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Asking for Business Part II
We just returned from a trip
to Cancun where, once again, I was struck with how easily, the
people with something to sell, ask for your business. In
America and Canada, a huge percentage of salespeople seem almost
embarrassed to ask - even when they've earned the right. In
Cancun, the salespeople haven't earned the right, haven't even
shaken hands, and they're already asking. It's the way that
business has been done for centuries. It's honorable. It's a
way of life.
How about you? Do you know
at what point you've earned the right to close? If not, go back to
Baseline Selling and read the chapter on Scoring. You'll see
that you've earned the right once you have touched all the bases and
left nothing to chance. You rounded second base so your
prospect needs what you have, has a compelling reason to buy it and
a compelling reason to buy it from you. You've established
your SOB Quality so you have a strong relationship, have built
trust, asked lots of questions that differentiated you from your
competition and caused your prospect to think about issues they
hadn't previously thought about. You rounded third base so
your prospect is completely qualified to do business with you and
you're completely qualified to do business with your prospect.
And you've run home, presented a needs appropriate, budget
appropriate, and time appropriate solution to the decision maker(s).
You've now earned the right to close.
Are you comfortable? You should be. There's not much that can
go wrong at this point. The only thing they can do that you
can't control is not make a decision. But you have tools for
that too. (Refer to the chapter on Scoring for the Inoffensive
Close, Rule of Triple Elimination, Rule of Habits, and the Rule of
Ratios. Some salespeople
come on too strong at this point. Some don't come on strong
enough. Some wait and let their prospect make the first move.
Some make the first move themselves. Some encourage their
prospects to think it over. Others ask for the business and
then take put-offs. Here's
what you must do. If you've earned the right to close and
you're at the appropriate place on the timeline for doing business
it is your obligation to close. Closing is not asking for the
business it's getting the business. Use the Inoffensive Close,
be confident, smile, and hang in until it's finally closed.
But only if you've earned the right to be there. If you
haven't earned the right don't even make an attempt to close.
That's the big difference between
what we do in America and what they do in Cancun and other tourist
destinations. We have the ability to differentiate ourselves
by earning the right to close but how many of us do?
To learn more about earning the right
and getting the business closed once you've earned the right, refer
to or order your copy of Baseline Selling today.
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