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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 Courses:

Sales Training America is a world class sales training and custom development training company specializing in sales training and sales skill development of our client's sales force. At Sales Training America we help our clients improve their sales profitability through the development of their sales management and sales efforts through SalesForce.com implementation. Sales Training America offers both public (open enrollment) sales training courses well as the development of customized sales systems and sales courses for Fortune 1000 companies across United States and Canada.

Are you one of the many corporations now focusing on core sales activities while implementing SalesForce.com while outsourcing non-core functions in response to intense competition?

If you are, Sales Training America can help there too. If you simply want to outsource some of your sales or sales management training or if you want to redefine yourself completely to survive mergers, acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, downsizing, or corporate restructuring we can help you.

For free, no obligation information on how we can help you with your sales training needs please contact us today.

Sales Training Tips:

Sales Courses to Refresh Your Pitch and Close More Sales

There are dozens of elements that go into a winning sales presentation. Some are obvious such as creating rapport, establishing value and asking for the sale, while others are much more subtle.

Because these quick refresher tips primarily focus on style and personality, they fall into an "easier said than done" category. To really benefit from this advice, you'll need to give it some serious thought, do an honest self-evaluation of your "pitch personality" and make the required improvements. If you find you are particularly weak in one area you may need to get additional advice or sales training.

Be enthusiastic but don't overdo it. You represent a great company with a fantastic product or service and you're naturally excited about it. Excitement is contagious. Show your enthusiasm and you will make more sales. Caution: Don't overdo it. Over-the-top breathless enthusiasm comes off as contrived and will increase buyer resistance.

Honest down-to-earth communication closes sales. Above all, respect your buyer's time and intelligence. Memorized, long-winded or lame, rapid-fire sales pitches kill deals. Make eye contact and speak to your buyer as if you were talking to an intelligent yet uniformed friend. Do not be too formal. Use your buyer's name from time to time, but not excessively. Communicate in an honest, open, confident and matter-of-fact manner. Smile.

What's your body saying? It's important that you communicate positively with your body language. Surprisingly, this is true even when talking on the phone. Lean slightly forward and show interest in the conversation. If you naturally talk with your hands don't stop. Remember, the buyer is subconsciously picking up on your body language. Make sure yours is conveying your interest in the buyer, along with your confidence in and passion for your product.

Focus on benefits. Never forget that it's all about the buyer, not you. Your pitch must resoundingly answer every buyer's unspoken question: "What's in it for me?" Choose key benefits that you feel will be most interesting and important to your buyer. Don't rattle them off like a laundry list early in the conversation, but introduce them into the natural flow of the dialogue. Keep benefits uncomplicated and easy to understand. Buyers are interested in the bottom line. They are remarkably uninterested in why you joined your company or your organization's vision statement. If the conversation veers away from benefits, subtly bring it back. As the conversation comes to an end, summarize the benefits and ask for the sale.

One size does not fit all! If you are delivering the same basic pitch over and over, you are undoubtedly losing sales. Take a lesson from the U.S. Marines and "improvise, adapt, and overcome." This requires listening and reading your prospect. You must always be thinking on your feet and adapting your pitch in real time to what you are hearing from your buyer. It's no easy feat, but those who master this skill close far more sales than those who don't.

Accentuate the positive. Which do you think sounds better to a buyer? "Our product will save your company 2500 a month" or, "You will save your company 30,000 dollars a year with our product." Obviously, the second statement is more compelling because 30,000 "dollars" is far more dramatic than 2500 even though they amount to the same savings. More importantly, "You will save your company...," makes the buyer both intelligent and a hero. Buyers want to save money. Buyers like to make smart decisions. Buyers love to be heroes.

Ask questions and listen up. You've heard it a hundred times: stop talking and make more sales. Effective listening will provide you with most of the answers to your qualifying questions without even asking them. Ask questions that will get your buyer talking. You will quickly learn about your customers' needs, what their hot buttons are, and how to gain their interest and confidence. Simply put, when your customer talks, you make sales; when you talk, you lose. Making a sale is a lot like playing a winning chess game. You rarely win with a brilliant move early in the game, but rather later after gaining an accumulation of small advantages. Listening to your prospect gives you those winning advantages.

Source: Michael D. Johnson link

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