I Still Love You

How many ways are there to express your appreciation and show your customers you love 'em? That's up to you. Just as Paul Simon suggested that there are "50 ways to leave your lover," there are countless ways to show your sincerity to the relationship. Let's consider a few: a simple phone call, a note on their invoice or delivery box, a delivery of balloons, cookies, chocolates, a fruit basket, a lottery ticket, a corporate treat (logo'ed pens, hats, shirts, note pads, golf balls, etc.) a gift certificate for two at an upscale restaurant, a copy of this book, (yes, that was a pitch, I couldn't resist!) or any other publication or magazine, tickets to a sporting or community event, the list goes on. Highlight any that may have triggered some ideas to pursue with your customers. "We love you and appreciate your business" should show in your every deed, because business usually stays where it's appreciated.

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Ten Follow-Up Letters

Don't underestimate the power of the humble thank-you note. Thank-you notes clearly indicate to the recipients that you've made an effort to think about them and thank them for their support. Consider the last time you received a handwritten invitation or note of thanks. Feels good, doesn't it? You can use thank-you notes for a variety of occasions. They confirm your commitment and help solidify your business relationship, making it more difficult for your competitors to replace you. Use handwritten notes for just about any situation or occasion. I offer you these ten suggestions for follow-up notes. Feel free to modify or tailor these notes to your specific situation. I offer these as guidelines only.

  1. After a purchase. Thank you for giving me the opportunity of providing you with the benefits of our product. I am confident that you will be happy with your investment and I will endeavor to offer excellent follow-up service. I do appreciate your support.
  2. A first meeting. Thank you for taking the time to meet with me. I enjoyed our visit and the opportunity to learn more about your business. I look forward to our next meeting.
  3. Telephone contact. Thank you for taking the time to chat with me on the telephone.You'll soon receive all the information we discussed. I look forward to following up with you next week to discuss the details of our proposal and the possibility of a win-win agreement.
  4. After a presentation/demonstration. Thank you for the opportunity to showcase our products and services to you (and to your committee). My presentation highlighted the key benefits of our product and outlined the mutual benefits of an association of our firms. I look forward to our follow-up meeting next Wednesday at 2:30 PM. See you then.
  5. A turndown or they buy from someone else. Thank you for taking the time to analyze my proposal. I regret being unable, at this time, to demonstrate our capabilities. However, we are constantly responding to our customers' expectations and to new trends, developments, and changes in our industry. Thus, I will keep in touch with the hope that in the near future we will be able to do business. This classy tactic clearly shows your professionalism and encourages the customer to seriously consider you for next time. A great tactic to become #2.
  6. A gatekeeper. Thank you for providing me with the opportunity to meet with Mr. Smith. Our meeting was productive and there may be an opportunity for our companies to do business. I will let you know how things work out.
  7. A referral. Thank you for the valuable referral. I look forward to meeting with Ms. Jones. You can rest assured that I will exercise the same level of professionalism that I have with you. I will let you know how things work out.
  8. A turndown but they offer to give a referral. Thank you for your generous offer to provide me with a referral. I am saddened to hear your immediate plans do not include us but I will keep you posted on new services that may benefit you.
  9. An anniversary. Thank you. It's with pleasure that I send this note on the one-year anniversary of your patronage. Your support is appreciated—clients like you contribute to our success. I have enclosed an update on our latest advancements and I'll give you a call next week to discuss them further.
  10. A cold call. Thank you for making the time to chat with me when I visited your office recently. I learned a great deal about your business needs and expectations. I look forward to following up with your people next week. I'll stay in touch.

Follow these six suggestions to maximize the impact of your note:
  1. Handwritten. Personalize it with your own handwriting. If your penmanship is sloppy, write slower.
  2. Don't use company letterhead. Buy some nice stationary that doesn't scream "business letter." It must be a personal gesture.
  3. Handwrite the envelope too. Personalize the whole package.
  4. Buy stamps. Use a stamp. Don't put it through a mailing machine. A typed envelope with a corporate stamp on it takes away from the personal touch. It also looks lazy.
  5. Include your business card. It clearly indicates who this note is from. A handwritten note simply signed by you may cause confusion or uncertainty as to the sender. Your customer may not know you all that well—yet.
  6. Don't expect a response. Although it may seem your efforts have gone unnoticed, your customers do appreciate it. In these busy times, customers simply don't have time to pick up the phone and thank you. I once sent a note and heard nothing back but the next time I made a call my note was displayed on her credenza.

Tim Commandment #9
Business will stay where it's appreciated.

Ask: How have I demonstrated my appreciation?



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Follow-Up: You Never Call or Write Anymore

Have you ever heard that line? I have. Your parents and friends sometimes say it to you, but your customers have a different way of saying it. Customers complain with their feet; they walk. If a customer ever says it or suggests it, you had better pay attention. It could be the death knell for your relationship.

Effective follow-up after confirmation and successful negotiation means going that little bit extra for your customer. The little things often move a relationship forward. The result is a win-win-win-win. The win for you is anchoring a solid client, a source of referrals, and second-selling opportunities within an existing account. When we treat our customers with respect and appreciation we feel good about ourselves. At the same time, our customers feel good about working with us. A long-term business relationship is forged.

It's a fact that customers will forget you within 27 days. Your parents might even forget you every couple of months. You have worked hard through Steps #1 to #9 and now it's time to use all your resources and tools to protect your newly acquired asset. You must build a fortress of loyalty to keep the watchful eye of your competitors out. I have often said that getting the first sale is easy. It's getting the repeat orders that truly validates your performance as a sales entrepreneur.

Keeping your customer happy and satisfied requires conscious effort. It is part of the ongoing process of assessment, feedback, and reassessment that makes you continually responsive to your customer. It's difficult to coordinate the pursuit of new customers while servicing and growing existing accounts. I think this anonymous quote says it well: "A relationship will deteriorate over time. A natural tendency of any relationship (business or marriage) is toward erosion of sensitivity and attentiveness. It requires a solid effort against the forces of decline." A powerful statement indeed.

Follow this reading to continue:
Ten Follow-Up Letters
I Still Love You

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Customers Don't Shoot the Messenger

We no longer live in times where they behead the messenger, although I'm sure that on occasions customers are tempted. In the eyes of customers, the salesperson is ultimately responsible for seeing that the product or service is delivered when promised. If problems arise when filling an order (and this is not unusual), customers should be informed promptly. The progress of the order or any possible back orders should also be monitored and communicated to the customer so that if something goes wrong alternative arrangements can be made. Customers may not jump for joy at the news, but they will certainly appreciate the opportunity to take corrective action.

Customers can become disgruntled for a number of reasons, most of which turn out to be minor when handled properly, tactfully, and in a timely manner. Dealing with panic-stricken customers demanding instant satisfaction can be an emotionally draining exercise. These intolerable nuisances, if left unresolved, can easily and quickly escalate into a mountainous catastrophe. Unfortunately, human beings tend to focus on the negative—what went wrong versus what went right. Your phone call will go a long way to prevent the proverbial poop from hitting the fan. Be the bearer of bad news before your customers call you. When you call they will be easier to manage, but when they call it's too late—they're in no mood to listen to your blamefest.

Monitoring order processing and other after-sales activity is critical to developing a partnership. A Purchasing Magazine study indicated that failure to follow through after the sale was the second-biggest complaint of buyers. What was the first one? Talking too much.

Many specific activities are essential to ensure customer loyalty and satisfaction. Sales entrepreneurs must be jugglers. Continue to build trust, monitor proper usage, assist in servicing the account, and provide expert guidance and assistance. Adopting an empathetic attitude to a real or imaginary problem cannot be overemphasized.

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My People Need to Talk to Your People

All parties must understand their roles and responsibilities and work in harmony for a smooth implementation. It's a good idea for both you and your customer to identify all parties involved in the implementation: "This is what I'll do, within this time frame, and these are the people to involve." Parties involved may include management, operations, accounting, manufacturing, engineering, shipping/receiving, inventory control, technical people, delivery people, and so on. You can't do it alone, so draw on the strengths of your internal customers and your customer's people to ensure a smooth, speedy, hassle-free implementation. With all parties working in harmony, the story of these four people becomes a reality:

WHAT WENT RIGHT?
This is the story of four people: Everybody, Anybody, Somebody, and Nobody. There was an important job to be done and Nobody was sure that Anybody would do it but instead Somebody did it. Nobody got angry because it was Anybody's job. There was no need for Nobody to blame Anybody—Somebody did the job Anybody could have done. Nobody made excuses but Everybody was satisfied.

Communication at the best of times is fraught with uncertainty, biases, and individual perceptions. Effective communication is a topic onto its own. Poor communication often results in costly oversights and mistakes. Communication is a very delicate, fragile process. As responsible sales entrepreneurs, we need to ensure an effective exchange of information.

For larger, more sophisticated deals, I suggest both parties safeguard themselves against the normal pitfalls of communication and consider drafting a letter of intent or a letter of agreement. I don't mean a legal document that requires hiring a lawyer at $50 for every three minutes, I simply mean putting a letter together on your company letterhead outlining the logistics of the deal. Who is doing what and by when? You and your customer can review it for accuracy and completeness, signing your respective copies.

Part of your responsibilities also include avoiding, or at least minimizing, user error. To do so you must evaluate your customer's abilities, technical or otherwise, and recommend training if necessary. Research suggests that up to 30% of the time customers are wrong. Reported product and service problems resulted from customer error, product misuse, or failure to read the instructions. Customers do screw up, but as professionals we have to allow them to maintain dignity. It takes a strong attitude to let certain things go while biting your tongue. You must also make your customer aware of the break-in period, the time required to fully appreciate the benefits of your product or service. This may not be apparent initially. True happiness will only come once everyone is using your product correctly.

