Body Language for Success: A Salesperson’s Silent Cues

 

Gestures-Executive

 

Did you know that 55 percent of communication takes place through body language, according to Psychology Today? That’s why it’s important for candidates and employers alike to understand how body language can reveal far more than words alone. This is especially true for small business owners who can’t afford to make poor hiring decisions.

Body Language for Success: What to Look for in a Sales Candidate

While body language should be considered when hiring any candidate, hiring managers should pay careful attention when filling a sales vacancy. Bringing on the right sales person that fits your company and culture is an important step — and it’s one you want to get right the first time. Here are five traits to look for:

  • Eye contact: Good salespeople make and hold eye contact slightly longer than others. They aren’t afraid to look you in the eye when they’re speaking to you. People tend to hold eye contact longer with people they like, Forbes notes, and a salesperson who makes and holds eye contact sends prospects subtle, nonverbal cues to show they are valued. It’s a strong characteristic in any salesperson.
  • Lean forward: Leaning forward is a signal of interest. Candidates who lean forward imply an interest in the job and in what you’re saying. More importantly, during sales meetings this can imply an interest in what their customers are saying to help make them feel valued.
  • Sincere smile: A sincere smile imparts confidence and joy. A fake smile can be a big turnoff in sales. Look for candidates who smile appropriately and sincerely.
  • Open arms: Holding the arms open or relaxed, rather than crossed over the chest, is another important body language for success move. Studies have shown that open arms lead listeners to remember 38 percent more of what’s said, according to Forbes.
  • Quiet hands: Hand gestures are acceptable in some cultures, but Americans using body language for success know that they need to keep their hands still and use gestures sparingly. A salesperson shouldn’t point, crack their knuckles or make fists for emphasis. Instead, keeping the hands soft and open on the lap are all signs of listening, caring and openness to ideas.

Tone of Voice

A candidate’s tone of voice also conveys body language for success. A deeper voice commands respect. Candidates who pitch their voice lower and speak in a calm, relaxed tone will help your customers feel more relaxed, too. That may help them relax and buy more!

Body language includes gestures, body posture and tone of voice. Pay attention to how candidates present themselves during interviews and look for people who convey genuine interest, authority and intelligence.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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Aldor_Delp_WEB

Aldor H. Delp is Division Vice President and General Manager of ADP Resource & HR Solutions, ADP, LLC. Aldor joined ADP in 2006 and has held various leadership roles supporting National Accounts, ADP TotalSource, and the Small Business Services division of ADP.

 

 

 

Insightly Insider Discussion, “Tweet It Up”

 

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Join us on Wednesday, July 13th at 9:00AM PDT  for our next Insightly Insider Discussion “Tweet It Up: Tips for Using Twitter to Grow Your Business”. In this online discussion, Jess, from our Customer Success team, will share practical tips not just for promoting your business on Twitter, but for meeting and networking with your peers, too.

This online discussion will take place in the Insightly Community. Leave a question for Jess to answer and share your own customer engagement best practices with the group in the comments area. All you have to do is sign in (top right of the discussion page), and you are set to participate.  And if you cannot make it during this time-frame, no worries. Jess’ tips and the comments will be archived in the Community.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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CRM for All: Consulting

Business-Mentor

 

Business owners are pulled in every direction on a daily basis. From managing operations, sales and marketing, to customer service and so much more. There’s no way that one – or even two – people could keep it all straight. Those who head up consulting firms are no different. When traditional rolodexes and spreadsheets fail, smart consultants turn to customer relationship management (CRM) to regain control of their operations. Our consulting customers broke down the top three reasons they turned to CRM:

  1. To improve workflow

Business Made Simple needed an easy-to-you, inexpensive and intuitive tool that would improve workflow and task management. Co-founders Erin Mathie and Melissa Bamfo use Insightly with the Evernote integration to capture notes from customer and lead calls. The information is automatically populated to the corresponding account records, so data can be tracked and easily accessed. The duo also loves Insightly’s pipeline tools, which manage client fulfillment projects from start to finish. All of this has contributed to greater sales conversions.

  1. To move leads through the sales funnel

Eric Greenspan, CEO of 74 Systems, uses Insightly to improve efficiency and keep tasks from falling off his radar – it’s become mission control. A majority of his leads come in from the website and webinars. Before, it was a challenge to keep prospects in order and moving through the pipeline. Now, using Insightly and Zapier, Greenspan has leads automatically pushed to the platform and turned into opportunities. He then reaches out to determine next steps. Since first implementing Insightly, the company has had more than 30 new customers sign up over the last three months.

  1. To boost customer experience

Winston Faircloth, CEO of Winsightz, has to keep track of individual clients and projects, so he can provide the right support at the right time. Using Insightly has proved to be invaluable in helping Faircloth heighten customer service. He assigns goals, holds training sessions and provides ongoing support, all of which are tracked and monitored on an ongoing basis. It’s been especially helpful in situations when Faircloth has had to quickly access client activity. When a client asked what was in the pipeline, he was able to immediately pull it up on the spot and show all the activity.  

