Helpful Centers

June 13, 2008

Web DevelopersSell More Websites in the Next Week Than You Have in The Last Year?

Filed under: Sales Management — admin @ 9:13 pm

I’m going to give you a hint that I have used in my sales training classes for web developers that explodes their results

  • stop selling websites,

      • start selling “more customers” or “more leads.”

In every sales training class I’ve done my students STRUGGLE with the concept that they shouldn’t be selling their products or services, they should be selling what the customer really wants and then they have trouble finding what the customer really wants.

So, let’s think this through. Why does a prospect buy a website from you? Think hard.

Let’s look back at the thought process of a typical prospect. Most, at least in their head, have started thinking that a website will bring them leads or more clients. So, when someone approaches them to sell them a website, some, in their heads, are thinking, website = more leads. Other prospects haven’t even gotten that connection, but they STILL want more customers. So, help them make the connection.

Instead of selling the website, go sell more leads or more customers through the use of YOUR website, but you’d better be able to deliver on that promise, or you’ll be in trouble.

I had a web developer client that hired me to help him develop his internet marketing. The first thing we did was make sure that all of his search engine listings and his pay-per-click listings were talking about the number of new clients that a typical prospect has gotten from them. 2-3 weeks later they had jumped from a $300K business to a $1M business.

So, far so good, great as a matter of fact, $1M was their target when we started working together.

However, there was still a gap in their internet marketing. We had raised their traffic 3 times, and their bottom line 3 times. However, when we looked at the website, they were still using the old copy talking about their product. Their conversion of traffic to leads to buyer was 0.7%, not what I like to see for my clients. I want to see at least 5%.

So, we rewrote the website copy, this time talking about the number of new clients that others had gotten. We uploaded their new copy to the site. One hour later they had jumped from 9 clients a week to 13 in the last hour, a fantastic jump.

  • Stop selling websites.

    • Sell the results–more leads, more prospects, more customers,

        • Then help your website viewer find the value of those leads by telling them just how many your customers have gotten.

    Your sales will go through the roof, guaranteed!

    Alan Boyer - EzineArticles Expert Author

    Alan Boyer, is a Small Business Coach and Sales Coach to website developers and internet marketers doubling most businesses in weeks.

    Sign up on his website to receive his Hints and Tips to Double Your Business emails.

    Helping Companies Worldwide Reach Further Than They EVER thought possible….FASTER

    mailto:AlanBoyer@leaders-perspective.com

  • April 14, 2008

    Finding Sales Leads and Contacts goes Hi-Tech

    Filed under: Sales Management — admin @ 6:51 pm

    Finding Sales Leads and Contacts goes Hi-Tech

    Where sales people used to spend lots of time prospecting for
    leads and cold calling, now they can simply log on to the
    Internet and buy, sell or even trade leads and contacts at a new
    website.

    Run a quick search on Google and you will find over 400, 000
    listings under the term “sales prospecting”. Most of the
    listings involve list brokers, marketing companies who supply
    leads and lists or actual articles on how to effectively Finding
    Sales Leads and Contacts goes Hi-Tech use your time to find and
    generate new sales leads.

    Traditional sales prospecting involves making cold calls. Either
    by telephone or dropping in on the prospective client or
    customer. These are time-tested means of acquiring contacts to
    sell to. And they do work.

    Many sales people would tell you though, that these methods
    usually require a lot of time and effort. In fact, when I worked
    as a professional sales person for a direct mail advertising
    company, I was spending nearly 80% of my time cold calling and
    qualifying leads. The majority of this time was spent trying to
    determine who would actually be making the buying decision.

    Although there are numerous low tech ways of dealing with this
    issue such as using direct mailing and telemarketing, up until
    now there has been few ways of networking with other sales
    professionals to actually exchange leads and contacts. Some
    networking events such as Chamber of Commerce meetings and
    Professional Sales Organizations “meet and greets” do allow a
    sales person to network with other sales persons to exchange
    contacts information, however, the time invested in these sorts
    of activities could be extensive for the results.

    A new hi tech way for sales people to exchange, trade and even
    buy and sell contact information has emerged on the Internet via
    a website. This website is formatted as an online marketplace
    for contacts. A sales professional can enter the contact
    information they have for a certain company and then is credited
    to their account with the right to then select 2 different
    contacts for their one.

    This membership website gives salespersons two different options
    for getting contact information. They can enter whatever
    contacts they have for trade, or for a minimum membership fee;
    simply buy the contact information they desire. It is apparent
    that the venture capital industry sees the benefit of such a
    service as well.