Tim Commandment #8
Create an action plan.

Ask: What are my implementation strategies?

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Action Plan: Implementation

Congratulations on your successful negotiation. The customer said yes, you reached a win-win-win-win agreement, and now it's time to take action. This is what you have been working so hard to achieve, the opportunity to showcase your company and your product, and to deliver on all the benefits and promises you presented earlier. However, in many ways, your job is just beginning. Just as in a marriage the, "I do" should be, "I will do."Your customers have high expectations—don't let them down. In fact, the more they spend, the higher their expectations. People expect their purchases to be perfect and hassle-free.

Surprisingly, the details of an effective action plan are often overlooked in the euphoria of finally anchoring the deal. Nevertheless, your role now is to quarterback all the activities necessary for a smooth, seamless implementation rather than race to the car, dig out a calculator and excitedly work out your commission and/or bonus. It's important that you identify and delegate responsibilities to ensure a timely, hassle-free delivery of your solution. A big part of what your customer just purchased is peace of mind about a worry-free delivery. Customers need to feel they have made a wise, intelligent investment. Initially they may feel a little uneasy, insecure about their decision. After all, you have convinced them to embrace change.

In this section you will read:
My People Need to Talk to Your People
Customers Don't Shoot the Messenger


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Low of 10 Options

A few years ago I had the pleasure of hearing Jim Rohn, an international motivational speaker, speak at a sales conference in Calgary. One of his many suggestions was to be guided in life, and in sales, by the Law of Ten Options. His point is this: with a cancellation or postponement of an event, there are always ten other options—ten alternatives to consider. For example: if you and your spouse had planned an evening out with the Jones but at the last minute they gracefully declined due to sickness, you now have ten options to consider—go see a movie, see a play, visit other friends, clean the garage, read a book and so on. All is not lost because of a sudden change in plans. The first five or six options may present themselves quite readily, whereas the final three or four may require some creative thinking—perhaps even some alternatives outside your comfort zone. It works well. My wife and I often discuss our ten options and frequently come up with options that are as enjoyable or more enjoyable than the original cancelled event.

Rohn's law can be applied to all situations and it can be particularly useful in pursuing the spirit of creative negotiation. Have some fun with it. Anyone with teenagers will immediately understand how effective it can be—teenagers exercise the Law of Ten Options on a daily basis.

Negotiation is not a game with a single objective but rather one step in building effective long-term relationships. It is only one of the ten steps in your Sequential Model but it can be the pivotal point in your relationship and your success. During negotiation you forge an agreement—like taking the relationship from a courtship to a marriage. "Will you marry me?" may not be your actual request but your final confirmation (the five magic words) certainly suggests the commitment and responsibilities of a marriage.

One of the surest ways to successful negotiation is to be well prepared. It's essential, but planning is often overlooked in the excitement of approaching the finish line. It's like training and conditioning to run a marathon but then running out of steam at the 24-mile mark. So many salespeople come close to the finish line but fail to complete the race because of a lack of training and preparation. We cannot afford to ignore the dire consequences of inadequate preparation. Planning is not an isolated step of your Sequential Model but is a prerequisite to successful graduation of each and every step—including creative negotiation.

The skills outlined in this chapter will help you to build confidence and reach your business and personal objectives. Understand not only how to negotiate, but when. Review the five principles regularly and continue to fuel your confidence to not only run a good marathon, but to finish it.

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Language of Negotiation

The following terms should become part of every sales entrepreneur's vocabulary.

  1. Concessions. Giving in to a customer's request without asking for anything in return. Concessions are central to creative negotiation. They are the backbone to a mutually accepted outcome as they acknowledge the other party and communicate sensitivity to his or her issues and demands. Initial concessions can be effective—they communicate that you are willing and that your intentions are honorable. Many authors suggest that negotiation involves a "progression of concessions." Once again, your min-max points must be clearly defined prior to giving concessions. Know your parameters and don't give away the farm. Begin the negotiation by offering small concessions. Concede the items or issues to which you attach little importance. The sooner you demonstrate your willingness to negotiate, the sooner the customer will respond in kind. Don't give away big concessions too early. Use them to respond to a customer's concession or to secure the deal: "Can we confirm the deal, if I give you XX?" However, you need to draw the line when your min-point is being compromised.
  2. Trade-Offs. Give customers what they want in return for something of comparable value. Value is perception. The item may not be equal in monetary terms, but it may be equal in perceived value. As you've heard before, "One man's garbage is another man's treasure." Once again, know your must-have issues and your min-max points before determining what you are willing to trade. The power of trade-offs is enormous and can have a tremendous impact on your productivity. By asking for a trade-off you elevate the value of your concession. It also stops the grinding process. Marry your concession to a trade-off, otherwise your customer will continue to make demands. You might as well say, "Sure, here you go, it's yours for the asking." A confident negotiator exercises give (concessions) and take (trade-offs) throughout the negotiation process, moving the dialogue toward a win-win-win-win solution. However, the rule of thumb is to stay flexible—there is always a way.
  3. Walk-Point. The point where you walk away from the deal because your minimum must-have issues are not being met. If through trade-offs and concessions you are unable to reach an agreement that satisfies your predetermined parameters, your only option may be to walk. However, walking may only be a temporary solution. Both parties may be receptive to a recess, a cooling-off period. In the interest of an agreement, you may both agree to revisit your parameters and get together again tomorrow, next week, or next month. Although both parties may privately wish there were some way to get back together, they usually don't know how to arrange a reconciliation. Open and honest communication, coupled with an attitude of win-win-win-win, is your key to avoiding an impass.
  4. Impass/Deadlock. Where communication no longer moves the agreement forward and conversation seems to go in circles. There is nothing wrong with deadlock—either party has the right to prefer no deal to one that falls short of their min-point. How do we break an impass? Change the negotiators, change the parameters, call a third party to mediate, change the shape of money (larger deposit, different terms, cash versus credit), or consider changing venues. These tactics can help create a climate in which new alternatives can be developed. There is always a way.
  5. Agree to Disagree. Both parties may agree to disagree rather than reaching an agreement that compromises both parties, leaving each resentful and disappointed. If your agreement is undermined you may lack the commitment necessary to carry it out. Once again, this could be a temporary situation. Negotiation might be better served two or three months down the road. This tactic can be effective in personal relationships as well. It can even work with your spouse!
  6. Confessions. Not only are confessions good for the soul, but they can be a good tactic for negotiators. Confessing— telling all you know, revealing your motives and needs—can be a good way to gain empathy. People tend to be more charitable to someone who tells all. You also demonstrate honesty and a sincere desire to do business. However, no need to share your personal net worth or your most recent sexual fantasy.

Principle #4: Negotiate Price, Don't Sell It

Is price the most important aspect of the sale? No. Never has been, never will be. Customers have never based their buying decisions solely on price and I doubt they ever will. However, salespeople convince themselves that price is the number one motivator to purchase. Studies show that salespeople bring up price before the customer does 60% of the time. Why? I'm not sure but I suppose salespeople feel obligated to bring it up, or perhaps they have been trained to do so. It could even be lack of confidence or corporate self-esteem.

Many salespeople violate the sales process by introducing price too soon. Ideally, price should not be discussed until after your initial confirmation. During the call you need to focus on selling value and benefits to the customer. Don't mention price unless the customer asks or you are negotiating. I realize this concept may seem somewhat manipulative and irresponsible, but it isn't. I have confirmed several deals without the customer or me mentioning price. I think it's part of the rapport and trust issue I spoke of earlier. If a customer trusts you and feels comfortable with you, price is not an important issue. There is an implied understanding that your price will be competitive, otherwise you wouldn't be in business.

By shifting the conversation to price prior to initial confirmation, the salesperson has invited the customer to openly challenge the price. Some salespeople are convinced the customer's mandate is to hammer the salesperson into submission, finally succumbing to a rock-bottom price. Classic tactic of a C account. How to negotiate against price and discount pressure is a common challenge among sales professionals. You've probably heard it before, "Your price is too high. You'll just have to do better," or "It's a competitive market. Your competitors can beat that price," or "You'll have to show more flexibility on your discounting," and so it goes. When salespeople concede too quickly in these situations they not only reduce profitability, but also devalue their customers' perceptions of the product or service. Don't respond by asking, "What's the price they're offering you?" or "What price do I have to beat?" This is a common mistake because it shifts the focus to pure price and discount levels. Experienced negotiators shift the focus to value comparisons versus price comparisons.

When dealing with the price issue, be guided by knowing your min-max points. If you have price or discount flexibility, do not give it all away at once. Instead, concede slowly and reluctantly. Also, consider trading price concessions for major commitments. It could sound like this: "If I give you X price, will you give me net 10-day terms (or COD terms)?" If the customer is insistent on a discounted price don't hesitate to ask for something from them that makes the deal a win-win-win-win.

Acknowledge the customer's curiosity about price, but don't get sucked into a price debate prior to initial confirmation. For example, when you ask for their business using the five magic words in, your customers may inquire about your price. Simply say, "Yes, I'm sure we both recognize that price is important, but at this point can we agree to do business together based on the benefits discussed, as long as I can give you a competitive price?" If the customer says yes to your initial confirmation, you now have a willing party with whom to negotiate. Consider the initial confirmation as a conditional sale; conditional upon working out terms and conditions supported by a competitive price. What salespeople need to realize is that if a fair price cannot be worked out then there is no deal. Final confirmation is conditional upon successful negotiation. However, don't negotiate all aspects of the deal and then focus separately on price. Make sure price or discount is part of the whole package, not a separate negotiation.

