Monday, January 11, 2010

January 21 Sales & Growth Workshop

On Thursday, January 21, I will host an interactive sales and professional growth workshop at the Courtyard Marriott in Newburgh, NY from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. This workshop will be divided into three sections: SHARP Sales training, Goal Accountability (BYO Lunch), and National Professional Women’s Mastermind Group. The SHARP Sales training is a series of five workshops held the third Thursday of each month focused on improving your selling image. Beginning at 9:30 a.m., the first class in the series has participants defining business strategies that parallel their own personal and professional goals and objectives. The Goal Accountability BYO (Bring Your Own) Lunch workshop will be from 1:00 - 2:00 p.m. This is a casual but productive session designed for busy individuals who want to create consistent activity to achieve their goals. From 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. the final workshop of the day will be the National Professional Women’s Mastermind Group. This women’s only workshop is a group that focuses on improving professional performance and growth. Workshops are a la carte – so you can choose which workshop best fits your needs. The SHARP Sales training is $299 for a series of five workshops held the third Thursday of each month, beginning on January 21. The hour-long Goal Accountability BYO Lunch session costs $5 to participate, and the National Professional Women’s Mastermind Group annual fee is $450 with a 10% discount when you pay in full, or $37.50 for monthly membership. For additional workshop information and registration, visit www.dpsalespro.com/workshopregistration.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Develop a strong value proposition statement: Make every contact count

To sell effectively, you must first establish and demonstrate value. Only then should you begin delineating features and benefits of your product and/or service. Traditionally, sales and marketing practices focused solely on their features and benefits. Organizations and their account executives heavily promoted attributes without first questioning and qualifying. Features and benefits are, and will continue to be an important part of the selling process; they are the "bread and butter" of what sells. However, to succeed in today's challenging marketplace, organizations realize that their corporate sales philosophy requires a significant culture-changing shift. Instead of focusing on and being satisfied with the sales closed today, they realize that planting the seeds for future sales is essential for long-term success. These future sales are greatly dependent on strong customer loyalty. To develop solid loyalty, sales professionals must be sure to develop effective customer relationships. This is based upon more than just the product or service; it ties into effective communication. Your customers want to know that you understand their needs and how to custom tailor the features and benefits into a business solution that targets their particular needs. All too often both sales professionals, as well as small business owners wearing the hat of a sales professional, inundate the prospect with the features and benefits of their product and/or service before asking qualifying questions. As a result, they come across as foolish, aggressive, uninformed and unprofessional. Customers insist on, and deserve, professionalism and expertise. Not only must your product work for them, they need to feel that you understand how it will specifically translate into business value for them. Understanding their needs and how your product or service fits will cre-ate a strong differentiation between you and your competition. To determine this and be able to provide convincing advice, you need to take the time to understand your prospective customer. Providing solutions is key to selling a product or service. Business people today are more demanding. They can easily access information and educate them-selves. Sometimes, so much information about so many products and services is available; it takes a concerted effort to differentiate your product and service. Selling actually requires the added element of explaining how benefits and features provide solutions and meet your customers' needs. By asking carefully structured questions and listening to the responses, you will are better able to explain exactly product or service will what value your service will provide. To sell effectively, show the real value first, and then delineate the features and benefits. Talk about how your customers' needs will be met and how what you are offering is unique. Use value driven words to begin statements. Words such as increase, avoid, reduce, strengthen, and enhance. The words you use must capture the attention of your prospects and inspire them to take action. This should be underscored in all of your ongoing communications, whether face-to-face, by phone, letter, e-mail or voicemail.