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Be a Sales Force
Most companies have sales departments. Fewer have
sales forces. After talking to a general manager about an upcoming sales
training seminar we were doing for her people, we uncovered the
potential key to this problem.
"Carrie," I asked. "What would you like to see your
salespeople doing more of? And what would you like your salespeople
doing less of?"
"John, I've got some highly paid salespeople who have
developed some extraordinary faxing skills. I want them to develop
extraordinary selling skills," she said.
By walking around her office doing her managerial
duties, she saw the problem firsthand. When you have six-figure
salespeople lined up at the fax machine, something is wrong.
She knew that a $10-per-hour junior can fax price
sheets and order forms for customers. Salespeople earn their money in
the field talking to prospects about problems and proposing solutions to
those problems.
Members of a sales department may have extraordinary
faxing skills. But it's the members of a sales force that have
extraordinary selling skills.
Today, it seems like email, voice mail, pagers and
cell phones let us stay in constant communication. But they also keep us
from getting in front of our customers.
One of the most important things you can measure for
yourself is time spent selling. How many minutes did you spend in front
of live prospects and customers this week? Don't count driving, waiting
in the lobby or filling out call reports. Use a stopwatch and record how
many minutes or hours you spend each day in front of the people who buy
from you.
It's a reality check. You'll be astounded or terrified
at the amount of time you do anything but sell. Once you have the
baseline data, work to increase the time spent selling by 15 to 20
minutes a week.
Sales go up when time spent selling increases. Sure
you're working long days, but are you spending enough time selling
during the day to stay on your plan? Until you make this critical
calculation for yourself, you may be leaving money on the table. That's
because you aren't at the table long enough to get it.
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