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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
 

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Sales Training:

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 seminars well as the development of customized sales systems and sales seminars 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:

Stepping Up Sales Results with Sales Training Seminars

The close isn't the end of the sales process. It's only a beginning — the beginning of a new phase of that process. I call it the Stepping Up Phase. The more sales we achieve, the more sales we should achieve; for in achieving more sales, we create more opportunities to achieve even more. We stop getting "more" when we either stop believing that there is more we can get or we don't have the knowledge or tools to get them.

Good sales people can close, but few "step up" for even more sales from that close. Yet stepping up should be one of the easiest accomplishments in sales — that is if you know how to build the staircase. Here are three tips for achieving consistent step-ups.

Start Early: George Burns said, "I had to work hard for 20 years in vaudeville before I became an overnight success in radio." That's a lesson in stepping up. Step-ups don't just happen "overnight." We must prepare for them. Prepare for them in the early stages of the sales process when prospecting for new clients, identifying decision makers, and making initial calls. Ask yourself: "What is the close in this sale? And how can that close lead to a step-up in sales?" Looking at your sales challenges from the viewpoints of step-ups gives you new insights into those challenges and new ways to meet those challenges.

For instance, I work with a materials supplier that wanted to acquire new customers in the computer industry. The sales people aimed to replace their competitors' materials with their materials in computer housing applications. They would have gotten closes with that focus — but not step-ups. The differences between their competitor’s materials and their materials were negligible in cost and performance. Step-ups would only come when they introduced their materials into their customer's design stage of product development.

The sales people continued to develop the traditional channels to their customers' purchasing departments. But they also began building step-ups early by including design engineers in their first-stage sales activities. They focused on being their customers' "design partners" — not simply showing them where they could save costs and achieve performance advantages but also showing them how they could get market share through the innovative uses of those materials. As design partners, they not only got closes but step-ups by integrating their materials into new generations of housings.

Link to Results: Step-ups happen only when you answer the vital needs of your customers — not the nice-to-answer needs but the truly vital needs. Discover those needs by asking and answering: "What are your customer’s absolute must-have results? Those "must-haves" are your great step-up opportunities.

For instance, I consulted with an insurance company whose growth had flattened out. We found out a key reason why. Their products were not meeting the must-have results of their customers. Their customers absolutely had to grow. Yet the company's products did not materially address those growth needs. Only when the sales people began to develop and sell products that met those needs did the company begin to get back on the growth track?

Get Cause Leaders: Salespeople often fail to get step-ups because they have a short-sighted view of the customer. They view the customer as only a customer! Whereas, if we want to get step-ups, we must see the customer not just as a customer but as a "cause leader," one who can lead our cause both inside and outside their company. Instead of aiming for just a close, aim, too, to obtain that customer's leadership.

For instance, the salespeople of the materials company not only worked diligently on closing with the engineer-customers but also on creating step-ups by persuading those engineers to be the cause leaders for their materials within the company.

Here is the way that they enlisted that leadership. They discovered that the absolute must-haves of the engineers were productivity and fast cycle-times. The engineers were under the gun, pointed by upper management, to produce designs faster with fewer resources.

In response, the sales people developed a materials performance package for the engineers that increased their productivity and cycle-times. In addition, they brought in productivity experts from their own company to help the engineers streamline their design processes. They're not only selling their materials. They're selling productivity as well. Seeing that the sales people were helping them meet their vital needs, the engineers became the sales people's cause leaders within their company — unleashing a torrent of step-ups.

Don't sell yourself short by focusing exclusively on the close. Liberate the step-up opportunities that are embedded in most closes. By starting early, linking to results, and getting cause leaders, you can multiply sales far beyond what simple closes achieve.

Source: Brent Filson link

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