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123: Aswin Shibu | Building the Discipline to Reset Everyday

Sales Tuners

Release Date: 02/12/2019

[CLASSICS] 095: The Difference Between Cooperating and Collaborating | Amy Appleyard show art [CLASSICS] 095: The Difference Between Cooperating and Collaborating | Amy Appleyard

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Understand How Your Prospect Makes Money: You already know how your company makes money and you already know how you make money once your company makes money. During the sales process, if you really dig in and figure out how your prospects make money, then you can sync your offering with their real incentives. It truly doesn’t matter what you sell if you can figure out how your offering impacts their revenue engine. That’s the key. Put Yourself Out There: Your network is not just going to build itself. You have to commit time in a given week or month outside your organization....

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#CoachesCorner 1 | Ashleigh Early show art #CoachesCorner 1 | Ashleigh Early

Sales Tuners

In the last 5-7 years, there has seemingly been an explosion in the number of companies, both tech startups as well as more traditional businesses, that require salespeople. Unfortunately, in that same period of time there hasn’t been any magical creation of new sales talent. That misalignment has led companies to over-recruit, under-train, and honestly… just hope reps “figure it out." I’ve had some sales leaders tell me they’ll hire 10 reps knowing full well only 4 will work out. What in the world is going on? Most sales reps actually know what to do — that has been drilled into...

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127: Jessica McQueen | Building a Sincere Interest in Understanding show art 127: Jessica McQueen | Building a Sincere Interest in Understanding

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Become a Subject Matter Expert: There have been many conversations on this show that have talked about the need to truly understand who your buyer is. Jess took that even a step farther by suggesting that she actually become a licensed health benefits consultant. Think about that. Are there certifications in your industry that could help you better relate to the knowledge your prospects have? Yes, you can learn these things at a high level likely through your companies sales enablement, but what would it take to be able to truly walk in your customers' shoes? Your Questions Prove...

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#READefined 1 | Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini show art #READefined 1 | Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini

Sales Tuners

In our first ever episode of READefined, we’re taking a look at Robert Cialdini’s . Today, we are all becoming overwhelmed by the sheer amount of information at our disposal AND the choice that comes with that for even the most mundane topics. While it would be nice to think our prospects consider all the information available to them before they decide whether to say “yes” or “no,” you know from your own day-to-day experience that reality is quite different. The truth is, we need shortcuts. We need rules of thumb to help us filter through the noise. And guess what… there’s a...

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126: Greg Zapletnikov | Breaking the Code to Find Your Own Style show art 126: Greg Zapletnikov | Breaking the Code to Find Your Own Style

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Speak a Common Language: As Greg was learning to sell, he was taught baseball idioms like ‘batting 1.000,’ ‘drop the ball,’ ‘be in the ballpark,’ and of course, ‘touch base.’ But to many of you listening, these phrases no longer have anything to do with the game because they’ve been so ingrained into our normal lexicon. What words or phrases might you be using that make no sense to your prospect? Greg gave the example of the literal translation of ‘How are you?’, a throwaway phrase we use in America that would make an Eastern European tell you all about their...

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125: Jenn Etherton | Setting Up a Sales Career Development Path show art 125: Jenn Etherton | Setting Up a Sales Career Development Path

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Observe the Actions of Others: You may not have the confidence or even opportunity to approach others to ask them about how or why they do what they do, but you can definitely observe their actions. Break down how they speak, how they hold themselves, how they treat customers, and what they do that’s different than you. And these don’t have to just be people in your office. With unfiltered broadband access, these observations can be people you admire online, TED speakers, or even public CEOs by way of their earnings calls and annual reports. Find Gaps in Your Own Skills: It’s...

