C-Level Selling and Advanced Selling Skills
C- Level Selling -- Subtleties Make Big Differences in Selling
Over the course of a year I talk with
thousands of complaining sales people.
Some complain about getting to the right people.
Others complain about making pitches that stick; others
about competition; some about the support they get from their
company, etc. etc.
When I suggest what they should do, they
either say they already know that and/or they're already doing
that. However, as I
delve deeper, or ask them to role-play with me, it becomes
obvious to both of us that there is a big difference between my
suggestion and what they're doing.
I call this a subtlety so as not to bruise egos.
I also call it a subtlety because just a few words
rephrased, or a few steps rearranged can make huge differences.
Today I was talking with someone trying to
sell corporate tax benefit packages to senior executives.
He said he gets lots of voicemail rejections.
I told him everyone does unless they have a compelling
message to leave on the prospects voicemail.
However, what the salesperson thinks should be a
compelling message usually isn't, or else they’d get their calls
returned. However,
making a few
networking calls could uncover a compelling message for this
individual. This
would be a subtlety.
In another conversation the salesperson
didn't understand why his pitch to senior executives wasn't
being received with more interest.
I told him it wasn't the pitch per se.
It was that he was giving the pitch before the person was
ready for it. This
may sound obvious but here is the subtlety.
When a sales person finally gets in front of a person of
power (or others), that person usually presses the salesperson
for the pitch - in one way or another.
But the person isn't ready for a pitch until (1) the
salesperson has establishes credibility; (2) the pitch is
exactly what that person wants to hear;
and (3) before the
person wants to hear anything, s/he has to feel the salesperson
completely understands his or her situation.
Again, this may sound obvious, but here's the subtlety in
the form of an example conversation.
Typical Conversation – Condensed Version
Salesperson / Powerful Person: "Hi", "Hi" –
Small talk Small talk.
PP: "So what have you got for me today?"
SP: "Well, I’ve got a lot.
Let me tell you.
Blah blah blah."
Subtle Version
PP: "So what have you got for me today?"
SP: "I’ve got a lot and I'd be happy to tell
you all about it, but first, what do you want to hear about?"
PP: “What kind of
question is that?
You wanted to see me.”
SP: “I know, but you agreed to see me for a
reason and I need to know what that is so I can target my
information and not bore you or waste your time with a lot of
stuff you could care less about.”
PP: "Well, Mary said you've got something
about tax benefits that I should hear about."
Side note: ‘Mary said,' is another
subtlety about networking that we’ll discuss in
another article.
SP: "Well Mary's right, but why don't you
tell me about issues or challenges you’re having or
opportunities you'd like to pursue as it relates to your taxes."
I could continue but let's stop here and
analyze.
The subtleties with the above are:
1.
You're pushing the person to tell you
about his or her situation.
That is, his or her state of mind as it relates to taxes
in this example.
Once the person vocalizes it, s/he will then feel that you know
his or her situation.
This is important and sales people usually don’t take the
time to establish this feeling with their prospects.
They assume the person knows they know and charge ahead.
People don’t know that you know and need to feel
comfortable that you do before they feel comfortable with you.
Additionally, by asking, you'll know what's of interest, and
what's not. Now you
may think you know what the person wants to hear because you do
this with similar people regularly, but that's the subtlety.
The person whom you're talking with, again, doesn't know
what you know.
Another subtlety is that you may think s/he needs to know
what s/he hasn't mentioned.
But unless you query him or her about it, and agree that
s/he wants to know about it, you'd be well advised to stay away
from it -- even though you think it should be important.
There is nothing worse than talking about something that
your audience (especially a powerful person) is not interested
in. Call this a
given or a no-brainer, but just think about how many salespeople
talk to you about things that you're not interested in, rather
than ask you what you're interested in, and then tell you about
it.
2.
This little switch from telling what you
have (even though the person asked for it) to asking what they'd
like to hear about, makes the conversation all about the person
rather than you.
Yes, you think you're presenting benefits that are all about
helping this individual, but it's not received that way until
the person has shared his soul.
All about him or her, rather than all about you makes a
big difference.
3.
By exploring, digging, and letting the
person explain and describe in detail, you're building
credibility -- even though you're not talking.
It’s like going to a psychologist.
You feel better after you get it off your chest.
I could go on, but the point is that little
shifts (subtleties) in words and actions make big differences,
and unless you’re really astute, these are extremely difficult
to detect in your approach and delivery.
However, just as with a professional athlete -- a golfer,
a baseball player, etc. -- the only way you'll pick up and
adjust is by working with a
coach.
Think about it for a second.
Those that are the best in their field, use coaches to
help them improve.
Actually, this should be one of the primary
functions of sales managers.
Unfortunately, most sales managers have never been
trained on how to be good mentors and coaches for their
salespeople. So if
you feel that's the case with you, and you need to improve in
your sales profession, it's about time you invest in coaching.
There are many venues available.
Your kids use coaches and teachers.
Your spouse and maybe you probably use a trainer for
fitness, etc.
However, who coaches you to improve your career?
Please, don’t say you don’t need it.
Tell Tiger Woods or Phil Mickelson, they don’t need their
coaches. Get the
point?
Think of what makes the differences between
amateurs and professionals.
Besides the money, it is the subtleties of the ways they
go about their business – the nuances, the little gestures, the
spin, etc. And the
differences between OK performance and big money performances
are the subtleties.
And now I invite you to learn more.
Bonus Tip: FREE E-Book
“Getting Past Gatekeepers and Handling Blockers”.
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