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Order Takers Masquerading As Salespeople!

7/6/2014

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Prior to the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) many salespeople didn't have to work too hard or too smart to be successful in their roles.

Based on a combination of the strength of the Products/Services they were selling and a buoyant economy, Selling was relatively simple.

Banjar has observed many so-called 'salespeople' who, in reality, operate more as 'order takers'. From our observations an order taker might have a good customer-service skills and represent their organisation professionally, however, they lack the ability to develop a more sophisticated understanding of their customers and struggle to develop a strategic or tactical approach to Selling.

In what is expected to be an increasingly competitive global marketplace, organisations will need to distinguish between genuine salespeople and 'order takers'. 


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Are there Order Takers on your Sales Team?

What are you going to do about them?


Learn more - get your White Paper at http://www.banjargroup.com.au/sales-shift-2020.html
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Characteristics of Salespeople

9/4/2014

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Do any of your salespeople have the characteristics detailed blow?

If so, grab them, hug them and clone them!

These five traits are not only key to their success, and obviously that of your business, but will be critical to continued success on the future.

It is from this strong foundation that these professional sales people will grow, adapt and thrive in the new business environment.  They will take challenges head on with enthusiasm and vigour.  They will not be daunted by the future but rather be excited by the opportunities this presents.

Is this how your sales team are behaving?

·       Customer Service Orientation - Making efforts to listen to and understand the customer. Anticipating customer needs and giving high priority to customer satisfaction

·       Curious and Inquisitive - Remaining positive and upbeat about the future and their ability to influence it to their advantage. Constantly looking for opportunities.

·       Creative –Coming-up with new ideas and original solutions to move things forward and being flexible in their approach.

·       Energetic and Active - Demonstrating passion and energy when communicating goals, beliefs, interests or ideas they feel strongly about and generating results through activity.

·       Professional - Having a strong belief in self and one's abilities to accomplish tasks and goals. Representing the organisation appropriately and responsibly. 


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How about you do an audit on your sales team.
Where are the gaps?

Learn more - get your White Paper at http://www.banjargroup.com.au/sales-shift-2020.html  
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Competencies of Salespeople

3/4/2014

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Everyone is different, that’s a given. BUT, our insight reveals there are particular competencies that are the standard of successful and influential sales professionals.

It is our belief that the following competencies have, and will continue to be, crucial to success in Sales:.

·       Planning - Taking a well-ordered and methodical approach to tasks to achieve planned outcomes.

·       Attention to Detail - Paying attention to detail in order to produce high quality output, no matter what the pressures.

·       Communication - Using verbal communication effectively as well as expressing ideas clearly in e-mail, proposals and other written communication.

·       Listening Skills – Seeking to genuinely understand other people by paying full attention to what they are saying and respecting their perspective.

·       Questioning Skills – Asking open questions that cleverly help the client identify challenges and opportunities. 


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Does your organisation's Sales team have the competencies required to build sustainable sales success?

Learn more - get your White Paper at http://www.banjargroup.com.au/sales-shift-2020.html  

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Networking

26/3/2014

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Organisations and individual salespeople need to develop strong networks in order to constantly drive Sales.

Although 'cold calling' may still remain part of some salespeople's repertoire, identifying opportunities through referrals and recommendations, or from people within their 'network', is critical.

Many organisations are recognising the emerging opportunities that Social Networking presents. Although a well-developed Social Networking Strategy is critical to contemporary business development, we still recommend face-to-face networking as the primary mechanism for developing business.

B2B Sales typically involves contracts with substantial dollar values and the vast majority of Buyers or Procurement personnel want to place an order with people they believe they can trust.

Face-to-face relationships are critical to building trust.

With this in mind, below is a list of essential qualities that have always been required of good salespeople and we believe will continue to be required for sustainable success into the future:

·      The ability to develop trust and confidence with other people

·      Personal integrity and honesty

·      An ability to self-promote and articulate the organisation's Value Proposition

·      Confidence and belief (self and organisational)


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How many networking opportunities have you taken up in the last six months?

Learn more - get your White Paper at
http://www.banjargroup.com.au/sales-shift-2020.html    
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Sales Process

19/3/2014

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The foundational elements of effective Selling

In order for an organisation to perform well and generate strong Sales, it needs a well-documented and understood Sales Process.

The unique nature of most businesses means that the Sales Process should be customised to their organisation.

Some 'constants' however remain in all Sales Processes including

·      identifying prospective clients,

·      understanding customer needs,

·      recognising opportunities,

·      demonstrating capability,

·      submitting customised proposals and

·      negotiating deals.

