Will You Add?
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Sales Training > Why Salespeople Fail

Tags

  • levels
  • early
  • beliefs
  • those barriers
  • employing these
  • selling exhibit

  • Links

  • Wisconsin Workers Waste Nearly 3 Hours A Day
  • For Entertainment And So Much More - Latest PC Games Review
  • Double Your MLM Opportunity Paycheque
  • Will You Add? - Why Salespeople Fail

    Speeding Up Word of Mouth Marketing
    Word of mouth marketing helps boost your sales considerably as the trust is at work in this case. Your customers trust you and some other people trust these customers. These customers when recommend your offerings to their people then they try out the recommendation without any apprehensions.The process, though, is a bit lengthy but is very effective for promoting your business. Therefore, its important that the recommendation about your product is made public rapidly then only your business will feel the difference it wants to.Ways To Accelerate The Word Of Mouth FlowFollowing methods should help proliferate your offerings’ information speedily:Outstanding Value: Offer outstanding value and experience to your customers when they use your products and services and when they deal with your customer service. A genuine and honest effort is always obvious and customers do take a note of it. So, honest offerings with a willingness to help the customers will make you stand out and the customers will cherish the experience of dealing with you. Now, just watch the rapid spread of word of mouth in the market.Customer treatment: Treat your customers as your near and dear ones rather than viewing them only as a resource to generate profit for you. A selfish attitude will give you a very short-term gain and you will loose the long-term market value.Advertisements: Draft user-friendly advertisements that are interesting and catchy for the audience and should be easy to share. The audience should easily
    problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point f

    Build Lifelong Networks With Your Own Barter Group
    I don’t know if you have ever seriously considered bartering. If you haven’t considered it, it’s probably about time that you did. Why? Well, besides the fact that both parties involved in a barter leave feeling satisfied, it can also build lifelong personal or business connections. Building a network of contacts with other people not only increases the number of acquaintances and friends you have it also practically guarantees success.It is well known fact that networking is a very important part of business whether it is done for finding more business deals or finding cheaper products or for enjoying exchanging goods and services without money or simply to build networks. Barter is one of the most overlooked business and personal tools available to you right now.Now the question becomes, how to take advantage of the barter system for your own interests? The internet is the easiest way to take advantage of barter and set up your own group. Never before has the interconnectivity between individuals been so easy to achieve or maintain. In fact with resources available online you could set up your own barter group without even spending a dime!OK, now to the steps to form your own barter group…1. Determine what you want to barter. Appliances, services, books, everything?2. Set up your group with the best free online resource for forming groups.3. Advertise to get the word out.1. In determining what to start a barter group for first look to your own interests and needs. What do YOU look
    Since 1990 I have focused on the three primary barriers which affect the performance of salespeople:

    1. Low confidence and self image

    2. A low sense of personal responsibility for their performance, and

    3. A low acceptance level of the need to practise selling skills

    In all top performers, and in sales team this might represent only between 15-20% of the population, these barriers have been overcome, or at the very least compensated for.

    Where many people make the mistake is in assuming that they can solve their overall sales force performance needs by employing people with the opposite of these characteristics.

    These people only represent some 15-20% of the population anyway and the stark fact is that merely because people are successful elsewhere, this does not guarantee that they will be successful with you. The reason for this is that your management style may not be conducive to a) creating and b) retaining high performers.

    80-85% of salespeople appear unable to overcome these barriers, but simply identifying what those barriers are is only part of the solution. In addition, if you do manage to employ the other 15-20%, without addressing the main influencing factors on performance you can also adversely affect top performers.

    Most salespeople, whilst enjoying the perceived freedom and benefits of selling exhibit internal conflicts which can dramatically affect their self image, thus reducing their confidence. This in turn is transmitted to customers, bringing about a self-fulfilling prophecy of low performance. The beliefs which produce this are:-

    a) no-one chooses selling as a first career choice. Most people drift into sales either because they can’t think of anything else to do or due to low educational achievement, circumstances or lack of opportunity, and thus other career choices become unobtainable. In professions such as sports, music, dancing, and acting, the great mass of people in them make early conscious decisions about wanting to be in that profession. They understand what they must do in order to stand any chance of becoming successful.

