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Good Sales Calls versus Good Conversations
There is a huge difference
between having a good conversation or having a good sales call with
a prospect. Let's assume that we're face to face with a
prospect and it's the first meeting. We've started the meeting
on first base and we want to advance, at minimum, to second base.
A lot of salespeople return to
the office after that sales call and report that they had a good
conversation. Some return to the office to report a good sales
call. What's the difference?
Let's begin with a good
conversation. This happens when you both get along, understand
each other, talk about what they do, what you do, find some areas of
interest and agree to speak again. Does this constitute a good
sales call? I'm afraid not. It's simply a good
conversation which, by itself, may not lead to anything more.
A good sales call must include,
at its core, a good conversation and, at minimum, meet the criteria
for reaching second base. So in addition to the good
conversation, we must identify some need, find the compelling
reasons as to why they would buy, identify some compelling reason
that would cause them to buy from us and develop Speed on the Bases
(SOB) Quality. SOB Quality is what differentiates us from the
competition. It's based on our ability to ask more questions, better
questions, and tougher questions than our competition. It
means we've built a stronger relationship, created more trust and
credibility by getting the prospect to trust and believe in us.
And finally, it means that we've quantified the problem using the
Rule of Ratios. (Baseline Selling provides detailed
explanations along with a myriad of examples of how to apply these
criteria in the section on Reaching Second Base.)
Now you know how to answer the
question, "how did it go?" If you're unable to respond with "I
had a great sales call", you're not really selling effectively out
there and you'll need to make some changes to improve your results.
If you respond with, "we had a great conversation" I would like you
to recognize the relative unimportance of that accomplishment if it
is not also part of a great sales call.
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