Especially in consulting, with so many moving parts, project and contact management can quickly get out of hand. With CRM and project management, consultants can keep tabs on what needs to get done, so client projects stay on track. Even better, Insightly surveyed its consulting customers and 56 percent of respondents paid back their investment in Insightly in one to three months or less.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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Give Your CRM a Summer Makeover

Sunflower

 

Suffering from summer slump with your CRM? Now’s the time to take a fresh look at all the features your content management system offers, clean up your records, and make sure you’re back on track to getting the most out of your software.

Give Yourself a Refresher

It’s entirely possible that you’ve forgotten some of the cool features your CRM has to offer. When you first learned how to use it, you could only retain so much information. You likely picked a handful of the most important features to help you achieve your goals, then left the rest to rot.

So what are you leaving on the table? Maybe you’re using it to help with sales, but you forgot about all the cool project management features. Or you didn’t realize that you could get cool reports on leads. Just think what adding these components to your CRM management could do for your business!

Take some time to reacquaint yourself with the full capacity of your CRM platform. Take notes on the aspects you’d like to incorporate (or add back to) your processes, and if you need to learn how to use these features, spend some time boning up.

Update Your Records

Sure, it’s no fun to go through all your client records and make sure they’re up to date, but doing so can greatly improve sales and marketing results. If you’re sending emails to people who don’t work at a company anymore, those emails don’t have the conversion potential the way an updated and active email address does.

Updating your records is a great excuse to check in to see how your contacts are doing. You can use the updating as the reason you’re emailing them, but you can also see how things are going and gauge whether there is any potential business that you can earn from your contacts. It also serves as a reminder to your network that you’re there, ready to help when they need you.

See What’s New

Likely, your CRM added new features since you last checked (at Insightly, we’re constantly adding new features, like the Insightly Sidebar for Gmail). You may be amazed to find that features you wistfully yearned for are now available. Implement these new tools into your sales process and see how much easier it can get.

Train Newbies

If you have new employees who haven’t yet been walked through how to use your CRM platform, dedicate time to ensure that everyone is up to speed. And it’s not a bad idea to have employees who were initially trained on using it take a refresher course so that they, like you, don’t miss any opportunities your CRM software offers.

Now is a good time to get feedback from those employees on how they like the CRM. Are there aspects they don’t like, or features they would like to implement? You can take their input into consideration as you continually innovate on how you use customer relationship management software.

Look for Integrations

The CRM world is full of integrations with a lot of the tools you’re already using, like accounting, email, and marketing apps and programs. If you can save time connecting your CRM with the tools you use on a regular basis, why wouldn’t you? Plus, integrations tend to streamline your work. Rather than plugging in contact info into both your CRM and email marketing platform, you can do it once and let that connection update the other system. Less work, more results.

If Q4 is a busy one for you, the summer is the perfect time to make sure your CRM is ship-shape for your big sales season. And even if it’s not, we could all use a reminder of everything our CRM platform can do for our businesses. It doesn’t have to eat a ton of time to give your CRM a summer makeover: spending even 15 minutes a day for a week can turn you into a CRM super star!

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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The Spam Diet

Turn It Up Tuesday: Tips from Insightly to Take Your Business to 11

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly CRM, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. Enjoy this week’s tips!

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Customize Your Email Signature

Customizing your email signature will reduce the chances that your messages will end up in the spam folder of your email recipients when sending email from Insightly. Your email signature may contain up to 500 characters for details like your name, company name, title, and phone number.To edit your custom email signature:From the profile icon menu, go to the User Settings > Email Signature page.User_settings-to-Email_signature
 
Enter the text for your new signature, using the options on the toolbar to format it. You can also include an image by using HTML tags pointing to a hosted image file.
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This week’s tip was provided by Tony Roma. Tony is an Insightly product expert who has been helping businesses implement software solutions for over ten years.

 

Economize on Battery Juice

If you’re an iPhone enthusiast battling the low battery blues, when you’re down to 20 percent, switch your settings to Low Power Mode — it stops all background apps from refreshing. (Just remember to switch it back later, so apps stay up-to-date.)

i-Phone6

 

 

 

 

Hold the Spam

Nobody likes getting telemarketer calls on their phone, especially during the workday.
The advent of texting as a favored form of communication has opened up a whole new
venue for annoying interruptions– spam texts!Cell-Spam

Paper is So Yesterday

Your sales team may still be using physical paper for orders, contracts, and other things that require a signature – but why? Storage boxes and filing cabinets fill up a ton of floor space better used for other purposes. Scan those old physical copies, move to a digital signing process, and get rid of paper for good. Not only does it take up space, it’s a waste of time when you need to find (and then refile) paper.

Paper-Basket

 

You can spare yourself the spam, by forwarding them to 7726. You can also reply “STOP” to any spam text messages you receive from a shortcode.

 

 

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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About the author: Marta Bright is Insightly’s Content Manager. She’s been writing about the “business of technology” in the Silicon Valley for more than a decade.

7 Sales Strategies for the Marketing Consultant

Sales-cube

 

Sales is a touchy subject. Either you love it, or you hate it.