    b) This apparent lack of understanding of the mechanics of professionalism leads people to focus on such professions as law, medicine, and finance as desirable yet unattainable professional status. The fallback position for all salespeople is that becoming a sales manager does not require any high academic achievement, and promotion to management is almost always based on sales achievement. In this way many salespeople are able to produce short-term performance levels in order to retire into management. The goal is to become a manager, which is seen to be a professional position. For many salespeople promotion is a reward and most fail in their first management role.

    c) Salespeople and customers have the same feelings about selling, in that the process is focussed on benefits to the person selling, not the person being sold to, and that part of sales technique is to persuade people to buy something they really do not need. Although many sales training theorists talk about creating an environment in which customers are encouraged to buy rather than having to be sold to, the way in which salespeople are trained and managed rarely allows this to happen. Once again, the top 15-20% do create this environment, mostly unconsciously, but instead of focusing on how they do this, too many organisations simply believe that finding and employing these top performers will solve all of their problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point fi

    Ignite Passion in Your Employees
    Hundreds of studies over the last three decades indicate that business success and profitability begins and ends with the commitment and enthusiasm of employees. Lior Arussy, author of Passionate Employees – the Fast Track to Revenue Growth, states, "In today’s competitive environment, passionate employees bring a much higher return in the form of more business with higher margin. You must take advantage of every edge you can get. Passionate people are that edge." Can you inspire commitment, enthusiasm, and passion? Here are five ways to begin: Provide a sense of purpose. Whether your employee is a store cashier or a cancer research scientist, knowing that his or her work matters and contributes to something meaningful helps to satisfy the human need to make a difference. Help employees see how their work is important and adds value to the company's success, and potentially to the good of something larger than the organization.Make expectations clear. Employees want to know what is expected of them and what they can expect of you. When teaching at the college level, I provide students with a syllabus that outlines exactly what they need to do to succeed. I explain the type of work that constitutes an A for each assignment. Then, I provide them with examples and point them to resources that will help them achieve that A. The focus is on excellence and the means to reaching it. Show your employees how to get an A and provide them with the resources to achieve it. Ackno
    r management style may not be conducive to a) creating and b) retaining high performers.

    80-85% of salespeople appear unable to overcome these barriers, but simply identifying what those barriers are is only part of the solution. In addition, if you do manage to employ the other 15-20%, without addressing the main influencing factors on performance you can also adversely affect top performers.

    Most salespeople, whilst enjoying the perceived freedom and benefits of selling exhibit internal conflicts which can dramatically affect their self image, thus reducing their confidence. This in turn is transmitted to customers, bringing about a self-fulfilling prophecy of low performance. The beliefs which produce this are:-

    a) no-one chooses selling as a first career choice. Most people drift into sales either because they can’t think of anything else to do or due to low educational achievement, circumstances or lack of opportunity, and thus other career choices become unobtainable. In professions such as sports, music, dancing, and acting, the great mass of people in them make early conscious decisions about wanting to be in that profession. They understand what they must do in order to stand any chance of becoming successful.

    b) This apparent lack of understanding of the mechanics of professionalism leads people to focus on such professions as law, medicine, and finance as desirable yet unattainable professional status. The fallback position for all salespeople is that becoming a sales manager does not require any high academic achievement, and promotion to management is almost always based on sales achievement. In this way many salespeople are able to produce short-term performance levels in order to retire into management. The goal is to become a manager, which is seen to be a professional position. For many salespeople promotion is a reward and most fail in their first management role.

    c) Salespeople and customers have the same feelings about selling, in that the process is focussed on benefits to the person selling, not the person being sold to, and that part of sales technique is to persuade people to buy something they really do not need. Although many sales training theorists talk about creating an environment in which customers are encouraged to buy rather than having to be sold to, the way in which salespeople are trained and managed rarely allows this to happen. Once again, the top 15-20% do create this environment, mostly unconsciously, but instead of focusing on how they do this, too many organisations simply believe that finding and employing these top performers will solve all of their problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point f