During negotiation be cognizant of your customer's behavioral style, and adapt. If you are selling to a Director and she wants to know the price prior to initial confirmation, I would be inclined to acknowledge the request and offer a price range. Don't be exact with your answer.

Principle #5: Negotiate the Issues, not the Personalities

Often, what causes you to become frustrated or angry in a negotiation is not the topic or issue, but your customer's personality traits. By putting emotional distance between yourself and the negotiation you gain a tremendous advantage. Negotiations often unleash emotions that short-circuit rational processes. We sometimes abandon our carefully designed strategy and resort to a flight or fight response. The key to effective, win-win negotiation is to react unemotionally.

From time to time you may find yourself dealing with an individual you do not particularly care for. Chances are you wouldn't invite him to go camping with you, but he may represent an A account and a sizeable business opportunity. Experienced negotiators understand that professionalism requires the ability to distance oneself from any emotional distractions. These may include biases, perceptions, values, fear of being exploited, egos, feelings, moods, stress, and so on. Parties can get too caught up in the emotions of negotiation. They become too close to the deal and overlook important facts that may help move the deal forward. In spite of all your efforts to build a personal relationship you may find yourself dealing with just a corporate relationship. You can both still benefit by simply doing business together and nothing else. Don't entangle relationship challenges within the negotiating process.

For most salespeople, the major barrier is simply the fear of negotiation. The very thought sends paralyzing shivers up their spines. The toughest hurdle is learning to be confident enough to stand up to the challenge. This means developing the ability to comfortably express a position without hurting anyone or being hurt. Many people find the straightforward, aggressive, business dialogue of negotiation intimidating. It's the same challenge with confirming: the fear of rejection or perhaps sounding too aggressive. Our natural human tendencies prevail—in our adolescent years we were taught that it was polite not to ask for things and never to be confrontational.

The best approach to dealing with the emotional aspect of negotiation is the pause button. Pushing the pause button means putting the negotiation on hold while you take a break to reevaluate the situation. This may be for a few minutes or an hour or after you have slept on it. Michael and Mini Donaldson offer this explanation in their book, Negotiation for Dummies:

Knowing when and how to push the pause button not only endows you with an aura of composure and confidence, but also gives you control over all the critical points of the negotiation.

They go on to say:

No single skill can be as helpful to you as the pause button in any situation laden with heavy emotional overtones. Almost by definition, you cannot fully prepare ahead of time for these situations. Your judicious use of the pause button can compensate. Pushing the pause button produces better results... or at least results that you feel better about.

The message is clear: don't be afraid to utilize your pause button. Use it to re-evaluate your position. Perhaps in the interest of flexibility it can become an opportunity to reconsider your must-have issues and your min-max points. Remember, with two willing parties, there is always a way.

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Five Principles of Creative Negotiation

Dealing with conflict and differences is rarely an easy task. Barriers to creative negotiation can be numerous and are often the saboteurs of a potential sale. Remember: your goal is to reach win-win-win-win settlements with qualified customers. To that end, I offer these five principles of creative sales negotiation:

Principle #1: Attitude First

Are you a good negotiator? Your answer reflects your level of confidence in your negotiation skills. Creating a positive mindset involves basic attitudinal characteristics, which become the building blocks for successful negotiation. Attitudes and skills must work in harmony. Attitudinal characteristics of negotiation include self-awareness, self-belief, and an openness to other viewpoints. Salespeople frequently overlook the importance of preparing themselves mentally. Attitude—how we deal with others when negotiating—drives the relationship. Develop a win-win-win-win attitude toward negotiation, and don't be satisfied until all parties are pleased with the solution.

Principle #2: Planning and Preparation

For many of us, planning is boring and tedious, easily put off in favor of leaping into action quickly. However, devoting insufficient time to planning frequently results in failure to negotiate a mutually beneficial agreement, and raises feelings of hostility and frustration.

The cornerstone to effective, creative negotiation is a carefully designed blueprint outlining specifically desired results for both you and your customer. The first step is to clearly articulate your position—know what your objectives are. Know the issues that are not negotiable and the issues that are negotiable. I refer to them as your "must-have" and "nice-to-have" issues. Must-have issues are predetermined prior to negotiation and are essential to a satisfactory agreement. They are simply not negotiable. Your nice-to-have issues are negotiable. Although they would be nice to have, they are not essential to the agreement. They are issues you are prepared to concede or use as trade-offs in the interest of concluding the agreement or maintaining the relationship.

Your window of flexibility is guided by your predetermined min-max points—min being your lowest acceptable point and max being your best, most ideal position. So, in the interests of creative negotiation, each of your must-have issues should be accompanied by a window of flexibility—your min-max points. Let's look at the example below.






As a sales entrepreneur, your must-have issue is making a profit. To do this, you are guided by the flexibility of your predetermined min-max points. As in Figure 10.1, the ideal situation is a max-point of $150 whereas your min-point is $100. Any price lower than your min-point is unacceptable—you may have to entertain other avenues, such as concessions or tradeoffs, to secure the deal. The wider the spread between your min-max points, the more flexibility you have to negotiate. Otherwise, you may become too rigid and inflexible, deadlocking the negotiation. In terms of your nice-to-have issues, I suggest there are no min-max points. These issues are subject to negotiation and may be used as concessions to advance the deal. The key to creative negotiation is knowing your parameters prior to negotiation. Whenever possible, plan your strategy beforehand. It's tough to negotiate creatively if you don't know the parameters of your destination. In creative negotiation, those who ask for more typically get more ... and those with low targets typically underachieve.

Also, consider whether negotiation is appropriate at all. It may be a C account or a C opportunity. In some sales situations negotiation can take place spontaneously, so be aware of the status of the opportunity: A, B, or C. You may have to respond on the fly so be sure to have the complete account file with you at the call for quick reference to previous discussions.

The second step in negotiation planning is to define the issues worthy of negotiation. Refer to all your notes and assemble all the issues, yours and your customer's, into a comprehensive list. Some issues may have been resolved prior to the negotiation, which is fine, but be sure to identify any outstanding issues. It can be frustrating and costly—in terms of time and success—if the customer calls you just prior to inking the deal with an unresolved issue. After the issues are assembled, the next step is to prioritize them. By sharing the list with your customer, you continue to build trust and confidence as you work through it together. Extract relevant information from your notes to enhance your position. A comment in your notes from six months ago may be a valuable piece of information. Salespeople often compensate for inadequate planning by conceding more than necessary. This shortcut can be very costly.

Sales entrepreneurs cannot afford to be quick and clever during the give and take of negotiation. Planning increases your negotiation success substantially and helps you achieve solutions that you never thought possible. Invest the time and energy (during janitorial hours) to prepare a strategy in line with your customer's behavioral style. Your strategy will help you relax, face fewer unknowns, and reduce stress.

Principle #3: Know the Lingo

The negotiation arena has a language of its own. I have seen many negotiation sessions fail simply due to not understanding the language of negotiation. My objective here is not to provide you with an in-depth study of all the nuances of negotiation but to create a mindset, an awareness, and an overview of the logistics of creative sales negotiation. I suggest you augment your negotiation skills and confidence by considering other publications on the subject. Consider this chapter as your springboard to further study.

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When Do We Negotiate?

Almost anything can be negotiated with the application of sound principles. The biggest misunderstanding is not so much how to negotiate, but when. Salespeople eager to do the deal often initiate premature negotiation, trying to negotiate before the time is right.

So, when is the best time to negotiate? In the majority of sales situations, salespeople attempt to enter into negotiation before the customer has agreed to do business. There is a better, more productive approach.

Sales professionals engage in negotiation when a customer has expressed an interest to do business. We negotiate after the confirmation step, after the customer has agreed to do business with you.

Upon initial reflection this concept may seem bizarre and contrary to traditional sales techniques, but that's only because you've done it that way for years. Although it may have worked for you in the past, it's not a very smooth or fluid approach.

Confirmation has two aspects: initial confirmation, where the customer is in agreement and willingly moves into the negotiation phase; and final confirmation, where the customer has accepted all the terms and conditions of your solution, including price. Initial confirmation may sound like this: "If we can work out a competitive price, may I have your business?" If the customer is in agreement, you now have earned the right to negotiate. It's much easier to negotiate terms, conditions, and price once you have a willing party. Your next step is final confirmation: "Now that we have agreed on a competitive price may I have your business?" It doesn't need to get any more complicated than that.

In our two-day sales negotiation seminar, salespeople are often shocked to learn that price should not be part of the sale. It's a separate discussion that takes place as part of negotiating final confirmation. It's no different than buying a house. You decide on location, size, number of bedrooms, and other features. After you pick a home you make an offer, which means you are now negotiating. The offer goes back and forth as both parties negotiate all the details, including price. In most cases the negotiating goes smoothly because there are two willing parties, a seller and a buyer. Use the same advantage in sales, by using your Sequential Model to create a willing buyer.

Tim Commandment #7
Negotiate after initial confirmation.

Ask: Have I earned the right to negotiate?