Having worked in a variety of sales and marketing roles, I’ve been on both sides of the love- hate relationship.

If you’re a consultant like me, sales is unavoidable. The good news is that you’re selling the best product in the world: yourself.

In this post, I’ll share seven strategic sales approaches for the marketing consultant.

1. Know Your Strengths

The term “marketing consultant” can mean many different things. Graphic designers, content writers, strategic coaches, social media experts, data analysts, and web developers could all self-identify as such. It’s important to be mindful of this when interacting with new clients. In my experience, customers often assume that a marketing consultant is able to do all of the above.

In reality, few people have the ability (or time) to master every aspect of marketing. It’s therefore much more efficient to focus on your strengths. Remember, you’re in the business of selling yourself. If you were selling a product, you would most certainly take the time to fully understand the item’s features and benefits. The same holds true for yourself.

Start by asking yourself some simple questions, such as:

  • What am I particularly good at?
  • Am I a specialist or generalist?
  • What do existing clients say are my strengths?
  • What am I not willing to do?
  • Do I know other consultants who can supplement my weaknesses?
  • How much does the market currently pay for my skills?
  • What adjacent skills could I (or should I) develop?

Once these questions have been answered, you will want to review them in the context of a pricing model. Will you bill for your time on an hourly basis? Or, does it make sense to offer a suite of services that can be bundled? In reality, everything is negotiable, but having a starting point is an important step.

2. Personalize the Entire Experience (Before, During, and After)

Clients come to you for custom solutions to their custom problems. Start acting like it.

Sure, the client could have reached out to a firm with greater resources and a larger staff of experts. All things being equal (aside from cost considerations), a larger firm is probably more equipped to serve the client’s needs. Instead, he decided to talk to you first. By default, the client assumes that working with a consultant will provide greater flexibility and a more personal touch. That is true, of course, only if you choose to make it a reality.

What steps can you take to create a personalized experience? For starters, use the client’s first name whenever possible. Research has consistently shown that people love to hear and see their own names. Acknowledge the client’s personhood by using the name he loves to hear most. In emails and other written forms of communication, be sure to use proper spelling and capitalization. When communicating verbally, don’t be afraid to work his name into the conversation. It may feel weird at first, but doing so emphasizes your commitment and future loyalty.

When drafting a formal proposal, consider incorporating the client’s logo on the cover page. Use the client’s company name in the footer of each page. Also, consider using at least one page of real estate to recap your understanding of the customer’s business model and history. This might be a good place to work in a few compliments, as most business owners appreciate a well-deserved pat on the back. Just don’t come across as as a suck-up.

As your relationship develops, you’re likely to make new contacts at the client’s place of work. Consider using a CRM such as Insightly to stay organized. As I pointed out in this guide, it’s a good practice to add new contact records and link them to the parent organization. If you spend time regularly updating your CRM, you’ll be in a much better position to deliver a personalized experience.

3. Jump-Start (& Guide) the Conversation

You’re a smart person. Your resume is certainly quite impressive. Unfortunately, your stellar track record does not make you a mind reader.

The only way you can identify and understand your client’s needs is to let him talk. Some clients will talk for hours if you let them. Others require some prodding before they’ll open up. Either way, it’s your job to guide the conversation such that it produces results.

As an example, let’s assume that you have one hour scheduled for a consultation with a new client. Without the proper plan, the hour can go by in a flash, and you’re no closer to a sale. Sure, exchanging pleasantries is a standard part of the process. Just don’t let time get away from you. Your job is to help the client solve his problems.

If the prospect seems to be avoiding the real reason for the meeting, it’s your duty to tactfully shift the conversation in a more productive trajectory. You might weave in something like:

“I’d love to hear the story about why you started this business…”
“I was looking at your website, and I noticed…”
“When I was preparing for this meeting, I was surprised to learn…”
“I wanted to mention that your original email actually got me thinking…”

Even after the conversation shifts to business matters, you may still find it difficult to keep the client on point. Many entrepreneurs are sanguine by nature, which means you have your hands full. A problem here, a random idea there, happy thoughts now, extreme frustration moments later. You must rely on your expertise to keep the customer focused, and more importantly, hone in on the ways you can help. Doing so will help evolve your relationship from acquaintance to trusted advisor.

4. Uncover New Pain Points

Most customers already have several problems in mind that require your expertise. These types of issues are certainly important to address. However, you may also be able to help the client uncover new challenges.

For example, clients often consult with me about optimizing their websites for generating more business. Customers usually say something like, “We want to update our website so it is more visible on the search engines.” This type of request is a potential goldmine for a marketing consultant. The client is giving me the opportunity to discuss how online marketing actually works. Many customers are surprised to learn that it’s not as easy as simply putting up a pretty website. When I start discussing facets such as content marketing, website performance, inbound links, and online reviews, my client is introduced to an entire new set of opportunities (or challenges, depending on how you look at it).

Helping customers uncover new pain points is beneficial for both parties. From a self-serving standpoint, you are given a priceless opportunity to demonstrate your knowledge. From the client’s standpoint, you are now the smartest person he knows on this subject. It’s therefore logical he will pick you to identify successful solutions.