    There's An Amazing, New 3,251 Step Sales Training Process!
    One of my clients is a sales training junky.He loves any new close, answer to an objection, or selling shortcut you can give him.He’s also an avid collector of tapes, books, newsletters, and you name it.I shouldn’t complain because he collects my stuff, too, but the last time he came to me for advice, I wanted to set him straight.I told him:“If you’d only PUT INTO PRACTICE a few if the tips I have given you, instead of distracting yourself with yet more pointers from myriad sources, you’d earn more sales and money, and save time, to boot!That offended him, because he really believes he’s getting somewhere.His latest fling is with the idea of “negative” selling. Instead of giving a prospect, good reasons to buy, he skewers his product with faint praise.“I don’t know if this is going to be of any use to you, but you might see some value in it.”Weak? Wimpy?You bet, but he’s convinced he’s better off using more sour than sweet; at least that’s what the recipe calls for this month.If you told him there is an amazing, new 3,251 step sales training process, he’d probably grab it.After all, it’s new.When I was a sales manager and I was running out of motivational ideas, I’d announce something new to my team.It could have been an innocuous change to the presentation, or I would say that a list I had obtained was “brand new” and they’d get psyched-up and there would be a temporary spike in their sales.The only problem is you can get hook
    ow educational achievement, circumstances or lack of opportunity, and thus other career choices become unobtainable. In professions such as sports, music, dancing, and acting, the great mass of people in them make early conscious decisions about wanting to be in that profession. They understand what they must do in order to stand any chance of becoming successful.

    b) This apparent lack of understanding of the mechanics of professionalism leads people to focus on such professions as law, medicine, and finance as desirable yet unattainable professional status. The fallback position for all salespeople is that becoming a sales manager does not require any high academic achievement, and promotion to management is almost always based on sales achievement. In this way many salespeople are able to produce short-term performance levels in order to retire into management. The goal is to become a manager, which is seen to be a professional position. For many salespeople promotion is a reward and most fail in their first management role.

    c) Salespeople and customers have the same feelings about selling, in that the process is focussed on benefits to the person selling, not the person being sold to, and that part of sales technique is to persuade people to buy something they really do not need. Although many sales training theorists talk about creating an environment in which customers are encouraged to buy rather than having to be sold to, the way in which salespeople are trained and managed rarely allows this to happen. Once again, the top 15-20% do create this environment, mostly unconsciously, but instead of focusing on how they do this, too many organisations simply believe that finding and employing these top performers will solve all of their problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point f

    The Internet - A Huge Surge in Entrepreneurs
    Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the founders of Google, Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay, Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon and Tom Anderson the founder of MySpace... what do all of these people have in common with each other? Well first of all, they are the founders of some of the most popular websites on the Internet. Secondly, these five people are true entrepreneurs in a true sense of Entrepreneurship.So what did these people do right? What does it take to be an entrepreneur? Is it as easy of having an idea? Or is it the act of intention mixed with determination?In my opinion, anyone can have an idea but it takes someone special to be a true entrepreneur. It all comes down to having the right ingredients as both an individual mixed with a decent idea. If one of these ingredients is missing, it will be impossible to be considered or act like a true entrepreneur and get your Internet business off the ground. It is fact, that someone can have the most unbelievable idea but without the act of intention (an anticipated outcome that is intended or guides your planned actions) mixed with determination (the quality of being determined to accomplish something) it will be extremely difficult for that person to make their amazing idea a success. Yet on the other side of the coin, someone can take such a simple idea of selling items on eBay but have the intention and determination to succeed, that they will be considered a true entrepreneur and will absolutely make their simple idea a vast success.Over the past decade,
    is to become a manager, which is seen to be a professional position. For many salespeople promotion is a reward and most fail in their first management role.

    c) Salespeople and customers have the same feelings about selling, in that the process is focussed on benefits to the person selling, not the person being sold to, and that part of sales technique is to persuade people to buy something they really do not need. Although many sales training theorists talk about creating an environment in which customers are encouraged to buy rather than having to be sold to, the way in which salespeople are trained and managed rarely allows this to happen. Once again, the top 15-20% do create this environment, mostly unconsciously, but instead of focusing on how they do this, too many organisations simply believe that finding and employing these top performers will solve all of their problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point f

