CUTTER CONSULTING GROUP

E100: Closing Week: Ending Season One of TSEP

January 3, 2024


What brings you to the show, and what are you hoping to take away from our summary wrap-up?


When I started The Sales Experience Podcast, my personal goal was to record 100 episodes before deciding if I wanted to continue.


I have loved doing the show. If you are a long time listener or you go back to the early shows, as with anything, I have enjoyed improving the show and myself during all these episodes.


I had some amazing guests on the show and had a ton of fun nerding out on Sales stuff.


In this episode I recap most of the topics from the show over the first 100 episodes – this is a great one to listen to if you are new to TSEP, as it will be a guide for what show to listen to next. If you are one of the loyal long-time listeners, then this show is a great reminder of what I covered so you can go back and listen to the ones that might help you wherever you are at right this moment in your sales career.


Thank you to everyone who has downloaded one or 100+ episodes. I appreciate all of you.


Make sure to subscribe so that when Season Two starts, you will stay up to date.


And if you have any suggestions, ideas, or topics for the next season, make sure to reach out to me. Would love to hear your feedback and thoughts.

  • Show Transcript

    Welcome to the sales experience podcast. Welcome to episode 100 of the show. Now this episode is going to be a little bit different in that this isn’t about closing techniques, it isn’t about sales techniques, isn’t about strategies, it’s kind of a summary wrap up episode. So if you’re looking for specific sales-related tips, may or may not find them in here.


    However, I’m going to go through some of my favorite topics and kind of point you in the direction in case this is the first time you’re listening. Maybe you’re scrolling through podcasts and you’re thinking, oh, here’s a show that’s actually done a hundred episodes. Maybe I’ll listen to it. This one here, I’m going to point you in directions. If you’ve been listening to the show for all a hundred episodes, which I’m super happy cause I know there’s some of you that do, I can see how many people have subscribed and how many episodes are downloaded every single time.


    And if that’s you, I appreciate it. So this might be a summary, recap, a refresh, go back, listen to some of those episodes that might be effective for you right now in your sales career. But first off, thank you for listening to this. If you’re listening to this show, whether it’s right now when it’s being recorded and posted in August 2019 that’s great. I appreciate that.


    Thank you so much for doing that because hopefully that means you’re interested and dedicated to a sales experience that’s positive for you as well as your prospect. So again, this isn’t all about how do I get you to be more effective so that you can sell more, make more money, turn more prospects into customers. Yes, that is part of it, but it’s also for you, the salesperson or you, the sales manager, building a team. How can I help you with a sales experience that you’re happy to provide, that you’re proud of what you do, that you become and view yourself as a sales professional as a great career and a way that you’re helping people and all of this to overcome the stigma, which is my goal.


    Overcome that stigma of what a salesperson means to most of the world and how most people do not view that as a good thing. A lot of salespeople are embarrassed to call themselves salespeople because they know it has such a negative connotation. And so that’s why I did this show. And so I appreciate everyone who downloads a single episode because that means there’s some hope that your trying to build the right sales experience, you’re trying to do the right thing. You’re trying to make sure that you’re providing the right experience for you and your prospects and make the world a better place in what you’re doing. So I appreciate that.


    Now, this is episode 100 of the ones that I’ve recorded and however, technically there’s over a hundred with the guest episodes and all of the bonus ones that I put in there, but for me, the way that I am, I wanted to just keep the episodes that I do myself as the ones in order, and this is episode 100 now, in the very beginning of the show, I talked about mindset.


    There was one week, it was actually week two episodes six through 10 where I talked about mindset. I talked about being open, willing, also watching film was a big episode and I had guest episode with Richard Smith that week and we talked about watching film like they do in sports. So watching and listening to your sales interactions after the fact, keeping in mind everyone hates hearing themselves. Talk on a recording. Everyone’s the same way. I’m the same way. Most everybody feels that way. However, if you can get past that part, yeah, listen to your calls, listen for the feedback, get feedback from your manager with the goal of improving and being better and better whenever possible. I also did a week of sales mindset in particular, which was episode 61 through 65 where I talked specifically about sales specifically focused on a positive sales mindset, so make sure you check out those episodes in that week because that was a huge one for a lot of people I know who are in sales and struggle with things like rejection, trying to stay focused, winning other people on the team who are trying to drag them down, the mediocre people.


