading. how-to-be-a-great-sales-professional

Become A Consultant To Your Customers

Dale Carnegie once called Frank Bettger the best salesperson he’d ever met. Carnegie said Bettger could sell almost anything to almost anybody.

And what was Bettger’s secret of success in selling?

Let Bettger himself tell you:

“The one biggest secret of selling anything is: Try to find out what people want, and then help them get it.”

That’s a powerful insight. It’s also a valuable specimen of selling savvy.

How To Help People Get What They Want

In this chapter, we’ll explore ways to apply that bit of savvy toward making you a very successful salesperson, while you help people get what they want.

Most salespeople approach selling from the opposite position: They decide what they want to sell, then they try to talk people into buying it. That’s almost guaranteed to create sales resistance. It puts the ball in the prospect’s court. It tells prospects, in effect, “Here’s why I think you ought to buy this product. Now tell me why you shouldn’t.”

And since you’re asking your prospects to transfer money from their hands to yours, they’re usually pretty good at thinking of reasons for not doing it. But if your prospects perceive that you’re holding something they want, they’ll look for reasons to move what they want out of your hands and into theirs.

You’re Not Selling Products and Services

The problem is that most salespeople believe that their customers want to buy the products and services they are selling. They think customers want to buy automobiles, insurance, clothing, or some other item.

You acquire selling savvy when you acquire this insight: Your prospects don’t want the products or services you’re selling. They want the things those products or services can do for them.

Many salespeople argue over whether it’s easier to sell tangibles or intangibles. But the salesperson with sales savvy and business acumen knows that we are all selling intangibles.

People Don’t Just Buy Suits

Think about the way you approach buying a new suit. Certainly, you are looking for clothing, but if that’s all you’re buying you can get by with a loincloth or a burlap bag with armholes.

But you’re looking for more than basic covering. Your real buying decision will be made on factors such as how a suit makes you look, hot it makes you feel about yourself, and how it fits your lifestyle and personality.

Those are all very intangible factors. They have to do with your perceptions, your needs, your feelings, and your values. The fact is that you’re not simply buying a suit of clothes; you’re buying what that suit will do for you.

And here’s where selling savvy really comes into play. You might know exactly what you want your new suit to do for you. But if the person trying to sell you a suit doesn’t understand what you want and doesn’t show you what you want, you won’t buy – no matter what the salesperson says or does.

On the other hand, you might not know clearly what you want a suit to do for you, or what kind of suit will produce the results you desire. The salesperson’s challenge then becomes to help you understand what you want and how to get it.

An amateur might try to sell you by lowering the price, by trying to convince you that your expectations are wrong, or even by trying to manipulate you into buying a suit you don’t like.

But the professional – the salesperson with savvy – knows that all those tactics are a waste of time.

Think of Yourself as a Consultant

If you want to be successful in sales, you have to think of yourself as a consultant for your customer. Consultants are people who carefully study their prospects’ needs, concerns, and desires, then show them how to get what they want.

Consultants focus first on solving the client’s most pressing problem or fulfilling the client’s greatest desire. But to become a true consultant, you have to go beyond making the first sale.

Real professionals understand a very important principle of selling savvy: Satisfied clients make the best prospects for future sales.

Therefore, selling professionals target all their efforts at establishing long-term relationships with their customers. They think of them as clients. They see themselves not only as providers of quality goods and services, but also as invaluable resources of information and expert counsel.

Professionals perceive themselves as experts who can offer valuable insights and solutions to their customers’ problems. And they work hard to instill in their prospects that same perception.

Developing this kind of solid relationship with a customer offers substantial rewards.

A $50 Million Relationship

One of the most dramatic illustrations of how this works is a decision Lee Iacocca made when he moved to the Chrysler Corporation.

When he took control of the company, one of his first moves was to dismiss the two advertising agencies that were handling the Chrysler account.

He replaced them with the agency he had worked with so successfully at Ford.

As Iacocca put it, he didn’t have enough time to acclimate Chrysler’s agencies to his way of thinking. It was much simpler for him to bring along an agency he had worked with before. It was a $50 million decision that resulted in the largest single transfer of an advertising account ever recorded.

That agency had become much more to Iacocca than just another advertising company. To Iacocca, that agency was an indispensable ally – a valuable consulting resource.

The salesperson with selling savvy understands the value of such a relationship with a customer and strives to maintain that relationship.

The Secret Lies In Positioning

But how do you establish such a relationship? How do you turn prospects and customers into loyal clients?

Think back to our discussion of positioning in Chapter two. Positioning is the key to establishing a solid relationship with customers.

Professional salespeople position themselves as expert advisers to their prospects. They prove by their actions that they are trying not just to sell to their prospects but also to help them get what they want.

Positioning yourself as your customers’ consultant enables you to establish and maintain secure, long-term relationships with them. It’s the best way to build the kind of solid client base and repeat business that can provide security and steady growth – for you and your company.

Let’s explore two of the central elements of building permanent – and profitable – consulting relationships with your clients.

The First Element: Become An Expert

If you want to earn the respect and confidence of your prospects, you have to position yourself as an expert. An expert is defined as “a person who is very skillful or highly trained and informed in some special field.”

Translated to the sales field, experts are competent professionals who are knowledgeable about selling, about their companies and their products, about their industries, about their competition, and about each of their clients.

How do you achieve this level of professionalism? Here are six pointers:

(1) Become an expert in your field

Professionals don’t just act as if they’re experts; they are experts; they are experts. They make it their business to know everything there is to know about their business.

If you want your customers to see you as an expert, you must be an expert salesperson.

To become a consulting salesperson, you have to become so familiar with the selling process that you can concentrate totally on planning, strategizing, and developing other areas of expertise.