Now it's in each party's best interests to negotiate a win-win-win-win solution. The four winners are your customer and his or her company, and you and your company. With two willing parties there is always a way, in spite of initial barriers and disagreements. Details can be worked out when both parties are motivated to do so. If not, details can easily undermine a possible solution. It's not a good deal if one of the four wins is missing or compromised. The idea is to reach mutually beneficial agreements that resolve inconveniences or dissatisfaction and solidify long-term relationships.

Trust plays a major role in successful negotiation. Although there is no guarantee that trust will lead to collaboration, mistrust will inhibit collaboration. When people trust one another, they are more likely to communicate openly and honestly. In contrast, if people do not trust you they are more likely to withdraw and be less cooperative. Acting in a trusting manner throughout the relationship serves as an invitation to others to be trustworthy, especially if your trusting manner is consistent. Each negotiator must believe that both parties choose to behave in a cooperative manner. Trust is not a one-time, singular event. It is established over time by demonstrating professionalism, honesty, integrity, consistency, and cooperation and by following through on promises and commitments. Cooperative behavior is a signal of honesty, openness, and a shared commitment to a joint solution. Take advantage of the trust engineered throughout the first seven steps of the model. Remember, people judge us by our actions, not by our intentions.

Approaches to negotiation tend to reflect personal experiences, biases, and perceptions of the individuals involved. They are often reflected in one of two ways: flight or fight. People who take the flight approach are uncomfortable with conflict and try to avoid possible rejection, frustration, and anger associated with negotiation. They become masters at avoidance and readily prefer to take flight rather than experience any degree of conflict. Relaters tend to take the flight approach.

The fight approach is supported by a mindset of, "Only the strong survive," and "Do unto others before they do unto you." Directors tend to favor this approach. It's a classic win-lose scenario. Bargaining and compromise are two components of fight. Bargaining is where you have a predetermined position and you haggle back and forth, working hard, grinding your opponent down. You pursue this approach until you are victorious. Compromise occurs when both sides give in and split the difference, settling for half a loaf. Compromise may satisfy both parties, but only to a limited extent. Of course, half a loaf in a highly competitive arena may be viewed as better than none but if it becomes normal practice the results may be less than desirable for both sides.

A more effective approach, one that fosters long-term relationships, is creative negotiation. Creative negotiation is defined as: "Both parties seek to resolve their differences by working synergistically to create a higher quality, value-added solution. Both parties acknowledge the need to reach agreement, working amicably and creatively toward a solution that satisfies each."

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Creative Negotiation: There is Always a Way

Children are accomplished negotiators. If they need extra allowance, a later bedtime, a sleepover, they usually get it. Children can be relentless in their pursuit of what they want. Familiarity gives them the advantage of knowing what parental hot-buttons to push. They are the best examples of ideal negotiators. Then they grow up and abandon the natural negotiating talents they learned instinctively.

Like selling, negotiation is something we use in every facet of our lives. I am often entertained just watching my three teenagers negotiate the use of one car. Amazingly, it usually works out. I think most of us are better negotiators than we give ourselves credit for. Negotiation is one of those transparent, interpersonal skills we use unconsciously. Negotiation is really a relationship skill used by people to deal with their conflicts and differences. Throughout this chapter, my goal is to leverage existing negotiation skills to build confidence and an awareness of long-forgotten negotiation principles and tactics.

Unfortunately, the very thought of negotiation conveys negative connotations, striking fear in the souls of most salespeople. Often the outcome of negotiation leaves people feeling dissatisfied, worn out, or alienated. A win-lose mindset has prevailed for decades. The negotiator (customer or salesperson) attempts to win important concessions and thus triumph over the opponent. It resembles the outcome of most sports: winner-loser. Not all successful salespeople are good negotiators. Most salespeople are not adequately trained in the art of negotiation and don't understand its many nuances. The necessary traits for successful negotiation vary somewhat, but some characteristics are universal, including patience, persistence, stamina, and confidence. Each negotiation is situational, with both sides discussing the points over which disagreement exists. In reality, no single negotiation session covers exactly the same issues or demands.

The modul of Creative Negotiation:
When Do We Negotiate?
Five Principles of Creative Negotiation
Language of Negotiation
Low of 10 Options

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Be #2

When it comes time to confirm, you will certainly encounter customers who say no, and mean no. Don't despair. An excellent alternative plan is to have your customers place a small order with you. Tell them you are not expecting them to make a wholesale change in suppliers, but ask them to place a small order to test you out. The proof is in the pudding. It's okay to be #2, just ask the people at AVIS Rent-a-Car. If you are successful at getting and delivering a few small orders, it won't be long before you build up to getting the lion's share of their business. Chances are your unsuspecting competitor won't know what happened until it's too late. I have personally converted several accounts from a no to a know to a yes by using this strategy. Customers can be creatures of habit and usually go with what's been tested and proven. Your #2 strategy provides an opportunity to showcase your stuff while building confidence and trust in you. Remember, the fifth pillar of success is Patient yet Persistent (Chapter 2). Quiet persistence, coupled with patience, ultimately pay off handsomely with the reward of becoming their #1 supplier.

Always act like a professional. Don't take the customer's rejection personally. Recognize it as a business decision based on circumstances you may be unaware of. Be grateful for the opportunity to meet and discuss the possibility of doing business. The professional handling of a no sale situation actually helps build a sound relationship by developing a spirit of professionalism and persistence. The customer will be much more receptive to a #2 strategy if you handle the no sale situation professionally. Remember, if you can't make a sale, make a friend.

One of the greatest pleasures of selling is the adrenaline rush and elation when the customer says, "Yes, let's do business." This is the moment of yes. There have been many private dances in customer's parking lots, clenched fists pumping through the air accompanied by triumphant shouts of, "Yesss!" and smiles that make dentists proud. Confirming the sale is the pinnacle of achievement—all your efforts have paid a handsome return. Unquestionably, the greatest thrill for a sales entrepreneur is the moment of yes when the customer agrees to buy from you in the interest of a honest, mutually beneficial solution.

Become comfortable with using the five magic words and make them part of your professional equity. Confirming with these five words communicates confidence and offers a refreshing change for the customer. Another tremendous advantage is that this approach is universal—the same five words can be used regardless of what you are selling. Big-ticket items, long sales cycles, short sales cycles, a product or service, it doesn't matter—the five words must be applied to every possible sales scenario. Sales entrepreneurs understand that the power of asking is what ultimately separates a professional salesperson from a professional conversationalist.


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Doubling Your Close Ratio

Recall that approximately 80% of purchases occur after the order has been requested five times and yet only 10% of salespeople ask five times before quitting. Likewise, 40% of salespeople ask only once, then quit. These 40% quit for a variety of reasons: impatience, the craving for instant gratification, poor follow-up, no time-management system, or just simple laziness. There is no doubt that these statistics are shocking, but customers are the victims of these lackluster performances on a daily basis.

Imagine having to confirm five times before you get a yes. That means, on average, there are four knows before a yes. That's a lot of work! Some authors suggest selling is a numbers game: talk to ten people, get five presentations, close two deals. That sounds like a lot of work—not selling very smart. It bears out the fact that the average close ratio is only 20%. That means, on average, salespeople close only two out of ten potential opportunities. Funny, I always thought selling was about people, not a game with winners, losers, and average, mediocre performances. Don't fall victim to the numbers game, condemning your career to a life of mediocrity. Don't measure your success against the masses. By comparing yourself against the averages, you only fuel a false sense of productivity. I say set your own standards. Don't take pride in being average—it's too easy and not very satisfying.

Remember that confirming is not an event but a process that begins within minutes of meeting the customer. Customers are very quick to pass judgment, wasting no time deciding if you are likable and trustworthy. The first step to doubling your close ratio is to ensure the first six steps of your sequential model have been completed to the customer's satisfaction.

Hence, if close ratios are a meager 20% that means the customers' ratio is 80%. Ouch! Customers are closing more often than we are. They sell us on the concept of not doing business with them. They offer a multitude of excuses, objections, and justifications all in the interest of selling us their "no." The problem is we are too quick to accept their rejection and with a bruised ego return to the adult day-care center to lick our wounds and seek support. Sound familiar?

So, what is a good close ratio? I would suggest that as a sales entrepreneur your target should be no less than 40–50%. That means if you approach ten potential customers, ones with a need and a bag of money, you should confirm at least four to five. Sound daunting? It isn't. Some top-notch sales entrepreneurs are confirming up to 75% of potential customers.

Start by evaluating your current ratio. Track it for a month or two and reality will quickly reveal itself. It may not be as high as you think it is. If yours is higher than 20%, congratulations, you are in the minority. But I will remind you, your objective is 40–50%. Proper execution of your Sequential Model will certainly contribute to doubling your current close ratio. It simply means building rapport and trust as you navigate through the first six steps of your model coupled with the confidence to ask for their business. Customers expect to be asked; don't disappoint them. They get irritated by reps who fail to complete the sales call with no direct close. You represent a solution to their needs, so the only outstanding issue is to ask them. If you don't someone else will—and be rewarded with a bag of money. Hence, taking your close ratio to 40% is not an impossible, arduous objective.

However, I caution you, don't strive to achieve a 100% confirmation ratio. Not only will it never happen, you don't want 100%. You couldn't handle it. You're already time-starved with what you have. Free up time by firing C accounts (and C activities) and increase productivity by doubling your confirmation ratio on A and B opportunities. If a 100% confirmation ratio is your goal, then work at McDonalds or Burger King. Everyone who walks in buys something. When was the last time you heard this conversation in McDonald's:

"May I help you?"

"Oh, no thanks, just looking."