5. Carefully Recap the Ways You Can Help

Each time you wrap up a meeting, it’s always beneficial to recap your understanding of the task(s) at hand – and, most importantly, how you intend to help. Based on the conversation, choose to focus on that which will have the greatest impact, is within your skillset, and make the client happy.

Given our previous example about web marketing, I might say something like this: “It seems that a blogging strategy would offer the best bang for the buck. This is right in my wheelhouse, so give me a day or two to get you a proposal.” If you’ve done your job in the meeting, the client will agree and be excited to get started.

It’s possible that the client may also request proposals for other topics that you’ve discussed (including the projects that you’re less than excited to pursue). Use your judgment to determine the correct response. Don’t just say yes to everything, but negativity can end things on a weird note. Be prepared to push back gently in the following situations:

Work that you don’t have the capacity or skills to do – On one hand, it can be embarrassing to admit you can’t do something. On the other hand, overpromising rarely works out well. In this situation, you have three obvious options: politely say no, gain the added capacity or skills, or make a referral to another consultant. A fourth option that I’ve successfully used is to convince the client to rally around your original proposal. Then, once you have achieved a few victories, circle back to the additional requests. This gives you more time to develop the necessary capacity or skills without admitting you’re not ready to handle it today. Be careful with this tactic, though.

Work that you dislike doing, is not profitable, or both – I don’t mess with promotional items. There, I said it. When clients ask for help getting their logo on a bunch of water bottles, I have to hold back the “no thanks” impulse from coming out of my mouth. Instead, I smile and say “I know a company that does a great job with promos. Let me have them get you a quote.” Same outcome, but less stress for me. Let the experts handle what you don’t enjoy doing, and you might even pick up a nice referral commission along the way!

Work that seems too risky – Many clients think creating a website is purely a marketing job. In reality, it’s a fine balance between technology and marketing. As a marketing consultant, I personally believe that server-related work is outside of my area of expertise. Naturally, a website can’t operate without a server. If customers don’t have the in-house IT capabilities to manage their own hosting, it may be beneficial to know (and trust) a few technical consultants.

6. Craft a Proposal that Can’t Be Refused

By taking an educational sales approach, you’ve already laid the groundwork for a smooth negotiation.

If you deal with small businesses (especially those under $5 million in revenue), a formal proposal may be overkill. A simple email that outlines your plan and proposed pricing may be more than enough. My proposal sounds something like this:

Dear John,

It was great to meet with you yesterday. I’m excited at the opportunity to help you grow your business.

I believe that a weekly blog schedule will help you achieve your goal of increasing web visitors and leads. My team is ready to assist with this, and I propose the following workflow:

On the first day of each month, I’ll send you a list of potential topics / keywords.

Each Monday morning, you (or someone from your team) will send me an audio file explaining how your company relates to a particular topic.

By the close of business each Wednesday, I’ll share a draft article for your review. You can send back any changes, or simply approve it as-is.

On Friday, the post will go live and will be submitted to the search engines for maximum visibility.

If this sounds doable to you, let’s get started next week. I charge (insert rate) per published article, invoiced monthly. Attached is my service agreement for your review and approval. Sign that, and I’ll return a copy for your records.

All the best,

Matt

Larger clients, however, will likely expect to see a more traditional service proposal. You could take a minimalist approach, opting for a simple presentation template. However, I would recommend taking it one step further and purchasing a stock template. There are many high quality presentation template sites, similar to stock photography or web template marketplaces. For less than $25, you can download a theme that would cost thousands of dollars to design from scratch. This will not only impress the client, but it will also give you an added layer of confidence to make the sale.

7. Hold Yourself Accountable

Last, but not least, you must hold yourself accountable. While some proposals will be accepted almost instantaneously, others will require multiple follow up emails or phone calls. In fact, some clients play hard-to-get on purpose to see how committed you are.

A web-based CRM system, such as Insightly, can help you keep everything organized. Manage sales pipelines, opportunities, and projected close dates with a few clicks. In addition, you can have Insightly remind you (via email) when it’s time to take action. The days of forgetting to follow up will be a distant memory, allowing you to close more deals and keep clients happy.

Put Strategy into Action

The best plans are the ones that actually work. If you’re looking to take your consulting game to the next level and attract more (or better) clients, it’s time to be intentional with your sales process.

With the right plan and technology, no one can stop you!

 

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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Matt Keener

Matt Keener is a marketing consultant and President of Keener Marketing Solutions, LLC. Matt specializes in content marketing and strategic planning, having helped numerous Saas (software as a service) companies and other small businesses worldwide. Read more of Matt’s work, check out his book, or connect with him on Linkedin.

The Secret to Nurturing the Best Leads Into Sales

Nurture

 

Most of your visitors come to your website for research and answers to specific queries, and approximately 73% of new B2B leads are not ready to purchase. Lead nurturing is a powerful method of gaining higher return for lower costs. The first contact has been made. Here’s how to make the most of those contacts and convince them to make that important first purchase.