    I talked about sheep and crabs. Make sure to check out that episode number 64 where I went into that, and then just really building your sales success mindset. That’s so key. Then in weeks three and four episodes 11 through 20 I talked about the fundamentals, and I’ve mentioned this a lot in the last couple of weeks as well, but how to go through the stages that you can apply to any sales process. Again, whether it’s B2C or B2B, whether it’s in person, it’s over the phone, a product or service doesn’t matter.


    There’s some fundamentals that I have found over the years that should be applied to every sales process no matter what and you should have them in there. The order is very important as well and I covered them. But to summarize, you want to make sure that you build a rapport and then you have empathy, then trust and then hope and then urgency so that there’s some plan to move forward now and to take action.


    Now you’ve got to do those in that order. If you start out with urgency before you have rapport before empathy, trust, or hope, then you’re just that pushy salesperson and you’re going to repel people, right? If you go straight into hope, there’s no basis of it and it sounds like this weird false hopes. You want to make sure you do all of those in order and then apply that to it so you don’t have to do it exactly right the way that I would say it, because your product or service, your personality, the way you do it, whatever your company has given you as the sales process and tools is going to be different. And so just take that and apply it so when you’re building rapport, build rapport in the right way, doing it with the right focus, and then when you’re getting to a point where you’re offering a solution, that’s when the hope stage comes in and you should be able to give them a feeling of where they are going to be, whether they’re you’re solving their pain or you’re helping them achieve a goal, whatever that is, should be a hope and they should be excited about what you’re offering.


    Then I talked about referrals, so week five where it was episodes 21 through 25 that was all about referrals. I had a great episode with Jamie von back on there and that whole week was talking about referrals, which is tough for a lot of salespeople because a lot of salespeople are just so short minded. They’re thinking about today if they’re hunting for it today and they’re not planting seeds to farm for tomorrow. So if that’s you and you’re not generating a lot of referrals for yourself and for your business as a professional, make sure to listen to those episodes and get into that framework where you’re closing for today.


    You’ve got to eat for today, you’ve got to hunt for today, but then you’re also turning every single interaction into a seed you’re planting and then you’re nurturing for referrals down the road so that at some point that scale tips needing to go out and hunt for today and waking up and knowing that you’re in a desperate mode every single day.


    Two, waking up and knowing that you have something you can farm that’s right outside your door. And then if you also hunt, then that’s a bonus. So that wasn’t very important. We’d make sure you listen to those referral episodes. Again, episodes 21 through 25 I had a week where I talked about scripting and how to build a script. So if you’re a sales manager or a sales leader and you’re looking at what can I do to build the right script? There was some strategies. I talked about episodes 26 through 30 and then I talked about personalities. This was a huge week and I tried to do my best during episodes 31 through 42 put in as much as I could from what I generally teach in a four to six-hour seminar and session and then also reinforced with salespeople in person. I tried to put it in 10 episodes, which maybe I was pretty successful in it.


    I covered as much as I could, but obviously that’s the reader’s digest version and I couldn’t put as much information in there as I would love to do.


    If you’re interested in that, listen to those. If you want more information, more help about personalities or how to sell from a personality based system, which also includes not selling the way you want to buy, but selling how your prospect wants to buy, make sure to reach out to me, go to CutterConsultingGroup.com use the contact page or find my email on there. Send me an email. Let’s set up a time to talk. Let me help you or your team with this. Give you any strategy advice. We can do workshops they go, there’s all kinds of options. Make sure to reach out to me. You can also find me on LinkedIn. Just search Jason Cutter on there and you’ll find me.


