Ted Nicholas, the author of "Magic Words That Sell" once said,
"Marketing mistakes are by far the primary reason businesses do not survive. This includes companies which consider themselves direct marketers as well as those who do not".
Of course Ted is quite right make mistakes in marketing and you'll end up paying through the nose with absolutely no results. Yet companies continually make mistakes in sales.
They waste the opportunities that marketing provides by using salespeople that have one, or more, of these traits:
Poor closers
Too aggressive
Passive order takers
Fear of phoning
Can't write to persuade
Can't present without being boring
Unable to build value in the service or product
Has poor follow-up skills
Can't get to top decision makers
Finds rejection difficult to handle
Poor time manager
Doesn't think strategically
Not self-disciplined
Doesn't try to get market knowledge
Yet sales training may have little or no effect because they're at the limit of their potential already. What About The Owners As Salestaff?
Often the owners in small companies are also the sales staff. If they can't sell they ultimately go out of business. If they can sell they usually reach a point where they're working harder than if they were in a job. Think about it...
If the owner is the company's sales channel they're probably also their own bookkeeper, administrative clerk, VAT returns clerk, receptionist and general "muck in and get the thing finished or delivered" guy too.
We all know about Michael Gerber's mantra about "Working on the business, rather than in it". We all agree that's a very laudable aim. But we're all so busy doing, doing that we can't quite bear to tear ourselves away from working in the business.
I've been a consultant for over 20 years and I've rarely met a business owner or director who's felt able to step back and consider the strategic aims of the business as it grows.
It's all down to the perceived urgent need for sales. Because often management have no visibility of sales beyond the next one or two months.
Ultimately your business reaches a point where you and your current staff are working all the hours there are to simply stand still.
Growing the organisation is just another item that stays on the "to do" list.
Before you reach that point you need to recruit a salesman. I'll use the term salesman rather than salesperson to indicate a man or woman who sells because it's seems less clumsy than salesperson.
It all comes down to recruiting the right salesman to take the company to the next level - and tied to good marketing too of course.
Broadly you can break salesmen into sales sheep, sales wolves and sales super stars. Let me explain what that means to you as the business owner.
Sales Sheep
They wait for customer to come to them, or the phone to ring to take an order. Or they wait in a shop and sell purely because the customer wants to buy something from anyone who wants to take their money. They think the customer is always right even if it means that they'll lose money on an issue that the customer created themselves. Or they'll give the customer some stock they had lying around. What about the salesman who drops by and entertains their contacts to "touch base", "to see if there's anything for me today" and who "nearly gets a sales but doesn't quite?"
Sales sheep cost you money. Let's count the ways:
Their basic pay to sales ratio is higher than your own, or other sales staff
They give stock or services away as sweeteners, or to get out of a problem
They entertain clients on expenses and still don't get sales
They entertain people at the clients who are not remotely connected to the sale process
They don't follow-up and lose sales to competitors who doHow do you recognise one? There is a way before you even recruit them...
They almost run out of your door and can't wait to close a sale. They're so keen they can make people buy your products and services even though they may be wrong for those customers. They know what you sell and try to sell it all to every customer, whether there's a need for it or not. They're equally upfront in-house anything that affects their sale, and often their commission, is bulldozed out of the way to make sure that sale gets done. Sometimes it's pushed through to the detriment of other customers or sales people.Sales Wolves
Sales wolves cost you money. Let's see how:
They sell lots but you get a higher returns rate
You get more external complaints, affecting your reputation and therefore referrals
You get more internal complaints and lose staff or morale drops
You lose sales by them tying up staff that other sales people need
They don't want to know about customer issues after a sale. They're too busy on the next saleHow do you recognise one? There is a way before you recruit them...
A good salesman gets in more business than he costs you to run and make your company more money than that. A bad salesman is a drain on your company. It can be almost impossible to sort the good from the bad. Almost, but not impossible.Sales Superstars
When you recruit a salesman you need to aim for the star salesman. Don't be put off because you think can't afford them.
The star salesman psychological profile is formed during their early childhood and you may catch one before they realise they're great. Or you may find one who was burnt out and is ready to join the fray again.
Either one doesn't require vast amounts of money. Remember even if you paid them 5 times what you pay yourself and they brought in 20 times more in profit would their salary even matter?
According to psychological research a star salesman is driven by two factors: Ego and empathy. Too much ego and they get the sales but at a huge cost to you in terms of customer and internal relationships bruised or destroyed by the ego-driven salesman. Also known as a Sales Wolf.
Too much empathy and they end up discounting so deeply and being so completely on their customer's side that you'll lose money on deals that would normally be profitable. Also known as a Sales Sheep.
Now you know how to tell sales sheep from sales wolves you want to find out how to get sales superstars. Check the next article in this two part series.
JJim Symcox is a business growth coach, copywriter, blogger and the author of "How to Leap Ahead Of Your Competitors". He coaches Chet Holmes clients around the world.
See Jim's blog on Business Growth and Marketing at http://www.business-powerpack.com it has over 500 posts on a variety of mainly business boosting topics.
He has another blog which looks at Search Engine Optimization at http://www.seo-copywriter-king.blogspot.com
Also click over to his site at http://www.AcornService.com to opt in to Jim's FREE and no obligation seminar series on business growth. The following topics are covered:
1 ........ How To Create Your Unique Selling Point
2 ........ How To Set Goals
3 ........ Should You Train?
4 ........ Direct Mail Doesn't Pay
5 ........ How To Do Proposals That Pay-off
6 ........ Is The Internet Costing You Money?
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