Grab their attention

Entice newcomers to delve further into what you’re offering. Make it clear what your product is and what makes your brand stand out from the crowd. A discount code or offer to make the client feel they’re getting special treatment right from the first contact has proven to be a successful starting point.

Sign them up

Once the initial attention grab has been made, ask all new leads to opt in to receive email and text alerts. Start immediately by sending an acknowledgment email to thank the client for signing up and perhaps offer a little bonus in that first contact. A further discount, free delivery or a video, advertising an important feature of your brand. Entice them to revisit your site and seek out further information right away.

Consider automating thank-you emails to allow your busy team to concentrate on fulfilling other tasks.

Ask for more detail

By asking for more information, you can start to build the client’s profile, allowing you to decide what subjects will be most relevant. Targeted emails will receive the most clickthroughs and garner the best feedback.

Automation allows streamlined contact and encourages efficient segmentation via your CRM, meaning that people get offers directly related to who they are and what they’re looking for, based on the information they’ve given you. Automation can also align your contact and marketing targets to ensure each prospective customer receives messages that are relevant, at the most opportune times.

Request evaluation at every visit to ensure customer satisfaction. A simple “Did you find what you were looking for?” can provide an opening for direct contact to help resolve queries and problems early on, fostering a personal relationship which grows as you gently encourage them towards the sale.

Make your contact effective

Using the information your prospective client has trusted you with, work out how best to fulfill their needs. You want all communication to be appropriate to their individual interests, to resonate with them on a personal level, and to garner trust in, and loyalty to, your brand. Boost the visibility of your brand by engaging in continuous contact. Even if they’re not quite ready to make a purchase right away, you want your brand to be the one they think of when they are finally ready.

Coordinate your emails and web pages with your social media output, so customers and prospects can use any method to find what they’re looking for. Ensure there’s a knowledgeable member of the team around to answer questions whenever they arise through direct contact. Answering quickly with a friendly, conversational welcome email or social media reply is vital in this non-stop international working era.

Using the client’s name, acknowledging special anniversaries and personal invitations to special events combined with enticing emails and content all come together to encourage more opportunities for direct and personal contact.

When you personalize contact, you generate up to 6 x higher revenue over generic, non-personalized information drops.

Make it timely

Making your follow-up contact as soon as possible after requested leads to a far greater likelihood of closing the sale. The longer you leave the follow-up contact, the less likely it is to end in a sale. Immediate follow-up calls have been proven to be far more effective than cold calling.

Even with timely and regular contact, some people need a little more time to make up their minds. On average, 10 separate communications are made before a prospective client becomes a customer. Nurturing your client by addressing concerns, being knowledgeable about all aspects of the brand, answering questions succinctly, and following up on conversations all go a long way to making the transaction successful.

Know when to pass the ball

As with all teams, the ball needs to be passed between players. Knowing how to identify when marketers should pass clients to the sales team for specific need fulfillment and for closing the sale leads to significant and measurable increases in sales opportunities. Lead scoring helps you determine when to hand off to a closer.

Treating your customers right – from the start to the sale and beyond – is the answer to increased sales and a full pipeline.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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The 8 Greatest Salespeople Ever (And What You Can Learn from Them About Sales)

Target-Sales

Theories and strategies about sales and selling are legion. Thousands of seminars have been hosted and even more books have been written, each promising to outline the secrets of turning a prospect into a customer. But talk is cheap, and top salespeople would surely tell you that it’s ultimately the sales that speak for themselves.

Who really knows the true secrets of sales? We scoured the past and present to find the eight greatest salespeople ever – all of whom have a legacy of success and distinct lessons to offer those who want to emulate them.

John H. Patterson, National Cash Register Company
1844-1922

John Patterson was one of the original icons of modern salesmanship. To hawk NCR cash registers in the late 1800s, he devised a strategy that has become known as the “Patterson method.” One of the key elements of the method was the intricate scripting of the sales process. Patterson sat down and wrote out what salespeople should say to their prospects. He anticipated objections, and wrote down the responses to those, too. This wasn’t a new idea, but Patterson’s “Primer” was extensive enough to be codified into a 16-page book, slicing the sales process into four steps (approach, proposition, demonstration, and close), all the while positioning NCR as a helpful ally whose goal was to help its customers succeed. (The register itself was not to be mentioned at all in the approach.)

The guidance within remains essential and compelling even today, from avoiding hard-sell tactics to learning how to overcome objections to high prices. Who among us has not been on one side of Patterson’s classic technique: “After you have made your proposition clear … do not ask for an order, take for granted that he will buy. Say to him ‘Mr. Blank, what color shall I make it?’ or ‘How soon do you want delivery?’ Take out your order blank, fill it out, and handing him your pen say, ‘Just sign where I have made the cross.’”

Patterson was also an early advocate for other essentials of the sales universe, including strong after-sales service and support to keep customers happy. He also pioneered formal training for salespeople and possibly even invented the concept of retreats. History is mute, however, on whether he was a proponent of the “trust fall.”

