It is the eternal question,
the sales manager’s version of nature versus nurture. I teach salespeople how to become better at their jobs. I believe successful salespeople are nurtured. There are best practices in the sales profession. Successful salespeople do many of the same things. A salesperson can, and should be, taught those best practices. Then, they will know how to do the job well.
Much of my practices
consist of teaching the best practices to salespeople. Sales is a proactive profession. Act first, and then your actions get reactions. A successful salesperson acts in the right ways. Behaviors are ultimately what determines the degree of success attained.
Thus, anyone can be taught the best practices of a successful salesperson. On a 1 – 10 scale, I can take 7’s and make them into 10’s. Or take 4’s and make them into 7’s. It’s even possible to
take 1’s and make them into 4’s. But I simply can’t take 1’s and make them into 10’s.
One Trusted Source
Find answers to your sales questions, interact with other professional salespeople, find vetted, powerful ideas and techniques to become excellent at your job.
If you have the character
for sales, that’s a great start. “Character” is the driver here. A person’s character is a combination of qualities, beliefs, and attitudes that give rise to one’s behavior.
A combination of characteristics defines who a person is. The practices we teach instruct the person on what to do. While countless books and articles have addressed “what successful salespeople do”,
few have described “who successful salespeople are.”
I don’t claim to have the
last word on this. Nor do I believe that this is the whole story. But, from one person’s perspective, here are my observations of two of the essential character traits of a successful salesperson.
Firstly, a desire to succeed is the one characteristic that I consistently see among successful salespeople. They truly want to be successful. This isn’t as simple as it sounds. The world is
mostly populated by people who don’t truly want to be successful; at least not if it is going to cost them anything. Most people would like to have the benefits of success. They want a sense of confidence and competence. They’d enjoy material advantages. They even want the respect and admiration of others. But they simply aren’t willing to accept the cost to become successful.
Sacrifice If You Want to
Be Successful
Success is almost always
the result of consistent, long-range investments of time and energy. If you’re not willing to give up something valuable, it’s likely you won’t be successful salespeople.
Throughout the history of mankind, successful people have been disciplined people. At some point in their development, they have discovered the power that lies in discipline. And they chose, with an act of willfulness and intentionality, to pursue disciplines. As a result, they rise above the pack on the basis of the strength of their wills and their ability to discipline themselves to do the right things,
consistently, methodically and regularly.
Everyone needs a bit of inspiration, education and motivation.
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