    Then on the show here, I went through many, many weeks where I answered questions. If you have any ideas, any questions for sales that you’ve had that’s burning inside of you, go through those episodes. There’s a good chance I covered it. I answered some things in there which may have helped. Then to wrap this episode up, I also had telesales week, so if you’re in a telephone sales-based position, episode 66 through 70 I went through and talked about telephone sales specific strategies, things to help you with creating your sales experience over the phone in telephone sales specifically. Then I had a recruiting week where I talked to episode 71 through 75 if you’re in a position where you’re recruiting or hiring or needing to build a sales team, make sure to listen to that. Hopefully some pointers and tips to add to what you’re already doing.


    Again, nothing in the show, nothing in the sales experience is meant to replace what you’re doing or what your company has provided or the structure of systems that your company has. These are general tips. This my best attempt to give you general advice and not specific game changing advice to alter what your company is requiring you to do or how your structure is built. Now, if you want some specific company advice, reach out to me. Go to the website, find me on LinkedIn, you know, send me an email, let’s get on a call and then we can talk about some specific company targeted strategies and what you can do to change your company, whatever that process is, whether it’s a script, recruiting, management, whatever that looks like. Then let’s get on a phone call and I can give you some specifics and we can talk about specifics that fit in there and of course when we jump on that call, be fully prepared.


    I’m going to ask you a lot of questions. If you haven’t figured that out about me by now is my first approach is going to be asking lots of questions. Figuring out what you’re looking for, what you’re struggling with, and then I can give you some advice and help you with what I can. Last week I talked about sales tax, so if you’re in a position within your company where you’re in charge of the technology, whether you’re a manager or an owner, listen to those episodes. 91 through 95 I talked about some things, great technology that you can use with the fundamental purpose of filling in around your sales reps everything that you can so that they can be laser focused on just what they want to do, which is conversations with prospects, moving them towards closing the point of sales technologies should be, do enable them to focus on what they do best and fill in as many gaps as possible.


    And then this week has been all about closing and as I wrap up this episode, episode 100 which is funny that it happens to be the end of closing week and it’s episode 100 I have an announcement to make which is that I am wrapping up the sales experience podcast for now, so don’t worry, I haven’t given up on it.


    My initial goal was to do a hundred episodes and I had them planned out. I made some adjustments along the way. I got some feedback, I did some fun things, I talked to some great people and what I’ve decided to do is I am going to take a break from the show, so at a hundred episodes where I’m at right now, I am considering this the end of season one of the sales experience podcast, a lot of shows, TV shows, movies, they all have some kind of ending. They take a break, they retool, they record new ones, they come back for a different season and they give you more content, different content, you know, more storylines and that’s my goal with this instead of being a podcast.


    Yeah. Where it’s just ongoing. I want to take a break. I want to step back. I’m going to do some retooling with this different approach. The fundamentals will, we’ll study the same. My goal will always be to help you as a salesperson produce the best, greatest, most effective, most satisfying, most professional sales experience you can for yourself and for your prospects, but as of right now, that’s going to end season one.


    This wraps up episode 100 please make sure to subscribe though, because when I turn this back on and I hit the ground running, then these new episodes will start flying out. You want to make sure that you get them right and you have them as soon as they restart. I’ll be posting it online. I’ll be sending it out. If you want more information, you can always hit me up @ www.cutterconsultinggroup.com you can go to LinkedIn.


    You can find these shows everywhere that podcasts are available and that’s it for episode 100 thank you everybody who’s been listening, whether it’s one episode or all 110 with the guest episodes. Yeah. I appreciate all of you. So very much.


    And as always, remember that everything in life is sales, right? And people remember the experience you gave them.