My point is this: Achieving a confirmation ratio of 50% is hard work, and yet it can be very rewarding. Success is hard work. A job that has a 100% confirmation ratio generally pays minimum wage.

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Nine Tips for Confirming the Sale

  1. Ask a confirming question only after you have effectively bridged a minimum of two appropriate features to benefits.
  2. Help people make buying decisions by pointing out how your value-added solution will benefit their business.
  3. Highlight how the benefits outweigh the costs; create value.
  4. Successful confirmation isn't an isolated tactic, it's creating value throughout the Sequential Model.
  5. If you can't confirm, you didn't successfully complete a prior step—planning, discovery, or presenting a creative, value-added solution.
  6. Before asking for a decision, expect customers to say yes—mentally picture them saying it.
  7. When you ask people for a buying decision, be quiet until they respond.
  8. A confirming question asks for a decision. A trial close such as, "What do you think of my presentation so far?" calls for an opinion.
  9. If you can't make a sale, make a friend.

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When to Confirm

When does one confirm the sale? When have you earned the right to ask this most feared and sacred question? The answer remains elusive, subject to broad interpretation, often founded on your interpretation of perceived buying signals. The majority of sales literature suggests confirming, "When the prospect is ready and communicates a buying signal," or, "When the buyer appears ready." I have always marvelled at the ambiguity in terms of when to confirm. Several authors suggest that you rely on little more than your own perception of body language and discrete buying signals to interpret when they're ready to buy. Unless body language or buying signals are very obvious, you run the risk of misinterpreting the customer's nonverbal communication. I agree that body language is a powerful component of the communication model, but not as the sole method of interpreting when to close. Everyone is different, just as behavioral flexibility suggests, each individual has a unique body-language style (Chapter 6). Socializers adapt their body language differently from Directors but they could be thinking the same thing. I don't think that we can apply a universal set of standards to effectively and accurately interpret body language.

When discussing body language at my seminars, I often notice a participant leaning back in his or her chair with arms folded. I ask the participant not to move and point out their posture to the class. The class usually agrees that the school of body language would have us interpret that posture as detached, uninterested, and guarded. I then validate my theory by asking the participant with folded arms, "Are you comfortable?" The answer, not surprisingly, is usually, "Yes." My suggestion is not to concern yourself with body language unless it's obvious or unless there is a drastic change during the sales call. Let your customer be comfortable without interpreting posture as a negative buying signal. The only real body language that I respond to is if my customer gets up and leaves the office. Then I clue in that perhaps the call isn't going as well as I'd hoped.

So, when do you confirm the sale? Confirm the sale when you have successfully bridged a minimum of two features to benefits. You have now earned the right to ask. One bridged benefit is usually not enough to convince them to buy, which is why I suggest a minimum of two. If the customer says yes, that's great. Go to Step #8. If they say know, then go back to feature fishing and continue to bridge. As we can appreciate, each customer is different. Some only require two benefits to confirm, others may require several. Once again, customers may simply need to know more before they say yes.

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Three Ingredients of a Yes

Just as a good fire needs three ingredients to burn, so does a successful confirmation. Take away any one of the three ingredients and you have no fire, no sale. The three ingredients of a Yes are: rapport, trust, and the power of asking. Just as with the five rights of passage in our definition of selling, you can't take away or fail to establish any one of the three. Unfortunately, many salespeople create rapport and trust comfortably, but fail to ask a direct, honest, confirming question. Sometimes they do ask, but have failed to first create rapport or trust. Would a customer give you a bag of money if he trusted you but you failed to ask? Not likely. Would he say yes if he didn't like you or trust you? Not likely. It's all part of engineering commitment. You start confirming the sale the second you come in contact, by telephone or otherwise, with your potential customer.

I find it amusing to hear the different excuses as to why a customer didn't buy. Sales representatives are the best "fire-dancers" on the planet. Each probably has 50 excuses, all conveniently memorized, and of course none blame themselves. During my years as a sales manager, I could have written a book on. "The reasons why I didn't get the sale." No doubt it would have challenged David Chilton's book, The Wealthy Barber, as an international all-time best seller. I offer only one reason why a salesperson didn't get the sale and ended up in second place. My reason doesn't make me popular but it's inarguable: "You didn't get the business because you were outsold." Pure and simple. Strip away all the excuses and that's what's left. The customer had a need and a bag of money and decided to give it to your competitor. Why? Your competitor probably offered a better, value-added solution having asked, better, smarter questions.


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Is It No, or Is It Know?

Time for a spelling lesson. It's important to understand the difference between no and know. Sales representatives spell no as no, taking the meaning literally as more rejection, another opportunity lost. (But of course you can't lose something you never had.) Conversely, sales entrepreneurs spell no as know: the customer simply needs to know more information before making a positive buying decision. It's not interpreted as rejection but more as an invitation to explain the possible benefits of doing business. By saying know, the customer has not yet seen the value in your offering and needs to know more about your tailored solution. This means going back to feature fishing and scrolling your corporate menu for appropriate features (hot-buttons), then bridging to create a benefit package worthy of consideration. That's value. Upon hearing a know, you might consider asking the customer: "What is the single barrier preventing us from moving forward?" A candid response may spotlight a potential objection that when managed effectively produces a yes. Until the customer sees value, you'll continue to hear knows.

Remember, earlier in the book I defined selling as the process of disruption. Making a change in suppliers or adding a new supplier to the list is scary at the best of times. Customers experience fear and anxiety just as we do. Your benefit package has to be convincing enough to disrupt customers into change. Customers will continue to say know if there is a bigger yes offered by the competition.

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Five Magic Words

Okay then, how do I confirm the sale? The Sequential Model offers a refreshingly simple approach to confirming. In fact, the apparent simplicity of it usually invites suspicion. "That's it, it's that simple?" Let me give you the five most powerful words you'll ever say when working through your Sequential Model. Look your customer square in the eyes, and with all the confidence you can muster say these five magic words .....

"May I have your business?"

—and don't say another thing until the customer has responded.

That's it! Five words. So simple that I dedicated an entire page to them. These words reflect clarity, sincerity, innocence, and professionalism. Go ahead, put the book down and say them aloud. Say them again. These five words are applicable to all four behavioral styles. Any one of the four styles will appreciate the intent and clarity of your question.

As you can clearly see, your Sequential Model need not rely on clever closing gimmicks to trick people into buying something they don't want. The beauty of this approach is that you know what you are saying, and the customer knows what you are asking. Forget about memorizing 50 different power closes—keep it simple.

What often sabotages this clean, refreshing approach is the confusion generated by the numerous books available on closing skills. Many of them, by title alone, suggest the need to build an inventory of closing techniques. Some books even suggest "The more closes you know, the better you're prepared to face the moment of truth." Nonsense. Consider this passage taken from Dartnell's publication, Close It Right, Right Now!:


Contrary to the popular belief that closing is an "end-game," or a final manipulation that sparks agreement, closing is a constant and continuing activity. I warm to the salesperson who shows interest in me. That helps me decide in his or her favor. I am attracted by a sales presentation that gives me clear information. That helps me favor that product. I appreciate learning about how the product fits my needs and benefits me. That helps me exclude other products I may have considered.

In the absence of all those good things, I am not likely to buy, no matter how clever the salesperson is in trying to button up the sale. In fact, I am driven from closing when I perceive too much cleverness in the procedure.

I have seen numerous books outlining countless closing techniques, all advocating the need to have a ready supply of closes to apply when needed, and all suggesting that an inventory of closes is directly related to your success. One such publication goes so far as to offer: "Twenty-Nine Special Closings That Rock Holdouts and Crack Hardcases." Another publication, The Sales Closing Book, offers "more than 270 powerful sales closes that can skyrocket your sales and income." The ultimate prize for trickery goes to a publication that offers this gem: "35 Tactics for Psychological Manipulation: The Master Closer's Mind Game List." Some typical closes include:

The Whispering Close
The Blitz
The Airplane Close

The Half-Nelson
Lost Sale Close
Extra Incentive Close

Ego/Profit Close
P.O.W. Story
Conditional Close

Puppy Dog Demo
The Silent Close
Callback Close

The Columbo Close
Return Serve Close
The Negative Close

Door Knob Close
The Grind
Emotional Close

Mutt and Jeff
Last Resort Close
Assumption Close

Imagine the mental gymnastics required to sort through all those memorized "closes" to decide which one to use. Unbelievable! I think the only thing that will skyrocket will be your level of stress and anxiety.

Once again, the entrepreneurial sales call should be a dialogue, a conversation between two human beings. Forget about memorized closings, putting cute names on closing techniques, or rehearsed scripts. These memorized closes are often manipulative, guerrilla approaches that compensate for not being good.

Customers like to be asked and they respect the salesperson who asks for their business in an honest, confident, nonmanipulative manner. However, research suggests that in approximately 70% of sales calls, there is never a direct request for the business. It may seem like an unbelievable statistic given that confirming is the final effort of a gold-medal performance (second place is the first loser), but it's true. Many salespeople attempt to confirm the sale but end up skirting the issue with a weak, unconvincing request to do business. A common attempt at confirming sounds like this:

S: Is there anything else I can show you or answer for you today?

C: No, thank you. You've answered all my questions and I have all the information I need.

S: Okay then. Well, let me leave you with our most recent brochure and a copy of my presentation. Mr. Smith, let me ask you, are you available next week?

C: Yes, I expect to be around.

S: Great. Why don't I give you a call early next week and we can discuss my proposal further and see how you feel about it. Is that okay?

C: Sure, that's fine.

S: Great. Thanks for your time.