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124: James Karanasios | The Habit of Success: You Are What You Repeatedly Do show art 124: James Karanasios | The Habit of Success: You Are What You Repeatedly Do

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Ask the Next Question: By this point, we should all be used to hearing the word “no.” However, it’s what you do after hearing it that defines you as a salesperson. The word could be a stoplight and completely shut you down. Or, it could be a challenge to you to dig a little deeper and understand the context in which that specific prospecting is using it. What aren’t they interested in? How could the get budget if the found value? When does their current contract with a competitor end? Build Your Own Following: In today’s world, it seems as if there are influencers popping...

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[CLASSICS] 077: Mark Roberge | Why Most Customer Success Issues Originate in the Sales Process show art [CLASSICS] 077: Mark Roberge | Why Most Customer Success Issues Originate in the Sales Process

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Successful Customers Trumps Revenue: The goal of sales should not be revenue at all costs. It’s our job to find people we can make successful through the value prop we’re pitching. Rather than focusing solely on the signed contract and commission check, make sure the customers you close are going to find value in what they bought 90 days later. Buyers Don’t Have to Talk to Salespeople: 20 to 30 years ago, every buyer had to talk to a salesperson. Today, buyers can watch demos, compare and research alternative products, and even get ballpark pricing online, all before reaching...

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[CLASSICS] 001: Jill Rowley | Know Thy Buyer in the Social Selling Generation show art [CLASSICS] 001: Jill Rowley | Know Thy Buyer in the Social Selling Generation

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Share: Even if what you share is unrelated to what you’re trying to sell, doing so allows you to show you care, which drives future opportunities. Focus on the Customer: Know the buyer from every angle at the company and personal level. Provide Value: Constantly consume and share content that will be relevant to your buyers. Full Notes   Book Recommendation by Seth Godin Sponsor  – What if every sales rep inherited the habits of your best rep? With Costello, they do.

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[CLASSICS] 046: Cody Lamens | Strive to be a Sales Professional, Not Just an Account Executive show art [CLASSICS] 046: Cody Lamens | Strive to be a Sales Professional, Not Just an Account Executive

Sales Tuners

Takeaways Take Advantage of Opportunity: There is a short window of time to take advantage of every opportunity. If you wait until an opportunity presents itself, it’s already too late. Seek out chances to learn, be more efficient, and give 100 percent from the get-go so you’re never in a position to wonder what might have been. Doors open on a daily basis, but oftentimes they are short and they are small. It’s crucial to take advantage of them when they’re there. Preparation and Repetition Always Win: You know what you need to do. You’ve spent time role playing real scenarios....

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Takeaways

  1. Invest Time Building the Right List: Knowing who your ideal prospect is, is only the beginning of a good outreach plan. Don’t take for granted the amount of work that goes into identifying exactly who those people are and trying to acquire their contact information. If you’re doing this manually, it’s a lot of work, and even if you’re paying for data sources, it still takes a lot of preparation to do it right. After you identify the right people, next spend some time trying to hypothesize what problems each of these companies uniquely face and what messaging you can use to address them on an individual level.
  2. Build Discipline Into Your Calendar: As a sales professional, it’s almost a given we have some level of ADD and the unique ability to find every squirrel there is in our day to day. That said, when you’re to take your game to the next level, blocking time on your calendar for all important activities is the first step to ensuring that success. Sure, you may believe you can multitask, or you may believe you have superhuman powers to just be able to will everything into getting done, but you could also just schedule the activities and make commitments to yourself. I use this technique to even schedule in time to learn about new things. Giving myself that permission ensures I don’t feel guilty about not doing something else high on my priority list.
  3. Learn to Reset Everyday: Look, I’m a gambler and always find it humorous when I go to Vegas and see previous outcomes of the roulette wheel displayed. Why? Because they literally have nothing to do with the independent event of the next spin, yet some people let them guide their bets. Whether you just closed a one million dollar deal or heard “no” 47 times, yesterday is in the past and should have no bearing on what you do today. In sales we have really high highs and just as low of lows, you have to force yourself to manage that energy and see each day just like the roulette wheel—an independent event.

Full Notes

Book Recommendation

Sponsor

  • Costello - What if every sales rep inherited the habits of your best rep? With Costello, they do.