By Ian Hales
Selling is tougher than ever. Customers are less accessible, more
sceptical and take longer to make a decision to buy. Before they
sign the order, they not only want the salesperson to dance a jig,
but they want to make sure the price is right. All this adds up to
added frustration, slimmer margins, longer hours and even lower
commissions. So why should it be any different for your Martial Arts
School?
This is why everyone in sales needs an extra edge, even a slight
advantage over the competition.
When you're making sales calls, following up on the telephone,
answering inquiries and attending seemingly endless meetings, there
isn't much time to develop a strategy. To make it easier, here are
13 effective ways to give yourself a selling advantage:
1. Be far more accessible
Maximum accessibility is the new reality and it counts for more and
more in business. It's not when you want to contact the customer
that counts, it's when the customer wants to contact you that's
critical. Along with your primary telephone and fax numbers, make
sure your customers have your home, beeper and mobile telephone
numbers, too. Emphasize that you are always available and that you
welcome calls. This increases customer confidence.
2. Improve your sales cycle management
Improved productivity is the key to increasing your sales. This
requires careful and continuous follow-up with an increasing number
of prospects and customers. There's only one way to do it and that's
with a computer-based sales tracking-management system.
3. Become a valuable asset to your customers
Just attempting to add value to the product or service you sell
misses the point today. That's history. Now you must be an asset to
your customers by demonstrating that you can enhance their future
and their well-being. Look for what you bring to your customers that
tips the scales in your favour.
4. Keep adding something new
Customers must think of you as a source for what's new and
different. "What's he going to come up with next?" is the question
they should be asking. You want to be seen as the innovator, the one
who is always thinking--not just another salesperson.
Do this and your customers and prospects will look forward to
meeting with you and hearing what you have to say.
5. Don't waste your customers' time
Saving time is the customer's highest priority and most valuable
asset. In today`s society we live at an ever increasing pace of
life. For most customers they want the goods now. Show customers
that you understand their situation by being highly efficient.
Figure out ways to reduce paperwork, unnecessary calls and
extraneous communications. Make it clear that you refuse to rob them
of their time.
6. Act decisively
Customers want to do business with people who are self-confident and
professional. Being nonsensical sends a message to customers that
you are indecisive and unsure of yourself, perhaps even confused.
Besides, indecisiveness signals vulnerability to the customer and
this makes it difficult for you to hold your own.
7. Customize your proposals
Don't underestimate the value of your proposal. Take it seriously.
Create proposals for individual customers by getting rid of
boilerplate paragraphs and pre-printed sections. Then, to get more
attention and to create a better impression, add color and graphics.
8. Look for new niches
The customer landscape is changing. People want to deal with
experts. Look for one or more niches (sometimes the smallest niches
are the best because you can own the group) where you can become
knowledgeable and the demonstrated expert.
9. Get over just thinking big sales
The big sale is great, of course. But don't ignore other sales that
may come by diversifying what you have to offer. Remember, 80% of
your sales totals come from 20% of customers. Figure out how to
attract the remaining 80% or long-tail group that have not responded
to your marketing.
10. Communicate warmly
Business letters are generally cold, stiff and dead. They lack the
vigour, feeling and excitement that are so important in selling.
Write to your customers the same way you would talk to them. Better
yet, pretend you are telling a story--let it unfold and then close
on an upbeat note.
11. Focus on the right benefits
Even sales pros get hurt by neglecting this one. Rattling off a list
of benefits can be as inappropriate and ineffective as trying to
sell features. Any benefit must match a customer's need. If a
customer is looking for an effective weight loss solution, your
pitch should focus on how your program relates to weight loss. You
shouldn’t need to emphasize on all the other benefits that you
offer. Let them experience it for themselves as an added value
incentive.
12. Educate your customers
Small talk is out when it comes to building relationships.
Cyberspace is changing the way we look at those we do business with.
What counts is not how you look but how you think. The quality of
your ideas must be outstanding. So take advantage of the opportunity
to focus on educating your customers.
13. Transform yourself into a free agent
Selling is best when it is practiced as a risk-taking business, not
when it's played cool and close to the vest. Make a decision to act
as if you are the company you work for. Work hard at letting the
customer feel that you and your company are one. Make it a powerful
combination.
Salespeople who operate using the right strategies have a distinct
advantage over their peers who continue working with yesterday's
approaches. These 13 ideas can help you get lucky when it comes to
turning those prospective leads into business.