David Ogilvy, Ogilvy & Mather
1911-1999

The “Father of Advertising,” David Ogilvy, had a job before he became the dad to an industry. He was, of course, a salesman, and an incredibly good one by all measures. Namely, he sold cooking stoves, door to door, across his ancestral homeland of Scotland. He was so good at it that the head of the company asked him to codify his methods in a book, which was ultimately christened with the catchy title, The Theory and Practice of Selling the AGA Cooker. You can still read the full text online; fans say that 80 years later it is still “the best sales manual ever written.”

For Ogilvy, selling was a numbers game. “The more prospects you talk to, the more sales you expose yourself to, the more orders you will get.” He backed that up with an approach that emphasized quality salesmanship, which required “energy, time, and knowledge of the product.” He eschewed artifice and preferred a straightforward approach to sales and stressed knowing as much about your customer as much as you did about the product you were selling: “Learn to recognize vegetarians on sight. It is painful indeed to gush over roasting and grilling to a drooping face which has not enjoyed the pleasures of a beefsteak for years.”

Ogilvy also had a strong focus on the art conversation. It doesn’t matter what you talk about during the sales process, Ogilvy teaches us, as long as you’re talking about something; the act of chatting itself breaks down barriers to sales. “Wise-cracking” was key, he wrote: “If you can’t make a lady laugh, you certainly can’t make her buy.”

Mary Kay Ash, Mary Kay Cosmetics
1918-2001

Mary Kay’s eponymous cosmetics company remains an icon of the direct sales model, but Mary Kay Ash didn’t just leap into the business without training. As an employee, she sold books and other products door to door for decades, grinding her way up the ladder until she abruptly quit after being passed over for promotion by, of course, a man.

Her ensuing anger was supposed to become the original Lean In, a handbook for women to succeed in the tough, male-driven world of business in the 1960s. Instead it became a business plan for Mary Kay Cosmetics.

Unabashedly pro-woman, Mary Kay’s lavish incentives to top saleswomen, namely in the form of pink Cadillacs, have become downright legendary. “Praising people to success” was one of her primary slogans as a manager, and “she constantly encouraged both the corporate staff and the independent sales force to act as if each person they met was wearing a sign around his or her neck that read ‘Make me feel important.’”

Dale Carnegie, speaker
1888-1955

Like many of the other names on this list, renowned salesman Dale Carnegie also got his start as a rank-and-file salesman, hawking everything from lard to correspondence courses for ranchers in his home state of Missouri. But Carnegie’s dreams involved something grander, which led him to pack up for the big city, where he took acting classes in New York in the hopes of striking it big on the stage. Acting didn’t work out for Carnegie, which led the then-penniless man to public speaking. Within a few years he was lecturing to audiences of thousands who wanted to learn how to master their own fears of speaking in public.

Carnegie’s seminal book, How to Win Friends and Influence People, came along 20 years into this second career, and his Dale Carnegie Course – now over 100 years old – has been completed by more than 8 million people. Widely relied upon in the sales universe, Carnegie’s primary lessons involve building up the confidence of the speaker or salesperson and developing interpersonal and communication skills in order to make them more effective at their job. In 2011, the book was updated for the “digital age,” where “winning friends” has become a much different game.

Steve Jobs, Apple Computer
1955-2011

The beloved but irascible founder of Apple was never a salesperson in the traditional, door-to-door sense, but his achievements as a non-traditional salesman are largely responsible for the massive success that Apple has ultimately become.

It would take over two decades – and Jobs being both forced out and rehired by the company he founded – for the CEO to strike upon the primary characteristic that ultimately drove Apple’s success in the early 2000s: Secrecy. By playing his cards extremely close to the vest and refusing to offer any hints about upcoming products to the media or the public, Apple became the subject of nonstop gossip and speculation among high-tech types. New products were (and still are) announced not via a press release but in an auditorium packed with reporters, often with an A-list musician waiting in the wings to close the show. Jobs understood the value of showmanship and hype, and even when Apple’s release du jour wasn’t all that exciting, he knew the company would dominate the news cycle for at least a week around the time of the announcement, drowning out all other news from the industry.

Today, Apple’s secrecy strategy is widely copied in Silicon Valley, though no one has yet managed to beat Apple at its own game. The key takeaway remains an essential one: Let your fans and the media do the hard work of selling your products for you.

Joe Girard, car salesman
1928-

Google “best salesman ever” and one name will show up more than any other: Joe Girard. While hardly a household name like some of the above, Girard undoubtedly deserves his share of the title – and even the Guinness Book of World Records agrees. For the uninitiated, Girard spent 14 years selling cars, and during that time he moved over 13,000 Chevys off of his car lot in Eastpointe, Michigan. Girard’s best month included 174 cars sold.

Girard credits his success with inspiration he found at a Catholic funeral, where he estimated about 250 people were in attendance – 250 people who were close enough to the deceased to pay their respects. Girard figured that this number had some significance in business, too. Do something great for one customer and you’re likely to reach about 250 of their friends, all potential customers. Turn them off, and you stand to lose 250 potential sales. Asking for referrals and earning positive word of mouth became Girard’s religion. He made personal calls to check up on how newly purchased cars were running, maintained detailed personal information about them (proto-CRM in action), and sent monthly greeting cards – devoid of any sales pitch – to everyone on his list. Eventually he knew they’d need a new car… and if not, well, they probably knew someone who did.