Documenting and supporting all stages of the Sales Process is critical to efficient and effective Sales. 


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Do you have a fully documented Sales Process?

Learn more - get your White Paper at
http://www.banjargroup.com.au/sales-shift-2020.html    
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Farewell Zig Ziglar

30/11/2012

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Motivational speaker Zig Ziglar died in Texas on Wednesday, aged 86. He had been suffering from pneumonia.

He wrote more than 30 books and and was well known for is corporate training and motivational speeches. 

"See you at the Top" was not only his catchphrase but also the title of his first book.

I have included here a copy of Seth Godin's blog that outlines the great inspiration Zig Ziglar was.



Thank you, Zig
My teacher Zig Ziglar died this morning. He was 86.
Thanks for teaching me how to sell and why it mattered.
Thanks for reminding me how much it mattered to care.
Thanks for telling us a fifteen-minute story about Johnny the Shoe Shine Genius, so compelling that I flew to the airport just to meet him.
Thanks for 72 hours of audiotapes, listened to so many times I wore out the cassettes twice.
Thanks for that one day we spent backstage together in Milwaukee.
Thanks for making goal setting so clear.
Thanks for elevating the art of public speaking, and making it personal, not something to be copied.
Thanks for believing in us, the people you almost never met in person, for supporting us with your voice and your stories and your enthusiasm.
Thanks for teaching so many people, people who will continue to remember you and to teach as well.
You'll be missed.

Boiler

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Storytelling for business - who would have thought!

2/11/2012

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You all know I like a good story. It's about the shared experience.

Amazingly in this tecnological age, storytelling is making a comeback. Technology is allowing us to share stories in so many ways: video, audio, mp3, pintrest, youtube, animoto etc etc etc.

In business, storytelling is keeping customers engaged. Interested in our company, our products, our services, our developments. The power of this connection lays in the customer seeking out more about us!

When it comes to brands and marketing, the application of story now needs to go beyond the traditional and ubiquitous tool of brand story; rather, it’s about engaging consumers in a brand’s stories and using the construct of stories and storytelling to create powerful connections. While the transition to digital media drove a focus toward content, today with ever more social tools and communication media, there’s a need for cohesive and meaningful connections in a marketing world that is now labeled “always on,” demanding more of brand communication. This is where story comes into play.

Kathy Oneto is vice president of brand strategy at Anthem Worldwide and has great insight on the subject.
"Why stories? It seems we’re all catching on to their effectiveness in connecting with people. When information is communicated in story form, we seem to remember it better and be affected by it more deeply. Brands are telling these stories across a number of different mediums--from packaging to video to visual and verbal content." Some tips on storytelling can be found from research consultancy Latitude, which recently released part one of its study, “The Future of Storytelling,” which identifies trends and audience attitudes about content. The tips Latitude provides on telling stories are the following:

1. IMMERSION  - Create an immersive experience through content that is delivered in multi-media and that is multi-sensory;
2. INTERACTIVITY  - Allow the consumer to become a part of it;
3. INTEGRATION  - Ensure there is coherence across the many touchpoints; and
4. IMPACT  - Make it lead to action
"Again, the difference today for marketers is twofold--storytelling is not an internal exercise alone; rather, it is an exercise that should engage the consumer. Brand stories need to now live day to day with the engagement of consumers to create strong, long-lasting bonds across all touchpoints, from packaging to video to visual and verbal content. Such a requirement transforms how marketers need to think about their role. It becomes less about directing and more about curating a brand and consumer journey."
Read Kathy's article and share your thoughts on how you might employ a story to ignite interest in your business, product or service.

Boiler

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Is your team on your team?

20/10/2012

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Well if it isn't you're in big trouble!

I was reading a Zig Ziglar article the other day and this point jumped out at me. How true I thought.

More and more we are seeing managers and business owners pulling their hair out, frustrated at their staff going in different directions and missing their targets.

Good business starts on the inside. Your team must believe in you and what you are trying to achieve. 

“The belief in the value of what you do or sell has to be so strong that everyone who comes in contact with a customer exudes confidence in the company and the product”.

When this is the case everyone is prepared to pitch in.

If your team is not on your team – STOP!  Step back and take 5 minutes to reset for yourself the goals for your business. Detail it out in a One Page Plan: the Now – Where – How.

Share this with your team and work together to plan the route to get there. Then set them free on meeting the needs of your customers through your product or service.

