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You are here: Home > Business > Sales Training > Why Not Stop By And Say Hi - Just To Keep You In The Minds Of Your Clients And Prospects |
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Will You Add? - Why Not Stop By And Say Hi - Just To Keep You In The Minds Of Your Clients And Prospects
Keep your Business Promises - Online and Offline >Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship.Keep your business promises, no matter how small they may be.Sounds like the most basic of business principles, doesn't it? Why then do so few businesses keep their day to day promises? This is something I've always taken for granted in my business dealings, but my own recent experiences have highlighted how much of a real differentiator reliability can be to onlin Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sa Niche with Passion and Reap Your Financial Rewards It seems like every time a hot prospect surfaces or a client’s contract is about to expire a loud speaker goes off in a salesperson’s head that says “attack”. Almost everyone is guilty of this behavior. We are motivated to make our numbers, save our resources, build our books of business and make money. Americans are instant gratification animals.One of the keys to creating a successful business is finding a market niche that is small enough to corner the market but big enough to make money. Let me tell you about a few people who have done that well, and why it works for them.Tony Cox, Catalog Solutions: Tony only focuses on small specialty foods catalog companies. He's found a niche that is very profitable a However there’s a more stable and consistent approach that we know works, yet so few of us use it with any regularity. It’s having the where with all to know that just stopping by and saying “Hi”, sending a card, calling to see how everyone is, may be the easiest way of holding onto or getting new business. It boils down to looking at clients and prospects as friends or family members. You, hopefully, phone your mom, spouse, kids, etcetera, to see how things are going, well why not do that with clients and prospects. A word of warning: don’t do it every other day, or with some annoying and phony premise. If you treat your business resources with the respect and caring that you would like, you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship. Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sal Give It Away Now ith any regularity. It’s having the where with all to know that just stopping by and saying “Hi”, sending a card, calling to see how everyone is, may be the easiest way of holding onto or getting new business.Two spanking new freesheets have hit London streets over the last month. One of them, The London Paper, is everywhere. Or its salesforce is anyway, thrusting copy after copy into the hands of passers by…even targeting drivers stuck in the evening pile-up.The London Paper is Rupert Murdoch’s first venture into free news. We've heard on the grapevine that this fella kn It boils down to looking at clients and prospects as friends or family members. You, hopefully, phone your mom, spouse, kids, etcetera, to see how things are going, well why not do that with clients and prospects. A word of warning: don’t do it every other day, or with some annoying and phony premise. If you treat your business resources with the respect and caring that you would like, you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship. Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sa 3 Tips for Introducing Yourself and Your Business do it every other day, or with some annoying and phony premise.Are you ever in the situation where you are introducing yourself and your business and don’t know quite what to say? Here are 3 important tips for establishing your expertise and impressing your potential client.1. Develop a killer “elevator speech”. You may have heard this phrase before; it’s a standard response of one or two sentences that quickly summar If you treat your business resources with the respect and caring that you would like, you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship. Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sa Controlling Your Body Language During an Interview f cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring.Controlling body language in an interview can enhance a person’s chances of a successful hire. Non-verbal signals are a part of every day life and we all subconsciously interpret these signals. Many individuals can identify the emotions and attitudes attached to the slouching teenager, the happy or sad person, or the introvert or extravert. A slouch, smile, frown or hand Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sa Fifteen Advertising and Promotional Ideas >Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship.Every successful company uses some sort of promotion to influence certain audiences, usually customers or prospects, by informing or persuading them. Reasons for promoting a business include: increasing visibility; adding credibility to you or your company; enhancing or improving your image and bringing in new business. The following cost-effective, easy-to-exe Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society. I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and would occasionally come by with coffee. No matter what happened that fellow could always count on me as a client. His loyalty and business friendship was handsomely rewarded many times over. Slow, steady and caring won the race! Remember building a book of business is a lot easier when your foundation is solid and you set it up for the long haul.
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