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 Sales Training Tips:
    Training Your Sales Staff
    Defining Sales Training
    Sales Management Coaching
    The Importance of Sales Training
    Increase Your Sales
    The Impact of Sales Training
    Confirming the Sale
    21 Ways To Increase Sales
    The Top 3 Fatal Sales Mistakes
    How to Shorten Your Sales Cycle
    Enticing Voicemail Messages
    Salespeople Bore Me
    Don’t Sell Like You Buy
    Goal Direction and Sales Success
    Good First Impressions -
        Handshakes
    Addressing the Elephant in the
        Room
    Position Yourself As A Leader
    Appointment Setting Tips: Using
        Power Language
    How To Overcome the
        Smokescreen Objection
    Opportunities in our Tough
        Economy
    Five Secrets To Writing Killer
        Prospecting Scripts
    COLLABORATIVE versus
        TRADITIONAL SELLING
    Seven Ways To Build Rapport
        With Anyone
    Power Pitching: Get the
        Personal Edge
     Marketing Savvy and
       Customer Focus
     Increase Your Bottom Line With
        Sales Training That Sticks
     Measuring Sales Training
        Effectiveness
    Sales Tips: Don't Bring a Knife to
        a Gun Fight
 

    More Sales Training Tips...


Sales Training Seminars and Tips

Marketing Savvy and Customer Focus

As we look at probable future challenges, I feel comfortable with the following predictions: competition in the marketplace will get keener; decision makers will become sharper and more discriminating; and margin pressure will continue to impact our profitability. As we go forward, it will be necessary for us to carefully and strategically sort out our options as to how we go to market. How we address the issues of discounting, taking our creative selling efforts to new levels and maintaining our position as viable and profitable organizations, must be a high priority.

I am often asked if I would rather be selling a product of the highest quality and offering the best service at an upper level price or selling a product of marginal quality with mediocre service at a much lower price. I will take the former over the latter every time. People are more willing to pay for quality than they have ever been. They just are not willing to endure the hassle that goes along with the compromises in quality and service. It is easier to explain price once than to apologize for quality forever.

In our attempts to assess the mindset of today’s buyers, we find that people in practically every industry want problem-free products and services that do the job for them without requiring additional time and money to solve quality problems. You are usually dealing with sophisticated buyers who know the significant cost of unanticipated problems.

There are five types of differentiation salespeople should be aware of: product, price, service, relationship and process. Do everything in your power to creatively differentiate in any manner other than discounting. Get in your customers’ faces and serve them to death. Make sure that everybody in the decision loop knows that none of your competitors compare to your creative factors of differentiation.

Don’t give away your margin; give away your heart. Give your heart away through extraordinary service and simple caring. Your heart will only get bigger when you give it away. Give away your margin, and you will be mortgaging your future. Don Hutson http://www.donhutson.com

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