What did I do that I now realize very few sales people do? Â These are the three cornerstone characteristics that I just took for granted, but which I have since discovered are the rare building blocks upon which sales success is built.
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1. Â Work hard, every day. Â
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I canât believe Iâm actually telling people to work hard. Â That âwork ethicâ was just instilled in me by my parents. Â I was raised in a family of six boys, and we all had paper routes and part-time jobs as soon as we were able. Â We were expected to work hard. Â I never questioned the wisdom of it.
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Of course there were times when I took that afternoon off, or those special long weekends. Â Every employer, though, got at least 45 â 50 hours from me every week. Â
In my practice, however, I run into sales people seemingly every week who have no problem with routinely leaving the house at nine and being done for the day at three. Â As one of my clients verbalized recently: Â âSo many people in the work force today have an entitlement mentality, a short attention span, and inordinate hubris.â Â If heâs right, thatâs too bad. Â Those are not qualities upon which success is built.Â
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2. Â Try to do well.Â
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Again, I find it incredible that I have to mention this. Doesnât everyone strive to do well? Â Actually, no. Â The vast majority of people, sales people included, just want to do a job and forget about it at the end of the day. Â Only a small fraction â somewhere between 5 percent and 20 percent in my experience â actually strive, day in and day out, to do well. The reason why most sales people are not highly successful is that they donât want to be
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Let me be really clear. Â Everyone wants the results of doing well â the extra income, the higher degree of respect from bosses and colleagues, the feeling of accomplishment and the extra confidence that comes as a result of sales success. But very few are willing to pay the price for it.
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I remember reading a quote from a famous coach, whose name escapes me at the moment. Â It went something like this: Â âEvery athletic has the will to win, but only the winners have the will to practice.â Â There is a price to pay to be successful. Â You have to want to be successful, and you have to want to be successful badly enough that you will invest time, money, ego, energy and emotions in it.
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3. Â Constantly improve. Â
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Believe it or not, you are not as good as you can be. Â Ever. Â If you are going to be successful at sales, you have to become more competent than you are now. Â
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Sales is a proactive profession. Â In other words, the customers donât send you a purchase order, and then you go see them. Â No, you must see them first, and influence them successfully. Â Your actions get reactions. Â If you act well, they will react accordingly, and youâll eventually get enough of the deals to become successful. Â If you donât act well, they will react accordingly, and youâll forever be relegated to mediocrity.
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So, if you want to be successful, you must continually improve your skills, your habits, your attitudes and your mindsets. Â Thatâs something that only a handful of sales people actually understand.Â
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There are two things to do to continually improve:Â
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a. Â Constantly reflect on your performance and your actions and identify things to improve. Â That means, reflect and evaluate after every sales call.
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b. Â Expose yourself to the best practice of the profession. Â That means read the books, go to the seminars, listen to the audios, read the Ezines, etc.Â
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Now, here is why it is so easy to succeed at sales. Â Sales is the only profession where most of the practitioners donât practice the three simple habits above. Â In every other profession, there is the expectation that serious practitioners will continually improve. Â Thatâs why doctors go to conferences, nurses have in-service training, lawyers read case studies, executives attend roundtables, minister listen to webinars, etc. Â Every other
profession in the world expects its members to constantly improve, and the vast majority of them do. Â
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In the profession of sales, there is no expectation for constant improvement. Â So, most sales people donât bother. Â The reason itâs so easy to be successful in sales is that your competition, other sales people, donât really want to be successful!