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By Jason Cutter February 19, 2025
What does it take to build the ideal Sales Experience? Why does it even matter? Maybe you think you already have one. You are a professional sales ops leader. You have put everything you can in place to help your salespeople sell more. You have optimized the processes so that your sales team can focus on one thing – selling. But I promise – even if you think all of that is true, it’s not. The Reality: No Perfect Sales Experience Exists I have never seen any company or team with the ‘ideal’ Sales Experience and operation. And to be honest – I have never built one successfully. Why would I admit that? Because the ideal Sales Experience is aspirational and business, teams, processes, and customer needs/desires are constantly changing. So as soon as you put new processes in place, something else needs to change and evolve. The Scalable Sales Success Iceberg In my Scalable Sales Success Iceberg – there are 24 categories that, when built out, create a scalable sales machine – where you can add in an input and get way more output. I would love to see companies have all 24 categories set up and running optimally. But that’s not even possible – because, as I mentioned, things are always changing. Focusing on the Biggest Levers Here is the key – to build the ideal Sales Experience takes focus on the biggest levers. The ones that, when pulled, create the biggest and best results. There are many processes and systems that you can put in place – but those are going to get you a few percentage points of improvement. Instead of putting it all in here, I want to make you a special offer. Email me at jason@sellingeffectiveness.com with your mailing address, and I will mail you the book that I co-wrote with Nick Glimsdahl called Reasons Not To Focus On The Sales Experience. It will be your starter guide, facilitating the creation of your ideal Sales Experience.
By Jason Cutter February 18, 2025
The Numbers Game Mentality is a Losing Strategy Sales is no longer a “numbers game.” You cannot succeed, long term, by focusing on volume of activity. Making a million dials, sending a million emails, knocking on a million doors (the first two are way easier than that last one) is a scorched earth strategy that will sink your business. You can’t out-dial a bad sales process. It will lead to even more bad online reviews. You can’t out-email a terrible sales funnel process that requires people to jump through poorly planned hoops. You can’t out-knock your way past slimy tactics and bad products/services. The Danger of the "Every No Gets Me Closer to a Yes" Mindset The whole “every no gets me one step closer to a yes” mentally is dangerous. That mindset and strategy assumes that it’s a numbers game. That the only thing that matters is finding the right person who will buy from you. Potentially, no matter what you even say – they are just ready to buy. Not only will this destroy any online reputation you have it will also wreak havoc on your team. It is the fastest and best way to burn out your team. It will lead to a revolving door or hiring, training, and quitting as people realize how unfun the game is you have built and how hard it is to be successful. It will also feel like a mismatch – very few people (and hopefully even less over time) are long-term excited about the business model of calling 500 people a day in hopes of making a few sales. If It’s Not a Numbers Game, Then What Is It? It’s quality over quantity. [Now…note – it does take a certain quantity of activity to fill a sales pipeline. So I am not saying that your sales team can just sit and wait for people to fall into their pipeline with money in hand.] It’s about the Sales Experience. It’s about your team ensuring that they are providing the right and best experience for that potential customer – in a way that sets them up to get into the buying mood and mode. All that matters is the Sales Experience. How can you support your team in terms of the quantity of activity to fill a pipeline, and then the quality of interaction that leads to sales? What Does an Ideal Sales Experience Look Like? What does that look like – the ideal Sales Experience? It’s when your team understands that the potential customer they are speaking with only cares about themselves. They don’t care about the salesperson, your company or the product. They are only focused on themselves. It’s when the Discovery/Empathy portion of the conversation is the most important part. Does your team realize that everything after Discovery – when done right – is just a presentation of the solution? It’s the fact that when you combine the parts of the Authentic Persuasion Pathway (Rapport + Empathy + Trust + Hope + Urgency) that the assumptive close is all you need. If your team is having to ask for the sale they are doing sales wrong. And don’t confuse earning the right to close with asking for the sale. The Sales Leader’s Role in Creating a World-Class Sales Experience Your job as a sales leader is to ensure your team understands that the only thing – above all else – is the sales experience they provide to each potential customer. That customer knows that they have the power and the feeling of unlimited choice. Which means they will decide who to give their money to based on the experience they have with buying from a company. How can you shift your team away from the numbers game mentality to actually providing a world class sales experience to each and every person they speak with?