Boiler

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The End of Solution Sales

6/9/2012

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I have just been reading an article in the Harvard Business Review (July-August 2012) and was intrigued with the headline: ‘The End of Solution Selling’.

The article announces that “the old playbook no longer works” and that “star salespeople now seek to upend the customer’s current approach to doing business”.  Bold statement and interesting observation I thought.

For many years we have championed the cause of sales professionals solving the problems of their customers to win business, and ensure repeat business - solution selling. 

But in recent times it has become apparent that being the font of all knowledge to our clients and solving all their problems is not enough. For a start, customers make an approach or enquiry armed with more knowledge of our product or service than ever before. They have researched and compared all before walking through our door.

As the article outlines, “customers completed, on average, nearly 60% of a typical purchasing decision – researching solutions, ranking options, setting requirements, benchmarking pricing, and so on – before even having a conversation with a supplier”. With this in mind, the celebrated ”solution sales rep” can be more of an annoyance than an asset!

“Insight selling” is now the mantra of the best salespeople. It is a new strategy that demands a radically different approach across several areas of the purchasing process.
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Sales professionals need to be adaptive. Solution selling skills need to be complemented with strategies to challenge, insights to engage clients and the touch to coach how they should buy. Successful reps “may still be selling insights. And in this new world, that makes the difference between a pitch that goes nowhere and one that secures the customer’s business.”

The full articles is linked on our website, so take the time to have a read and see how Insight Selling might better suit the ‘new age’ customer in your market?

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Business People Who Sell

17/5/2012

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There is a common myth in sales circles that sales people are born not trained. Of course this is nonsense. Send me the details of any midwife that recognised an up and coming sales person like Zig Zigler at birth!

The facts are that selling and the science of selling, like any science, is a learnt skill. The basic foundations of this learning are effective communication, planning, goal orientation and problem solving. These elements combined form the foundations of what we call "Sales Swagger” or the “Sales Essence” of an individual.

For many years now I have said consultants are in a privileged position when it comes to selling. They generally have a fantastic ability to solve problems. They have become good listeners by being forced to understand their clients issues in order to offer solutions. They also, if involved in accounting and professional services, come from a ‘trusted’ position via existing relationships and the perception of accounting in the wider community.

So what is the issue with selling if all these factors are stacked in your favour?

Why is it so hard to become “A Business Person who Sells” when the customers prime driver is to go forward, achieve their goals, be successful and achieve growth and profit?

Through observations, training and my own business experience, here are the top key blockages:
  • Confidence in your own selling ability 
  • Inadequate time allocated to proper sales cycles, from start to finish 
  • A poorly thought out (SCA) or Unique Selling Proposition (USP) 
  • Lack of sales process or model to find suspects, convert to prospects and then convert to customers 
  • Fear 

Fear is not even worth talking about. I have never seen a salesperson shot by a customer! The worst thing that can happen is the customer says “No”! If you have a robust pipeline this will never be a problem.

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Selling is not something you can do once a month at the Club Golf Tournament. You need to allocate time to the process of selling. Time for pipeline development, relationship building, sales calls and follow up conversions. Everyone in your organization need to be involved in the process of customer development — not just the ‘rainmakers’.

You need to be able to anchor your sales process with a point of difference to make sure your USP is in fact unique. Understand your SCA. Build a sales process and then consistently use it leaving nothing out. Don’t skip steps.

Lastly, begin to build goals, targets and milestones. Set yourself a meeting target, proposals out for consideration target, conversion goal and win/loss ratio.

Lets be clear. Customers want future goals and success. They are not interested in your products and services, sorry to burst the bubble. I challenge you to ring 20 customers now and ask if you can come over and show them product X, Y and Z. I bet none take you up on your offer. Instead ask them if you can meet to discuss their top 5 blockages to success you can help them fix, and you may even find they offer to pay for coffee!

Here is a model or approach you may have heard of. Sit down with a customer and ask them “Where are you now?” (Listen) Then ask them, “What are your top 5 issues for the next 3 months? You know, the burning ones.” (Listen) Then ask them “Where do you want to be in 12 months time?” (Listen) Then with them, discuss and agree on actions and strategies to get them there. Abracadabra! Looks like a plan!

If you want to be “A Business Person who Sells”, become a person that helps everyone you meet grow in some way. As these people slowly make sense of the value they are getting from the relationship chances are you will become very popular, very successful and well paid.

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    Mike is a Sales Scientist who is passionate about sales and the art and science of selling.

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