Ron Popeil, Ronco
1935-

The father of the infomercial, Popeil and his products are household names for millions of people who grew up dining on veggies sliced with the Chop-O-Matic and chickens cooked in the Showtime Rotisserie. But even if you didn’t own one of Ronco’s wacky kitchen inventions (like the infamous Inside-the-Shell Electric Egg Scrambler) you still knew about the man and his products.

That’s because Popeil’s lengthy, late-night television commercials doubled as more than just effective demonstrations of his products (which were always so impactful that they seemed too good to be true). They were also entertainment, and even if you had no intention of buying an Indoor Smokeless Grill or a Turbo Food Dehydrator, you knew it’d probably be more fun to watch the commercial than whatever else was on TV at the time.

But wait, there’s more! Today, the infomercial has become a crucial sales tool for thousands of products that need to be seen to be understood, and the format ultimately led to the launch of 24-hour retail TV networks like QVC. But Popeil credits more than TV for the runaway success that has earned Ronco an estimated billion dollars in profits. For him, it’s all about passion, saying: “If you have that passion, it is conveyed through marketing. People see it. I get up before them and show them something new and wonderful. When I create something, I believe in it, and I am very passionate about it.”

Donald Trump, The Trump Organization
1946-

Say what you want about The Donald – you won’t be the first one to do so – the man is arguably the most effective salesperson living today. Consider the range of businesses Trump has managed to get people to buy into: Wine. Vodka. Coffee. Chocolate. Golf courses. Restaurants. Energy drinks. Mortgages. Steaks. Casinos. Cologne… nearly all of which have simply been called “Trump.”

The billionaire has done all of this through unconventional tactics that fly in the face of much of the above. While old-school salesmen have praised the art of empathy and understanding your customer, Trump has made salesmanship all about Trump. Claims of his products’ superiority are outrageous to the point of preposterousness – and yet Trump seems to believe them so fully that his prospects do too. Any competition is immediately dismissed as a joke at best, as actively harmful to the customer at worst. And all of this is communicated in a bubble of opulence. Trump’s dress and manner connotes glamor and success, the idea being that his customers can aspire to the same level of greatness if only they buy what he’s selling.

At present, of course, Trump has embarked on his most ambitious sales project ever: To become President of the United States. At press time, he already had over 13 million people lined up to buy. Now that’s a sales job.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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About the Author: Christopher Null is an award-winning business and technology journalist. His work frequently appears on Wired, PC World, and TechBeacon. Follow him on Twitter @christophernull.

Monday Morning Mantra

Turn It Up Tuesday: Tips from Insightly to Take Your Business to 11

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly CRM, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. Enjoy this week’s tips!

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Activity Sets

If you find that you’re entering the same tasks or events week after week or day after day, you might want to build an Activity Set to generate a series a repeatable tasks.  An Activity Set is a series of instructions to create tasks or events. Those tasks and events will be linked to the record they’re applied to, but aren’t connected to each other or grouped in any way. 
Activity sets:
⦁ Need to be set up by your Insightly administrator.
⦁ Can include calculated task due dates and event dates.
⦁ Can be used to create activities directly for leads, contacts, organizations, opportunities and projects.
⦁ Can be embedded in a Pipeline stage for opportunities or projects.
Activity-Sets

Let’s use an example of a sales team contacting new leads. Every time a lead is assigned, a salesperson must call the lead, send an email follow-up a few days later, and then stop by for a visit a few days after that. (This is a quite efficient sales group.)

 

Without an Activity Set, the salesperson or sales manager enters the same three tasks into Insightly for every lead. Each task is entered separately, which can mean lots of repeated data entry. This also leaves room for error when entering task names, due dates, and other details.

 

This week’s tip was provided by Tony Roma. Tony is an Insightly product expert who has been helping businesses implement software solutions for over ten years.

 

Just Say No to Brain Drain

According to the NTL Institute, humans tend to remember:

  • 5% of what they learn when they’ve learned from a lecture (i.e. university/college lectures)
  • 10% of what they learn when they’ve learned from reading (i.e. books, articles)
  • 20% of what they learn from audio-visual (i.e. apps, videos)

Brain-Drain

  • 30% of what they learn when they see a demonstration
  • 50% of what they learn when engaged in a group discussion.
  • 75% of what they learn when they practice what they learned.
  • 90% of what they learn when they use immediately (or teach others)

What does that all mean? Well, it means all of that time we spent pouring through books and attending classroom lectures was a bit of a bust–with  80-95% of that information going in one ear and out the other. No!

Before you pull the plug on sending your kid to college or learning to speak another language, changing up your strategy will make a big difference. Instead of passive forms of learning, we focus our time, energy, and resources on “participatory” methods that have proven to deliver more effective results, in less time. So, if you want to learn to speak Spanish, start spending time with native speakers and talk, talk, talk.