By Jason Cutter February 17, 2025
The Abundance of Options Today we all have lots of options. While writing this I could speak into my phone and order whatever I want. I can get food delivered before I finish writing this article. I could get a TV delivered to my door before I wake up tomorrow. When someone wants to buy something, they are armed with as much information as they want to access. They can research, read reviews, and watch videos about a product or company. The Shift in Power to the Buyer Because of this, the power balance of sales has shifted away from the salesperson and company to the buyer. Knowledge is power – and they now have all the knowledge they want. With knowing that they have ultimate choice of what to buy (internet and globalization has led to the ability to order anything you want from anywhere…so you are no longer limited to the stores you can drive to and what they have on hand), it means that everything is a commodity in their minds. Nothing is unique or special. Everything is interchangeable. Does the Sales Experience Even Matter? So, this means the sales experience doesn’t matter anymore. There is no reason to put effort into the sales process, the conversations with potential customers. No value in spending time trying to ‘help’ people – since they just view products, salespeople, and companies as interchangeable. You are not special, so there is no benefit in caring. They will walk into your store, and they will decide what they want. They fill out your online for, and they decide if they answer when you call and how the call will go. They walk up to your event/booth, and they decide how the interaction will go and if they want to listen to your elevator pitch. They will let you know if they are interested in moving forward. They will let you know how they want to buy. So, like I said above, there is no real value anymore in the sales experience. Or could it actually be valuable? Is it possible that all that matters IS the sales experience? If people feel they have ultimate information and control of the buying process, how do they decide on what to buy and who to buy from? When I search on Amazon for a product type I have never purchased before, how do I pick? When I want to go shopping for garden supplies for the house, how do I pick where to go? When I need to buy a new fridge, who will I hand my money over to? The cheapest place with terrible service? The place with reasonable prices and great service? The Sales Experience Shapes the Decision I choose based on the sales experience that I will receive. With everything else being equal, I (and I believe most people) will select the place to shop at or the products to buy online based on the experience I receive. To me all that matters is the experience. While I am trying to buy something. Once I receive it – ensure it does what I need it to do. With the feeling of unlimited choices, it can actually be harder now to buy something that in the past. People get into analysis paralysis more often. Which means that for consumers to buy something new they need help. They need a professional salesperson. They need a sales experience that matches their expectations. They want a guide who will help them make the right decision for them, with an experience that goes above and beyond what more people receive any more when they walk into a store, call a company’s toll-free number, or visit a website and have to fill out a form. If you want to succeed in sales – the only thing that matters is the sales experience you provide.
By Jason Cutter February 13, 2025
The Balance of Effort in Sales The blogs this week have been about the other person going most of the way. Whether it’s a prospective customer and your salesperson, where the salesperson truly can’t want the deal or make most of it happen for that customer to truly be successful. On the path for that prospect to becoming a customer, they should go at least 51/49. Whether it’s your team and their manager, the manager can’t want the team to succeed more than the team actually wants it for themselves. It’s not scalable for the coach (manager) to run on the field every play to win the game for the salespeople. What about sales ops processes and systems? What about the tools available to the sales team and the ones that are classified as sales enablement? In a reversal of philosophy, I believe the sales ops processes should go 90, the team should only have to go 10. Why Do We Need Salespeople? Let’s start where it matters – what is the point of having salespeople? I know many owners question the need and desire to have salespeople. They are hard to manage, tough to deal with, always want more money (potentially for doing less work and closing less deals), and are very resistant to change. Of course, that is a generalization. Of course, there are salespeople who don’t check those boxes. However, having worked with a lot of teams in a lot of industries, that generalization