A classic unsuccessful close. The salesperson has avoided asking a direct question to buy and is leaving with nothing more than hope and a sense of accomplishment. Of course, in the meantime, the salesperson is totally vulnerable to the prey of the competition. As coincidence would have it, the competition shows up the very next day offering the customer the same solution, but the difference is that she exercised the power of asking. She wins the gold, the salesperson wins nothing more than experience. I implore you to safeguard yourself against the competition and reevaluate your confirming tactics. No customer, at least that I'm aware of, will ever reward you for just showing up and making a good sales pitch. Ask yourself: Is my confirmation a direct invitation to purchase? Is it clean, honest, direct, and nonmanipulative? Test it out on fellow sales entrepreneurs, your sales manager, or your mentor.

Tim Commandment #6
Confirm the sale with a direct, simple question.

Ask: Did I ask for their business?

Now, before you unceremoniously discount my confirming theory, appreciate that I'm only suggesting this approach (the five words) in the interest of simplicity, honesty, and the power of asking. I recognize that there are other tactics to confirming. In fact, I endorse more than one approach. For example, simply ask your customer, "Since we both appear to be in agreement, what's our next step?" or alternatively ask, "Where do we go from here?" You can preface this confirmation question with a summary statement outlining the accepted benefits.

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Confirming the Sale: Closing

People buy from people. Better yet, people love to buy. The buying experience can be very rewarding and can satisfy many of the motives to buy: ego, prestige, status, greed, joy of spending money, peace of mind, and so on. The ideal sales process is a mutual journey of honesty, trust, and respect as you and your customer work in harmony through the Sequential Model. When the journey is mutual, confirming the sale is not a matter of if, but when.

Traditionally, this step is referred to as "closing the sale." However, the word "closing" has negative connotations that conjure up images of unscrupulous sales representatives using manipulative, guerrilla tactics designed to coerce unsuspecting customers into buying. Traditional closing techniques typically violate the sales relationship. Customers today are tired and irritated by these offensive, manipulative, unethical arm-twisting tactics.

Make buying easy for your customer by confirming the sale using a nonmanipulative, straightforward approach and presenting a practical, value-added solution. Confirming is the pinnacle of selling achievement. It is when the customer awards a gold medal to the salesperson who delivered a win-win, value-added performance. However, confirming does not happen in isolation from the total sales process. You need to be engineering commitment throughout the entire sales call because anything you do or say, at any step, will either erode or enhance the sale. Chronologically, the confirmation comes as Step #7 of the Sequential Model, but be cognizant that your success at this point is based on a series of buy-ins or confirmations throughout the journey. Confirmation simply means to create a shared sense of enthusiasm to do business then exercise the power of asking. The ideal situation is a sales entrepreneur who can confidently ask for the business and at the same time be diligent in building a relationship by asking smart questions. Don't underestimate the power of asking.

"Man who wait for roast duck to fly into mouth, wait very, very long time." (Chinese Proverb)

Why is it that so many salespeople become paralyzed with fear at the thought of closing? Even when they have successfully navigated through the previous six steps they still fail to ask for a buying decision. The reasons are as diverse as customers themselves. The most common one is fear. Fear of rejection, fear of sounding silly, fear of failure, fear of upsetting the customer, the feeling of not being good enough or worthy enough to ask. All valid reasons, but unfortunately this becomes a negative habit pattern that seriously compromises our success at confirming. In the interest of harmony and not offending a potential customer, we unknowingly sacrifice our own agendas by failing to ask.

Psychologists agree that the fear of asking is learned through negative conditioning experienced as early as childhood. Our parents, teachers, siblings, and even friends have all contributed to nurturing this debilitating virus. No one is born with it. Your fears are all learned and reinforced through repetition by those around you, even yourself. As one lady said when finally asked out by a fellow she admired, "The trouble with you men is that you often reject yourselves before you give us women a chance to." She was elated when he finally asked her out, and without hesitation accepted his invitation. The same analogy applies to salespeople. We often reject or doubt our own proposals or presentations long before we give the customer a chance to. However, because it is a learned condition, it can be unlearned as well, and sometimes very quickly. I suggest there is a direct relationship between low corporate self-esteem and negative self-talk, and your confidence to ask for business. Confirming demands an attitude of confidence, expecting the customer to say yes. Anything less puts you in entrepreneurial quicksand. Just as the Chinese proverb suggests, don't expect rewards such as roast duck or a confirmed sale unless you ASK.

The modul of Closing:
Five Magic Words
Is It No, or Is It Know?
Three Ingredients of a Yes
When to Confirm
Nine Tips for Confirming the Sale
Doubling Your Close Ratio
Be #2



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Bring It Forward

Another common situation involves the stall objection or the timing objection. A customer may say: "Sounds good but we can't look at it until the next quarter or our next fiscal year. Call me in six months." The timing may not be good or they need to stall until a new budget becomes available. My strategy in these situations is to bring it forward—bring the situation forward as if the customer were making a decision today. Simply invite the customer to enter into the hypothetical arena and ask, "Hypothetically, if you were to consider making a decision today, what would you be looking for? What's important to you?" Maximize this opportunity with the customer, do a mini-discovery to learn some initial criteria for when it comes time to make a decision. You then provide a mini-presentation, giving your customer some insight into what your solution can offer. If your customer is receptive and sees value, ask him or her a hypothetical close, "If you were to make a decision today, would you buy from me?" Remember, reiterate to the customer that this is all hypothetical so by no means are they making a commitment. By going through this bring it forward strategy, you and your customer know there is valid reason to take a serious look at you come decision time.

This strategy far outweighs the alternative, which is to say to your customer: "Okay fine, I understand you won't be looking at this for six months. I'll call you then." Don't leave yourself vulnerable to the competition. Secure an initial commitment by using the bring it forward strategy and you may pique the customer's interest enough that he looks forward to having a serious conversation with you at the appropriate time. Heck, he may even say to your competitors, "Thanks for calling but we're already looking at somebody."

Your overall objective is to deliver a creative, value-added solution that leaves no doubt in the customer's mind that you're the best solution. Make a vivid impression with an innovative, convincing presentation. Cookie-cutter, boring presentations do little to advance the sale—customers buy differences, not similarities.

Don't overlook the you solution. Your competitor may offer similar products or services with competitive pricing, but they can't duplicate you. Next time you're asked the question, "Why should I buy from you?" look the customer square in the eyes and say, "Because I'm your salesperson." Don't depend on a product solution or a price solution to differentiate yourself. Your greatest asset is yourself.


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The Price Objection

When was the last time you made a purchase solely based on price? You haven't and I doubt you ever will. Your customers don't either. Yes, I certainly agree that price is very important, but it's usually six or seven down the list of importance. Variables within the purchasing decision that may precede price include size, color, delivery, warranties, availability, after-sales service, quantities, terms and conditions, and so on.

Price objections are the easiest and most common—they have become a very natural and predictable part of the call. Sales entrepreneurs expect them. It's as if customers have been trained or conditioned to raise the price objection during every sales call. Part of the problem is that the retail community bombards us with advertisements and promotions focusing on price. We've all heard "We won't be undersold," or "Our price is the lowest, it's the law," or "If you find it cheaper we will pay you twice the difference." Every time you pick up the newspaper, read flyers, see TV commercials, listen to the radio, or stroll through your local mall, it's PRICE PRICE PRICE. No wonder when we arrive at our customers' offices they scream, "WHAT'S YOUR BEST PRICE?" Simply respond by politely asking your customer to refrain from watching TV commercials, reading newspapers, or listening to the radio ever again. It seems to be more of a conditioned, automatic response than a legitimate concern.

"You get what you pay for." This cliché has been around for decades but the message seems to be overlooked by some customers. There will always be customers who have convinced themselves that a low price is their number one priority. However, my sense is that more and more customers are appreciating that price is only one small component of the sale. To support my point, I share with you a comment from economist John Ruskin.

It's unwise to pay too much ... but it's worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money . . . that is all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot—it can't be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well to add something for the risk you run. And if you do that, you will have enough to pay for something better. (John Ruskin 1819–1900)

What impresses me is this was written before 1900. The rationale underlying his theory hasn't changed in 100 years.

Zig Ziglar offers this explanation in support of a competitive price: "Our company made the decision to explain a higher price once rather than justify poor service and quality several times." Great line. I tell my students, "You only cry once when you pay a higher price."

What is a competitive price? Research tells us that customers will pay 8% to 12% more for perceived value. Customers will put their money where their mouth is if you deliver a value-added solution—but anything over 12% and the customer may resist. For example, if your competition is priced at $1,000 you can charge $1,120 and still be considered competitively priced ($1,000 + 12%). Anything above the 12% may be too aggressive. Hence, your objective is not to match your competition at the $1,000 price but rather to price it higher due to the value you created. As a consumer, I'm sure that on more than one occasion you paid a higher price because you appreciated the service and attention you received. Your customers are no different.

The best advice I can offer is that price should not be discussed during the Discovery or Confirming steps of your Sequential Model. Price is an issue you negotiate. Don't sell it. What I mean by "selling it" is that salespeople often try to confirm the sale by focusing the conversation on a discounted price. Sell a value-added solution during the call, not a price solution. Don't make price the focal point of the call.

