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The top 2% do this because:
Double and triple your call activity. Honestly, your competitors do not have the "stuff" to compete under these circumstances. Average salespeople buy into the "woe is me" philosophy and decrease sales activity. The top 2% know that an economic slowdown is an opportunity to edge out competition. Re-allocate your field time. Work more with your "A" accounts and in lieu of your "B" and "C" ones. Your purpose should be two-fold: 1) Your top producing accounts have the capacity to buy more from you; that’s what makes them "A" accounts and, 2) You’ll be securing your position with these accounts from potential attempts by the competition to wrest them away. Don’t allow that to happen! Remember, this business cycle is impacting the competition, too, and they’ll be aggressively looking at your "A" accounts as a source of new business. Examine prospecting efficiency. Both rookie and veteran sales professionals tend to let their prospecting slide when times are good. As a result, their prospecting skill levels and prospect targeting abilities get rusty. This is a good time for you to "hammer out" your "prospective customer dimensions" In other words, delineate "what does my ideal prospect look like?" Then, identify key prospects in your area and proceed to develop your capture and execution plans. Fire "stalled" prospects and move on. Your income and success depend upon calling on true prospects and current customers who can (and will) do more business with you. Assess the prospects you are calling on and don’t be afraid to "fire" them, particularly if your extra effort is not showing any results. Remember that you have a business objective for every call you make. If you don’t, your call will be reduced to a "social" nature and you don’t get paid for those. Go the extra mile for customers and increase value-added activities. You need to be creative in low or no-cost ways to help your accounts cut costs or stimulate new business. Go out of your way for your top accounts. Now is the time to establish yourself as a source for best practices. Share how your other accounts have benefited from your ideas. Make every call count. Be prepared to make the most of every call. What value are you deriving from each customer visit? Who is controlling the sales call/sales process…you or the customer? Experience and research has demonstrated that formal pre-call planning generates more successful outcomes of all sales activities. You should never take sales call effectiveness for granted – especially in tough economic times. The days of "blowing through" a call are over. The simple fact is that you are paid to move the customer to the next stage in your sales cycle. In today’s economic climate, you’ve got too much at risk not to plan for success. Now, more than ever, craft a strategy to overcome such objections as:
Plan to succeed. You will not survive an economic slowdown by simply hoping that you sell more or your current customer base buys more. Account planning, territory planning, and pre-call planning are the keys to efficient selling in a down economy. It’s time to review account plans or develop them, if you haven’t already. Account plans are the "road map" to selling more to your "A" accounts. It may be time to reassess pricing or bundling in order to pick off some of your competitors’ offerings. In addition, ask yourself the following questions:
This is not the point in time to perfect your golf swing or take extended time off. This is the time to dig in and take charge of your sales activities. By doing so, you’ll be able to survive the current tough times and will be positioned to reap the benefits when the economy bounces back because you’ll be ahead of your competitors who didn’t! Jim Kasper is the Founder and President of Interactive
Resource Group. Mr. Kasper has over 26 years of practical experience in
direct sales, sales management, sales training, and marketing. Contact
him at www.salestrainers.com or call 800-891-7355
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