isn’t completely wrong or unfair. So if there is even a small part of that which is accurate, why would we even mess with the messiness of having salespeople? Of needing to employ and manage humans? The Human Element in Sales We need them. That’s why. Even in 2025, AI and technology has not successfully replicated the requirements of sales – which is about helping a human (prospect/customer) make the right decision and move outside of their comfort zone to buy something new. It still takes your human (salesperson) to persuade that other human. It’s why I say all the time that its not B2B, B2C, Retail, SaaS, etc. – it’s H2H. Sure, people can buy something online or even in a store without speaking to someone. But if it’s a considered purchase where there are options and decisions to be considered – it still takes a human being involved. That means ultimately your human (salesperson) has one job, and one job only – persuade the right prospective humans to buy. Minimizing Distractions for Salespeople Everything outside of that mission, task, focus is a distraction that takes away from their highest and best use. Imagine if we had a surgeon who had to prep the room, prep the patient, schedule the surgery and meetings, and do all the parts of the surgery themselves. Nope – they show up for the surgery and do what they do best. Then they take off their gown, gloves, and walk away to get cleaned up and move on to the next thing. Your goal as a sales ops leader is to support the team with systems and processes that allow them to focus on the one thing you need them for. The human part. It would be amazing if they could show up, talk to people, and make sales happen. Of course, there is more that they (and any professional) need to do before, during, and after the sales conversation. But your goal is to minimize all that. Every hour that your salespeople aren’t selling or doing sales-related activities, they aren’t moving revenue forward. The Ultimate Goal of Sales Ops What processes can you put in place that go 90 percent of the way, where the salesperson can do the last 10 percent? An example would be building an email campaign that runs automatically, and when the right people reply, the salesperson gets involved in getting that person from email to phone call. Another example would be your CRM serving up people for the salesperson to call – leads or anyone in the sales pipeline flow – with all the backstory, research, data, intel needed for them to review it then take action. What can you put into place that takes away as much distraction and effort from your sales team such that they can focus on the one thing you need to focus on – other humans?
By Jason Cutter February 12, 2025
The Danger of Doing Too Much as a Sales Leader Alright – so maybe they don’t need to go 90. In true servant leadership mode, you would go way more than 10% of the way to your team. But you have to be careful, as a sales leader. The inclination might be to do it all for them. To help them close their sales. To make excuses for them to your leadership as to why they aren’t closing more sales. Especially considering the very high likelihood that you are a sales manager because you were a great salesperson in the role that you are now managing. And there is a slight chance that you are a player-coach…so you are leading and selling. This can make it really tough not to want to run out on the field to win the game each time. But that doesn’t scale. That doesn’t lead to increased results. You can only sell so much as one person. Creating a Culture of Ownership So, you need to have people on your team that are coming to you. What does that look like? The pinnacle is a salesperson who doesn’t close a deal, comes to you right away and asks for feedback. They want some critiques as to where they could have done things better, different that would have led to the desired result – a closed sale. That takes a healthy level of ego by a professional who has the ultimate growth mindset. They know there are always ways to improve. They want to improve. And they are willing to risk their ego (and the internal, protective, primal part of our brain that doesn’t want to risk our place in the tribe) by asking for feedback that could be negative. Whenever you can, encourage that type of response. Ensure that the team knows that the team itself, and you as their leader, is a safe space – where the goal is to improve, grow, win and that everything done to support each other is done in that mode. They truly have to feel safe to share their mistakes and to get support in learning how to do more, better. Feedback That Drives Growth Part of this takes team and individual meetings that are actually filled with positive support. That doesn’t mean it’s always positive, motivational fluff. It’s not even about the shallow strategy of the feedback sandwich. Its about being real, honest, and empathetic – meaning “I see you are here, I know you want to be there, I will help you get there – even if its hard and it means saying hard things.” It should never feel mean or abusive or like an attack. But you can give some really direct feedback that will sting that ego I mentioned, but the person will know the intent behind it. The second part is