Understand the difference between price objection and price resistance. Price objection is a matter of clear opposition to your price—I can't pay it, or I won't pay it because we have limited funds, and so on. Price resistance suggests your customers have the capacity to withstand or tolerate your price. They may not like it initially, but they will pay it. Salespeople often respond to price resistance by immediately offering to lower it. Wrong thing to do. Try to focus on building value instead of reducing the price. Rarely is the sale based solely on price, so don't become an order-taker, getting the sale on little more than your good looks and a cheap price. Customers buy based on their perceptions of the overall value you present. So, how do you create a high perceived value? I think William Brooks answers that question succinctly in his book, Niche Selling. He offers the following formula where V is value, PB is perceived benefits, and PP is perceived price:

V = PB/PB

This formula clearly shows that the higher the PB, the higher the value: V increases as PB increases and PP decreases. For example; if we have a PP weighting of 10 and a PB weighting of only 5, then V=0.5. However, if we inverse the numbers where PB=10 and PP=5, our V=2. The first example where V=0.5 tells us that the focus was on price (PP=10). Our second example, where V=2, the focus was on selling benefits, thus V was four times greater than in the first example.

Next time your customer says, "Yes, but what's your best price?" this is what he really means; "You did a good job here today Bernie. That was the best feature dump I've seen this week. However, you have failed to sell me anything of value so I have no option but to create value myself. The only way I can do that is by hammering you on price. If I get you down low enough, then maybe I'll see some value and buy from you." When you fail to create value, your customer tries to do it by way of a low-low price. Not a good way to sell. As one sales manager said, "The day we are the cheapest price is the day we sell this stuff by direct mail." Let's stop this order-taking stuff and focus on selling true value to our customers.

Consider this: When you pitch features, telling versus selling, the customer sets the price. When you present benefits, a value-added solution, you set the price. It's your choice.

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Five-Step Strategy

Let's look at an appropriate response to managing objections, guided by the five-step strategy.

  1. Acknowledge and validate your customers' objections. Don't stick your head in the sand and hope they go away or the customer forgets about them. Even postponement of the objection may result in a negative perception or reaction from your customer. Some sales seminars have suggested that it is best to ignore the objection, that it's only important if the customer brings it up more than once. Wrong. The next time they think of it may be after you've left and your competitor is in the customer's office, more than happy to address the very objection you ignored. Show respect and empathy by immediately acknowledging the concern. Simply say, "Yes, I can understand your concern," or, "Other customers initially felt the same way," or, "That's a fairly common concern in our business. I will be happy to address it." Remember, always express empathy and sincerity, and never get defensive. Watch your nonverbal responses as well. Turn the objections into positives by regarding them as gateways into your customer's thought process. Objections are really just your customer voicing concerns and explaining primary expectations and needs. Be sure to hear between the lines. Take the time to think about what is being said and the way it is being said. Sales representatives too often leap on an objection before the customer has had a chance to finish talking. The customer barely gets ten words out and the sales representative is already hammering away at a defensive response: "I have to show he's mistaken, how could he be so misinformed?" It's a panicky reaction that often sabotages the sale and the relationship. The best defense is a good, professional offense.
  2. Clarify your customer's specific objection. Paraphrase with questions that help you understand the objection. Though some customers are adept at voicing needs as needs, others voice their needs as objections. All objections can be used to your advantage, once you realize that you are gaining valuable information. Identify their objection as either factual, based on logic, or emotional, based on personal perception and biases. Objections are usually motivated by one or the other. Factual objections are much easier to deal with because incorrect information or incorrect perceptions can be corrected. Facts are objective, universal, and inarguable. Emotional objections, however, are extremely difficult to deal with. They are subjective and often merely an excuse or smoke screen. They usually don't follow sound reasoning and may take patience and persistence to overcome. They sometimes conceal a hidden concern that you may never be privy to. Once again, effective use of conversational probes will eventually get you to the root cause of the objection. As you ask questions, stay relaxed, listen carefully (take notes) and appreciate that you're about to learn something important. As a last resort, the eventual resolution may have to be to flag it as a C account and move on.
  3. Respond to the objection immediately and solve the problem. It represents the customer's predominant thought at the moment, so make it yours. Remember, your customer is probably expressing legitimate corporate curiosity, not launching a personal attack on you. Satisfying the customer's objection or concern may be as simple as mentally scrolling down your menu of features and presenting the one that will eliminate the objection. The "feel-felt-found" method is an effective strategy to manage objections. The sequence is important and should sound like this: "I can understand how you feel ... other customers felt the same way . . . but once onboard with us this is what they found . . ." Provide details about how other customers benefited from their decision to buy from you. A testimonial letter may strengthen your case. You can actually demonstrate that other customers realized their initial opinions were unfounded after they tried your product. This is an excellent method, especially for Socializers and Relators because they tend to care what other people think.
  4. Validate that the objection has been satisfied. Don't assume that you have satisfied the customer's concern. There is nothing worse than plowing through the sale, leaving behind unresolved, unanswered objections. If you don't resolve them, your competitor will. To validate acceptance of your response, simply ask the customer, "Have I satisfied your concern?" By answering yes, the customer grants you permission to carry on with the sale. A no answer may indicate that further clarification is necessary.
  5. Uncover objections up front. Sales entrepreneurs know that certain features of their product or service may be vulnerable to the competition. Although not all objections can be preempted, the more common ones can be addressed during the conversation. Bring it up before the customer does. A sales entrepreneur may approach the price issue by saying: "Other customers have expressed concern that our product is expensive. Well, let me show you the true value in relation to the cost." You now go on to bridge the appropriate features to benefits. Customers have no need to raise objections already stated and answered by the salesperson. This strategy will help thwart possible false or shallow objections that may stall the sale. Try to eliminate tough objections early in the conversation for an objection-free close at the end. A fun example of this strategy: Next time you're feeling frisky, take two aspirin and a glass of water up to bed. Ask your spouse to take the two pills. Of course she will ask what they are. When you tell her they are aspirin she'll probably say, "But I don't have a headache." Great!

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Managing Objections: Friend or Foe?

"If only my customers would quit raising objections, selling would be a lot easier." No doubt this statement reflects the thoughts of many sales representatives, especially those with limited experience. One thing is certain about objections: they have a nasty habit of popping out of nowhere during the sales call. They can appear anywhere, at any time, and usually without warning. Nothing strikes fear in a sales representative's eyes faster than an unexpected objection.

Selling today involves an array of sophisticated skills. Many sales experts agree that the "moment of truth" of closing won't happen until you have listened to, understood, and successfully resolved any objections the customer has. Overcoming objections is your ticket to sales success—the gold medal.

Objections are strange things. Most objections are really questions or concerns in disguise. They are often smoke screens protecting the customer against possible buyer's remorse or the wrath of management for making a wrong purchasing decision. Although the customer may be totally honest and sincere, you may not clearly understand what the concern is.

Sales representatives view objections as the enemy, as traps that customers set to sabotage the sale and get rid of them. Sales representatives feel challenged by objections because they require an on-the-spot, unrehearsed response possibly derailing their well-rehearsed, canned pitch. You never know what the customer might object to or challenge you about. However, objections are an integral part of the whole business of selling. Without objections, you'd be just an order-taker. The career opportunities for professional order-takers are dismal and the pay is about the same.

I suggest that well-prepared sales entrepreneurs anticipate and welcome objections. They have learned the value of objections and view them as a friend, an ally to the conversation. This means that managing objections should be planned for, just as with any other step of your Sequential Model. Rather than regard an objection as an obstacle, regard it as an asset to the sale. It depends on your attitude. Even though objections tend to sound like verbal attacks, you can't afford to have your response sound defensive or confrontational. With a positive attitude you're more likely to respond without any hint of hostility, which makes your customer more receptive. A positive attitude can be communicated by use of a cushioning statement, an empathy statement, such as: "You're right, our price is higher than most, but what exactly is your concern?" This helps build rapport and encourages trust. Remember, it is your reaction to the objection that counts, not the objection itself.

Give some thought as to how you view objections. How do you respond to objections? What's your attitude? You're on the right track if, upon hearing an objection, your immediate response is to ask yourself, "What exactly does the customer mean by that?" If there's any doubt, and often there is (don't assume), simply clarify the concern in one of these ways:

What do you mean by that?

Is this what you mean?

Tell me more.

Please elaborate.

I'm not sure I understand.

The cardinal rule for managing objections is: Never offer a response to an objection until you fully understand how it relates to this particular customer and this particular situation.

The cause of objections is somewhat universal. It's an uneasiness brought on by unsatisfied, unanswered, or undeveloped expectations. Remove the cause of an objection and you remove the concern. Objections may stem from political reasons (my sister works for your competitor), personal biases (I prefer to deal with XYZ company), or from prejudices (I've heard bad things about your company). Most, however, come from unsatisfied personal or corporate expectations. The probing skills developed in Chapter 7 will help you explore customer expectations. We all feel uneasy about purchasing something that hasn't dealt with all of our concerns and expectations, voiced or unvoiced. It's impossible to effectively anticipate all possible objections. Objections are as varied as customers themselves. I suggest you develop strategies (responses) for the more common objections you may encounter.

However, objections are good barometers for the sales call. They show your customer is listening and they provide a means of clarification while stimulating conversation. Simply consider objections as conversational speed bumps, slowing you down long enough to grasp what the customer's concerns are. Look at each objection as a spotlight on a particular concern. Once satisfactorily resolved, each grants you the right to advance the sale. Objections are also a means for customers to direct the conversation in line with their expectations. They offer a huge communication advantage. Rather than you yacking aimlessly (feature dumping), customer objections provide navigational signposts guiding you where the conversation needs to go. It helps both of you stay in sync and helps shrink the sales cycle. The absence—not the presence—of objections should be cause for concern. One of the surest signs of a bad or deteriorating relationship is the absence of objections. The customer is either bored, not being candid, or is simply not interested.

