Why should sales be different?
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It isnât. Â There are principles, processes and tools that have been proven to be more effective than others in sales, just like in every other profession. Â It is like a football game. Â No coach says to his team, âOK, you guys go out and figure out how to be successful.â Â
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Rather, a coach develops a âbest wayâ to tackle, to block, to pass, to catch, etc. Â And then, the coach develops the system, creates a game plan, and teaches his players that system and that plan.Â
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In a similar way, a selling system addresses the interaction between the sales person and the customer, providing a âgame planâ for success. Â Think of it as a template for the sales personâs face-to-face tactical encounters. Â It is based on the principle that, when it comes to selling a specific product or service to a certain type of customer, there are principles, processes and tools that are
proven more effective than others.
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Study any successful company that fields a large number of sales people, and youâll discover that almost every one of those companies has evolved a well-defined, duplicable selling system. Â And they teach that system to their sales people â âThis is the way we keep track of our files, this is the way we collect information about our customers, this is the way we present this product or that one, this is
the way we think about strategy, this is the way we develop a weekly plan,â etc. Â The larger, older, and more successful a company is, the more likely it is to have a highly sophisticated and refined selling system.Â
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The large, old, life insurance companies are great illustrations. Â Go into the local Northwestern Mutual office, for example. Â Talk to a manager, tell him you would like to sell for him, but you are going to do it your way. Â See how far that gets you. Â Or perhaps IBM has an opening for a one-of-a-kind sales person. Â Maybe Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson havenât yet figured it
out.
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You have the idea. Â A well-defined selling system is one of the essential components of an effective sales company.Â
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To be effective and productive in your sales efforts, sooner or later you need to develop a selling system.
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Your selling system should have variations for each major market segment. Â For example, the âbest wayâ to sell to a truck line may not be the best way to sell to an accountant. Â Typically, a selling system would define a sales process for each segment, and then address the best ways to accomplish each step in that process.
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Take truck lines for example. Â
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The most effective process may be to make an appointment with a purchasing person, to collect information at the first face-to-face meeting, to prepare a written proposal, to personally deliver that proposal, and then to make a personal face-to-face follow up call. Â That may be the process piece of the system.
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The tools might consist of a script for making the appointment, a profile form to collect the information, a capability brochure to use to describe and introduce the company, a standard âproposalâ form, and a set of carefully crafted questions to use throughout the process.
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The tactics may be a series of techniques to facilitate each step of the process â to accomplish each step well.
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When all those pieces are put in place - the appropriate processes, tools and tactics - you would have a selling system.
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And when you have a selling system, and when you have trained all your sales people in that system, you will have taken a major step forward.
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Youâre ready for the big leagues.