hiring this type of person. Hiring people for the team that wants to win, grow, succeed. And they know that you don’t get better by being coddled, sheltered, or protected. You want people who don’t like the thought of perpetually living safely in their comfort zone. And they are excited about the opportunity to be a part of a team that pushes everyone, empathetically, outside of their comfort zone. Are You Leading or Just Managing? If you find yourself as a leader having to push your team, or going to them most of the time, or most of the way mentally – then they see you as a manager not a leader. They see you as someone who manages them, pushes them, and wants them to do things they don’t want to do. I have written some blogs here that go into what your role should be – as a leader, not a manager. Pulling people along with you, inspiring people, and supporting yourself with a team of people who want to win. Not just those that want to show up, do as little as they can and hopefully go unnoticed (yet – complain about not making enough money and how the comp plan isn’t fair, or the leads are bad, or their schedule means they can’t be successful.) Make sure your team knows that they need to come to you – at least 51/49. They should be asking for help, guidance, training, feedback, and support more than you are having to push it down onto them.
By Jason Cutter February 3, 2025
If you have seen the movie Hitch, then you know the scene. Will Smith’s character (Hitch) is trying to coach Kevin James’ character (Albert) on how to finish out his upcoming first date. He is giving him pointers, one being that if his date fumbles with her keys at the door, it could mean she wants a kiss. So Hitch wants to see if Albert knows what to do – for a good night kiss. Hitch gives him the advice “you go 90 percent, and then wait for her to go 10%” which Albert then asks “wait for how long?” Hitch: “as long as it takes.” Albert leads in, Hitch is holding back to see if Albert will wait, and then Albert goes all the way and gives him a kiss. Hitch gets upset, and says “You go 90, I go 10 – you don’t go the whole 100%.” The Sales Analogy Kissing our prospective customers is not acceptable (just ask HR!). But the concept is the same. You don’t want to ever make 100% of the effort for your prospective customers. You don’t want to be the one who is doing all the work. Fundamentally, it is not good practice to want the deal more than the other person. When you go your 90, you need to wait – as long as it takes – for the prospect to go to their 10. And I would say that you want to go somewhere between 10-49, in reality. How Successful Sales Professionals Balance Effort Successful sales professionals know how far they have to go to meet the prospect where they are, while also knowing how much effort the prospect needs to put in to show they are committed. Where most salespeople get in trouble is they get desperate. They want the sale (kiss) more than the other person and they go the full 100%. Of course, persistence is important. And you won’t get what you don’t ask for (although…if you have followed me for any length of time, you will know I am very against having to ask for the sale). But you also have to ensure that your prospects actually want what you are selling. And they want it for their reasons and their motivations. They are driven to pursue your production option(s). They must go 10, 40, 60% of the way to you. The Pitfall of Chasing Your Prospect Just like courtship and relationships – if you find yourself chasing and one-sided-pursing the other person then it means you want it more than they do. It also means they own you. You are essentially begging them for the relationship – convincing, manipulating, begging, bribing, persuading your way forward. Which means they consciously and/or subconsciously know that they are in control. Because if they say no, you will keep pursuing and offering solutions. In sales – that looks like a salesperson who is calling, emailing, stalking a prospect – making offers, offering discounts and trials, and trying to find any way to make deal work. They are going 90-100% of the way for the prospect, not requiring them to go anywhere towards the agreement. This will end terribly. If they do decide to buy – taking the discount, free trial, taking the sale bait – they will not be happy (since they weren’t bought in for their reasons), they will look for reasons confirming why they didn’t really want to buy anyway, and they will know that they own you. Your company will have to convince them on a regular basis to stay in the relationship. The Right Balance for Customer Ownership You fundamentally need that prospective customer to come to you. Not 100% where you are just an Order Taker. But potentially 51% of the way – so they want it more than you. The more you can get them across that 50/50 threshold, the more they will be a satisfied customer. But remember – at 51/49 – they still need persuading, they still need to understand the value of your product for where they ultimately want to be in their life/business, and they still need your support. They lean in the right amount, you lean in the right amount = sales magic!
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