Playing Well With Others

We all have our own unique way of doing things in the workplace; however, what make perfect sense to us might not to others. If you ever wonder if you’re being a good boss or co-worker, take five and ask/ponder a few simple questions:

  1. Have your colleagues sought you out for advice within the last three months.
  2. Can you think of a few examples where you proactively sought the perspectives of others that you knew would offer a different viewpoint?

Trust

  1. Do you show up on time for meetings and conference calls?
  2. Do you respond to emails within 24 hours?

Monday Morning Sales Mantra

Every day is different in the world of sales, and some days are simply going to go far better than others. If your week is going sideways, remind yourself of the simple things that help keep your mind and work day organized:

  • It’s not what you say; It’s what your customer believes.
  • Never go into a sales call not knowing how you’re going to close the sale.

Monday-Mantra

  • Have a dedicated time set aside either daily or weekly to do your prospecting.
  • Believe in yourself and what you’re doing to help your customers.
  • Show up and show up on time.

 

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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About the author: Marta Bright is Insightly’s Content Manager. She’s been writing about the “business of technology” in the Silicon Valley for more than a decade.

A Marketing Consultant’s Guide for CRM Success (Part 3)

Marketing-Consultant

 

So far, we’ve discussed tips for structuring and populating your CRM. These steps are certainly important, but the long-term value of any system comes down to its impact on the bottom line.

Aside from managing contacts and client details, how can a CRM actually help you grow your business? In this post, I’ll share my tips for leveraging opportunity records to achieve this goal.

Why Opportunities Matter

Picture this. You’re chatting with a client, and the conversation takes an unexpected turn. Scattered among the mixture of personal and accounting issues, you learn about a pet project that he has been pondering for several years. The client wants to move forward but doesn’t have the capacity to research, plan, and implement his vision. He has the budget to get started, but he needs help.

At this point in the conversation, alarm bells should be going off in your head. As a marketing professional, you have both the technical know-how and availability to assist. Unfortunately, before you can give your pitch, the client changes the subject. You forget about the idea, and you never follow up.

This is the definition of a missed opportunity. Your client was willing to open up his billfold and let you work your magic. If only you had remembered.

Seizing the Opportunity

A tool such as Insightly CRM is valuable for avoiding this type of situation. By adding an opportunity record and linking it to a contact or organization, you give yourself a much greater chance of winning the deal. Easily track specific details that you may otherwise fail to consider, including:

  • Value of the opportunity
  • Notes about the project
  • Probability of winning
  • Stage in the pipeline
  • Projected close date

Creating your first opportunity record is a great start, but consider the value of having dozens more. Instead of digging through handwritten notes, email inboxes, or the far corners of your brain, your CRM keeps everything nice and tidy. With a few clicks, you can even visualize and sort which opportunities are most valuable, closing soonest, or stuck in the queue.

Forgetfulness is Your Worst Enemy

In the previous example, it was clear that a CRM can help you stay ahead of the curve. But, that is only true if you actually remember to use it.

Marketing consultants are quick to try new technologies, but we’re also easily distracted. If you don’t agree with me, stop and think about how many passwords you have. Now, consider how many of those tools you actually use. Failing to use your CRM might be the most costly mistake you make, given the value of your opportunity pipeline.

If I’m being honest, these are the two things I regularly forget to do:

  1. Input new opportunities
  2. Follow up on existing opportunities

Insightly CRM can be incredibly useful for warding off your forgetfulness. Let’s start with remembering to input new opportunities. Sure, you could bookmark the Insightly portal, log in, and manually add opportunities via the web app. Unfortunately, you’re not always at your desk when opportunity knocks. The good news is that the Insightly mobile app is just a tap away via your smartphone or tablet device. Launch the app to quickly add deals on the go. When you get back to your desk, you’ll be delighted to see that your pipeline is more robust than when you left.

It’s easy to get caught up in the excitement of a promising opportunity, especially one that is projected to close quickly. Many deals, however, require nurturing to bring them to fruition. Your calendar is already booked solid, so remembering to follow up can easily slip your mind. As an Insightly user, you can keep yourself organized by using tasks. For instance, if you need to send a proposal by next Thursday, you might attach a task to the appropriate opportunity. When the task becomes due, you will receive an email reminder. Take that forgetfulness!

Grow Your Business with Opportunities

As a business owner, you value being able to see the “big picture.” Your CRM can deliver this type of information, but only if you commit to tracking deals via opportunity records.

Grow you pipeline, monitor your close rate, and in time, you’ll see the value of your CRM far outweighs the cost.

 

At Insightly, we offer a CRM used by small and mid-sized businesses from a huge variety of verticals. Learn about all of Insightly’s features and plans on our pricing page or sign up for a free trial.

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Matt Keener

Matt Keener is a marketing consultant and President of Keener Marketing Solutions, LLC. Matt specializes in content marketing and strategic planning, having helped numerous Saas (software as a service) companies and other small businesses worldwide. Read more of Matt’s work, check out his book, or connect with him on Linkedin.

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