It is important, however, to draw a distinction between objections and tough questions. The difference can be significant, yet subtle. Objections are expressed in response to a comment or information you provided. A tough question is asked to retrieve information from you. Treat the tough question as just that, a question to gain new information. Be straightforward and provide specific information that directly answers the question. For example, the customer might raise an objection right after you bridged a feature, challenging you to further validate the benefit, whereas a tough question may deal with a potentially difficult situation that many sales people mistakenly interpret as an objection. The customer will either be satisfied with your answer, ask another question, or generate a new objection. In either case, know the difference and employ the appropriate response.

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Ten Key Ingredients

To help you differentiate yourself and neutralize the competition, I offer ten key ingredients of an effective, creative presentation. They apply whether you are presenting to an individual, a committee, or a group.

Enjoy Yourself. Enjoy what you are doing. Selling is fun, not a battle of wits between customer and salesperson, so loosen up and enjoy. Believe in yourself and what you are selling, supported by the right mental attitude. Add your own style of enthusiasm and be somewhat entertaining as well as informative. After all, you are on stage. Communicate your belief in yourself and your product or service by exhibiting sincere enthusiasm. Involve your customer when and if appropriate. I tell my customers that I sell entertrainment. At my seminars you're going to learn something but you will have fun in the process. When was the last time you learned something that was boring or presented in lackluster fashion? You probably haven't—boredom stifles learning. Rekindle your enthusiasm if necessary and present with gusto.

Another aspect of enjoying yourself is looking good, feeling good. I often suggest the most important presentation of the day is to yourself in the mirror. You must be confident of your appearance prior to a confident delivery. People love to visualize and the visual sense is very, very powerful. In fact, it is the visual impression that makes the greatest impact. Remember, people buy you with their eyes within 10 seconds. As a result, our verbal content can be virtually smothered by the vocal and visual components.

Research suggests that the believability of a message is evaluated on three elements; 7 percent verbal, 38 percent vocal, and 55 percent visual. [2] "What you do speaks so loud I can't hear what you say." Great words spoken by Ralph Emerson.

The fun of it all begins with the process of looking and feeling good. Don your best outfit, fill your lungs with confidence, and within ten seconds your audience will be impressed with your presentation.

Prepare and prepare some more. Preparation is key to a smooth, fluid presentation. Any good seminar on presentation skills will tell you, "Don't try to eliminate the butterflies, simply get them to fly in formation." Having the butterflies is a form of positive energy that will help you get started and make a smooth transition into the body of your presentation. Here is a guideline that I use: Every five minutes of presentation time requires one hour of preparation time. Thus, a 15-minute presentation requires a minimum of three hours preparation. Trust me, this formula works. As one anonymous quote suggests, "Every time you open your mouth, your mind is on parade." Preparation will ensure your parade looks sharp, sounds sharp, and dazzles your audience. Make it fresh, not canned.

Another suggestion is to rehearse your presentation by delivering it aloud to a wall. Pick a quiet place, perhaps at home, stand back from a wall then go through your presentation, at least the verbal part. If you do it a couple of times to the wall, you'll be amazed how easy it is when you do it live.

As a professional keynote speaker, I spend days preparing for a half-day keynote. Here is another guideline: Be cognizant of when you prepare. Don't use valuable selling hours to do your homework.

Know your customer's style type. Consider how you might design your presentation to appeal to different style types. A presentation to a Director should be totally different than to a Socializer or a Thinker. Each style has different expectations that cannot be ignored.

Socializer.
Must be fun, entertaining, and stimulating. Sell sizzle more than steak. Make your presentation colorful and upbeat, showing how your product or service will enhance your customer's status and visibility.

Director.
Must be short, to the point, businesslike, outlining the main points. Time will be limited so don't waste it with unnecessary conversation or detail. Present the facts and the results they can expect to see. Give them options where they can make decisions.

Thinker.
Must be logical, informative, and detail-oriented. Thinkers are very analytical, looking for accurate information, honesty, and reliability. Back up your presentation with supportive documentation and data and a lot of technological punch. Don't expect a decision that day. Thinkers need time to mull it over, working out any possible bugs. Arrange a specific time to follow up.

Relater.
Must be sensitive to the people side of the business. Ask for opinions and feelings and show how your solution will be compatible with other departments within the company. Use lots of references and testimonials. Relaters need to know that other customers support your product or service. They tend to follow the norm, guided by routine, so don't make your solution too bizarre or outlandish.

When presenting to a committee or to more than one individual, tailor your presentation to the style type of the decision maker among the group. Identify who the key individual is prior to the meeting, and design your presentation and your approach to reflect his or her style. You cannot be all things to all people, so don't even try. It makes for a very awkward presentation if you try to satisfy everyone by floating among the four styles. I caution you. Don't present until you have determined who will be there and why. Don't ever go into a presentation blind; do your homework. If you can't meet committee members prior to the presentation, at least talk to them on the phone to determine their style and their role in the decision-making process.

Involve the senses.
A Chinese proverb says: "Tell me, I'll forget. Show me, I may remember. Involve me, I'll understand." Up to 82% of what we learn is through sight. Take advantage of these findings and include visuals where you can, within reason. The more senses you can engage in your presentation, the better—visual, auditory, or kinesthetic (touch it, feel it). Research demonstrates that visual input makes the greatest impact. Psychologists agree that viewing something three times has a lasting impression and improves retention and recall. However, don't show up to your next presentation with 56 overheads colorfully presented on PowerPoint.

Be benefit-oriented.
People don't buy what something is, they buy what something does. Avoid presenting your features, they do nothing to stimulate the customer into action. Benefits will. By talking about benefits you keep your customer's attention focused on the "what's in it for me" aspect. A sobering thought to consider when presenting: Your average customers will immediately forget 50% of what you told them and after only 48 hours will forget up to 75% of your message. Ouch! All the more reason to captivate your customers' attention by using all their senses, presenting benefits, and having fun.

Avoid corporate jargon. Nothing loses customers faster than confusion. Don't use gobbledegook that may confuse them; use their language and their lingo and provide explanations where appropriate. My suggestion is to present simple concepts first, then complex ones later in the presentation. Presenting simple concepts early will help warm the audience to your style and make it easier for them to understand the complex ones later. Customers are sceptical of razzle-dazzle presentations; straightforwardness and honesty should be your guideposts.

Exceed expectations. The first step is to know what 100% is, then exceed it. Know what your customer expects from you. You only learn that by asking. Unless you clearly understand what the 100% mark is, you run the risk of delivering a solution that falls short of expectations. Delivering a solution that you are excited about does little to advance the sale if it is only at 90% of customers' expectations. Once again, that may be the reason you get beat up on price. A 90% solution doesn't cut it, not nowadays.

To exceed expectations, you only have to go an extra inch, not an extra mile. All it takes is a little extra effort, giving customers something they didn't expect. Exceed expectations by delivering an extra unexpected 1%: The 1% solution. It really doesn't take much to exceed expectations. Just as little things can turn a customer off, little things will turn a customer on. An example of a 1% solution would be just as you are leaving the store with your new CD player, the salesperson you dealt with stops you at the door and says, "Thank you for your business, I appreciate it. Why don't you go over to the rack and pick out a free CD of your choice? It's on me." Would that impress you? No doubt it would. The potential return on positive word of mouth is certainly worth the investment of giving away a free CD. Keep in mind, though, no two customers are alike. Not every customer will appreciate a free CD so you will need to vary your 1% solutions. Each customer comes with a unique set of expectations and perceptions that must be revealed during the Discovery step. It stands to reason, then, that no two presentations or solutions will be the same. I suggest that from now on you deliver a solution that is 101% of expectations—under-promise and overdeliver. Don't simply satisfy your customers—surprise them.

Be professional. Your only option as a sales entrepreneur is to be guided by a professional code of conduct: walk the talk. It is critical that your verbal presentation be in sync with your visual presentation. That means sound professional and look professional. Don't show up looking like a bum but sounding like a pro, or vice versa. Also, use professional language, don't swear or use slang. Even if your customer is using colorful superlatives, don't lower yourself. Maintain a level of conduct that says you are a professional, a true sales entrepreneur. Yes, be yourself, but don't engage in activity or conversation that erodes your credibility or your professional conduct. Also, be consistent. Customers are sceptical and suspicious of inconsistent behavior. You have worked hard to get to the presentation stage. Don't blow it by being inconsistent throughout the sales process. The Sequential Model demands professional consistency at every step—no missing pieces.

Take the customer to the presentation. Rather than struggling to take all your stuff to your customers, it can be easier and a bit more exciting to take your customers out of the office on a field trip. Take them on a tour of your facility or perhaps show them your product already in use at one of your other customers' locations. I have known salespeople who have flown potential customers to tour their head office and meet the president and some of the personnel who will be involved in servicing them. Once again, most people are visual, so take advantage of that and show them anytime you get the chance. It's worth the trip and the investment.

This approach also communicates pride and clearly demonstrates your commitment to the relationship as well as the conviction that your solution is right for them.

Action plan. Don't limit your role to that of a presenter. As an entrepreneur you are there to present an entire package, which includes a next step—an action plan. Don't finish with, "Thanks for having me in. I'll call you next week." Ask for feedback, then determine a specific call to action. This could be a specific day and time to follow up, an appointment for a follow-up visit, a tour, a meeting with the design people, and so on. Don't leave empty handed.

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