    The Future Of Advertising: How Crafty Marketers Are Chasing After Your Cash
    Everywhere we go, we are bombarded by a myriad of pesky ads. You name it, they are all over the place. Television, radio, billboards, magazines, news bulletins, the internet, buses, ATM screens, flyers, street signs, mailboxes and even people wearing ads. Advertising is all about attention. Grabbing people’s attention these days is no piece of cake. Given a chance, most people are eager to banish these countless and irksome “in-your-face” product promos. Proof of this is the overwhelming success of PVRs (Personal Video Recorders). So what are companies expected to do? The traditional 30-second spot on TV doesn’t seem to bear much fruit. Moreover, newspaper advertising can be very treacherous and unrewarding, unless you can burn plenty of bucks to afford a full-page exposure.Broadcasting networks which rely heavily on the multi-billion dollar advertising industry to survive are taking a new approach, with the introduction of “ads-free” television shows. But wait a minute. Television networks are not exactly turning down the cold, hard advertising cash worth billions just to please their viewers. The new trend is to conveniently place ads and product logos in such a way that they do not appear advertorial. In other words, products will have to seamlessly integrate with television shows in such a manner that they do not steal the limelight, but rather appear to be part and parcel of the show. Does it seem like a strange twist of coincidence that the judges on the popular “American Idols” show are always taking coke with the “C
    problems. We can all too easily recount stories of instances where service provided by an organisation falls far sort of the customer mission statements contained in their advertising.

    True professionalism comes from a process of accepting the rules within which the professional can perform.

    In order to release talent and ability that people have to be able to learn and perform the basics, mostly through repetition and skill drilling. There’s a saying that amateurs practise until they get it right, however professionals practise until they never get it wrong.

    Most professionals have tools that they use and they also understand that the way in which those tools are used requires compliance to basic rules. For example, a javelin thrower knows that they cannot cross the line when running up to throw the javelin. They know that the javelin has to be thrown point first. An actor knows that they have to use a stage prop in a certain way at a certain time, and they know that they have to stick to the script. A dancer uses a certain type of footwear specific to a particular dance style. They accept that they have to perform a number of steps in a certain sequence. A guitarist knows that they have to strike the strings of a guitar in a particular fashion and hold the strings on the fret board in a certain way in order to comply with the music – which they follow.

    These rules, which ensure consistency, and through consistency professionalism, are understood and accepted by professionals. They are neither understood nor accepted by salespeople or sales managers primarily because consistency brings with the responsibility of inflexibility.

    You might have heard McEnroe complain about the ball being in or out, but not of the necessity to serve over the net. Nigel Kennedy may have complained about always playing ‘dead guys stuff’ but he doesn’t change the music or miss pieces out. When Michael Flatley disagreed with the rigid nature of Riverdance he had to set up his own company. There may be modern versions of Shakespeare productions, but they keep the original words.

    In following the rules, and adhering to the way basic training has moved them to competence, and the coach towards excellence, professionals have no issue with compliance, repetition, and constant practice of the same skills. They understand that it is through this process that they can release their talent and personality.

    Too many salespeople, and many sales managers believe that selling is about personality and therefore seek to employ or become the perfect salesperson without understanding how talent and personality is released.

    Once performers have experienced the benefits of practice and structure and of eventually the release of talent and personality it becomes a natural follow on to reach for constant improvement. Were it that easy. There is a missing element.

    The way in which the salesperson feels about the job they do has a major impact on their effectiveness, but that’s not the whole story. Whenever I ask senior managers what the reason is for one team performing well and one not so well, the answer is inevitably the difference is the manager. My own experience, and research over the last ten years bears this out.

    All sales managers are drawn from the population of salespeople and therefore bring with them the same baggage they acquired in their sales role. Although many want to treat their old peer group in a different way few have been shown any other example other than the status quo of – ‘there are those that lead and those that follow’. Indeed most sales managers take up their new positions without any instruction, formal or informal. They then adopt the behaviours their past managers have taught them, perpetuating the status quo. There’s an analogy with parenthood. Where did we all learn to be parents? From our own parents. There is no other profession where you are allowed to practice on a live audience other than as a salesperson or a sales manager. Although the title manager provides some internal satisfaction regarding professionalism, the practise of sales management is rarely professional.

    Insofar as personal responsibility is concerned all sales managers believe that they are responsible for the success of their teams. Whilst they are certainly accountable no-one can be responsible for the performance of another person. It’s a d

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/40197/atriclecheck-Why-Salespeople-Fail.html">Why Salespeople Fail</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/40197/atriclecheck-Why-Salespeople-Fail.html]Why Salespeople Fail[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Easy Fundraisers

    Simplify Negotiations with the Six Rules of Effective Communication

    Thanks For Your Persistence!

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com