Think about your knowledge of the selling basics next time you watch Olympic ice skaters perform on television. They perform the most difficult of movements with such style and grace that they make it look easy.

Their movements are elegance in motion. When they make a mistake or their routine is interrupted, they pick right up and keep going.

That kind of excellence comes only from practice. They have drilled and drilled until they have mastered the fundamentals so thoroughly that they don’t even have to think about them.

So when the spotlight is on them, they are free to concentrate on expression, on timing, and on communicating with their audiences.

The sales professional has the same kind of command over the basics of selling. The essentials are so ingrained that the professional performs without thinking about them.

(2) Become an expert on your company

If you want to become your customer’s consultant, you must become an expert on your company.

As a salesperson, you may be the only representative of your company that your customers ever see. When customers see you, they’re looking at your company, as far as they’re concerned. If they like you, they’ll like the company. If they distrust you, they’ll distrust the company.

Trust is a vital part of any relationship. Competent professionals know how to build their customers’ confidence in their companies.

Major corporations spend millions of dollars advertising their brand names. They realize that people buy from companies they know and trust.

The more you know about your company, the more you’re able to give information that will inspire confidence in new prospects and keep your regular customers loyal.

(3) Become an expert on what you sell.

Knowing as much as possible about the products and services you sell is the third vital area in which the consulting salesperson must have some expertise.

When customers ask, “How many units can it produce per minute?,” “How much floor space will it take up?,” or “How soon can you ship it?,” they want information, not sales puff.

One of the most common complaints consumers and professional buyers make is that they can’t get straight answers to the simple questions they ask salespeople.

The main reason they don’t get straight answers is that the salespeople don’t know enough about their products or services to provide the answers.

We owe it to our customers to have the information to provide quick and concise answers to at least 99% of the questions they might ask.

In fact, what you know about your complete product line and all of the services your company offers is one of the best measures of your professionalism as a salesperson.

Professionals are inquisitive. They ask questions and are always eager to learn. They know that knowledge is like money in the bank: it pays to have it, and it pays to use it.

Some salespeople like to dance around the questions with fancy footwork. If they don’t know the answers, they fake them. If they’re dealing with knowledgeable business people, they’ll find themselves on the canvas quickly. Today’s customers are informed, and they don’t waste time or money on people who play fast and loose with the facts. When you don’t know the answer to a question, you’ll earn respect by simply saying, “I don’t know, but I’ll find out and let you know right away.” Today’s customers are informed, and they appreciate integrity when they see it.

(4) Become an expert on your industry

Professionals are constantly reviewing these questions:

• Who buys the products or services my company sells, and why do they buy them?
• How do these products contribute to the lives and businesses of the customers who buy them?
• How are these services and products used?
• What trends have affected the industry in recent years, and what trends are emerging that could affect customers in the future?

It’s only when you know the answers to these and other vital questions that you can position yourself as a valuable resource for your clients. Savvy begins with knowledge. And knowledge begins with a dedication to learning.

(5) Become an expert on your competition

If you want to position yourself as an expert consultant, know your competition. The more you know about your competitors, the greater your ability to sell against them.

So, ask yourself:

• Who are my competitors?
• What do they sell?
• How are their products inferior to ours?
• How are their products superior to ours?
• How do they sell?
• To whom do they sell?
• What do they tell my customers?
• What gaps are there in their product lines?

Some of your competitors are well-trained professionals, and many of them know more about you than you imagine.

Professional salespeople don’t lie awake at night worrying about what’s happening in their industries or what their competitors are doing. They just stay alert and observe everything that happens around them. They keep an eye on the competition.

They read trade journals, ask questions of their customers and people within their company, and study ads and sales literature from all the companies that serve their industry.

The more knowledge you have about your competition, the more likely your customers will be to respect you as a consultant, as a value-driven salesperson, and as a problem solver.

(6) Become an expert on your customers

Most important of all, you must become an expert on your customers.

To understand what your customer wants and needs, you have to know your customer the way your family doctor knows you.

You take it for granted that your doctor understands the human anatomy and how the organs work. That’s basic stuff.

But you’re not just a generic specimen of the human race. You’re you – a unique individual with your own physical and emotional makeup; your own pattern of aches and pains; maybe your own set of allergies.

You want your doctor to prescribe medicine that’s appropriate for you and not for some generalized average citizen coming in off the street. If your doctor doesn’t understand your unique symptoms and physical makeup, you may go home with some drug that will set off an allergic reaction or aggravate the condition it was intended to treat.

In the same way, sales professionals research each potential customer to discover the prospect’s unique business or personal needs.

They draw out customers with questions. They observe everything their customers do and listen to everything they say.

A man named Louis Holden got the first donation Andrew Carnegie ever made to a school. In exactly four minutes, Dr. Holden collected $100,000 from a man who opened the interview by saying, “I don’t believe in giving money to colleges.”

How did he turn it around? As a consultant, he had done his homework on Andrew Carnegie. Once he understood Carnegie’s deep desire to help young people get started in life, he was able to show his client how he could fulfill that desire by making a large donation to a college.

Knowing what motivates a prospect is probably the most powerful piece of information a salesperson can have. Professionals learn all they can about their prospects; then they use that information to influence them to buy.

To position yourself as an expert – as your customers’ consultant – you have to become an expert. Expertise requires depth of knowledge and understanding, and that’s something you can’t fake. Customers can sense it when you know what you’re talking about, and they recognize it quickly when you’re talking over your head.

Become an expert requires dedication and effort. But until you’ve become one, you’re minus the first key element in building a consulting relationship with your customer, and you’re somewhere short of being the successful salesperson that you can be.

Recommended Resource

This is a great book by all standard, and I very much gladly recommend it to you.

how-to-be-a-great-sales-professional

How to Be a Great Sales Professional

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