    Recently this website’s principals secured two rounds of venture
    capital to build and manage this site. The initial round
    garnered $750,000 dollars to build the website itself. And then
    in a second round of capitalization received over 5 Million
    dollars to ensure the long-term operations of the site.

    According to the website itself, there are already over 250,000
    contacts at over 30,000 companies already available with over
    2000 Vice Presidents of Marketing listed as well as over 60,000
    IT Professionals.

    Currently sales people who want to start using the system can do
    so with a free 2-week trial. The two-week trial includes the
    above-mentioned offer of 2 contacts for every contact entered.
    All contacts include both telephone number and email address. To
    find out more about this new hi tech service for getting
    contacts and sales leads please visit,
    http://recommended.bravehost.com/jigsaw.html

    April 6, 2008

    This Is Your Year To Be BOLD!

    Filed under: Sales Management — admin @ 1:59 pm

    WOW!! Can you believe it is 2006?

    Doesn’t it seem like yesterday that we were drinking champagne
    bringing in the new century??

    6 years have gone by since then. What have YOU filled them with?

    This Is Going To Be Your Felt-Marker Year!

    You’ve seen them - those fabulous huge felt markers that little
    kids love coloring with. They leave a BOLD mark!

    One thing this Sales Diva knows - that unless you plan something
    BOLD every year- life has a way of tip-toeing past you.

    And all you are left with is bills, excuses and the odd gray
    hair (Ok - a heck of a lot of gray hair!)

    This decade is almost 60% over - wouldn’t you like to KICK IT UP
    A NOTCH?

    Why Is Selling About Being Bold?

    Listen - being “vanilla” in this world gets you absolutely
    nowhere.

    Your customer - and potential customers - want to buy from
    people/companies they trust, admire, respect and overall LOVE!

    If you are blending in with the crowd, copying what others are
    doing and basically COASTING - I have some tough news for you.

    You are going to keep STRUGGLING.

    However, if you make a BOLD impact with your customers on what
    you deliver, how you HELP THEM GROW, how BOLDLY easy it is to
    work with you - they will start lining up at the doors.

    I don’t know about you - but I only buy from businesses that
    have heart and passion and who show me VALUE.

    I simply don’t have time for anything or anyone who pride
    themselves on being “vanilla”.

    I DIVA-DARE YOU!

    Quit being average. Quit being so afraid of taking a chance.
    Quit playing it so damn safe!

    Your business and your customers need you to be EVEN MORE of who
    you are.

    You are already pretty amazing. But you know what I am talking
    about - deep down there are some things you have been coasting
    on…and they bug you.

    Bring your ideas to the light of day. Expose them - do a pilot
    project - fly the kite! You will be THRILLED at what being BOLD
    will do for you - and the wonderful OPPORTUNITIES that will be
    attracted to you.

    This BOLD DIVA believes in you!

    Copyright© 2006

    April 5, 2008

    Sales Management - What’s Involved? Part 1

    Filed under: Sales Management — admin @ 7:48 am

    What any individual Sales Manager actively does is conditioned by the size of their company, the products it sells and the way they are sold, the organisation of functions within it, and perhaps their own special ability. They may carry most or all of the responsibilities which would be those of a Marketing Manager, if this position does not exist within their company.

    Essentially, however, the task of the Sales Manager is to produce revenue for their company through the operations of the sales staff for whom they are responsible. The size of this revenue, and the profit (however defined) which it should show, are usually predetermined in order to achieve the aims of company policy. The objectives which they set for the various activities which are involved in carrying out this task should therefore be derived from, and be compatible with, company objectives, such as return on capital employed, cash flow, market position, growth.

    CHARACTERISTICS OF THE SALES MANAGER’S JOB

    • Many of the factors which affect success are not within their control (such as competitors and government legislation)

    • They are nevertheless required to forecast future sales and to plan their operation accordingly, using their judgement and experience.

    • They must depend on other departments for the design, production, quality and delivery of products for which they obtain orders, just as

    those departments must depend on them to get these orders.

    • The sales staff that they rely on to produce the results they have planned for, are for most of the time working alone, not under their immediate control.

    • They are engaged in a constant struggle to obtain increased sales

    against competitors with the same aim.

    Although the basic functions and skills of management, discussed later, apply to their job, it is clear that such qualities as creativeness, flexibility, tenacity, and ability to deal effectively with people, will be particularly important. At the same time the ability to analyse market situations and form sound judgements on them, is equally necessary but may not sit easily with the kind of qualities mentioned.

    THE SELLING ROLE
    Since, like other managers, the Sales Manager depends on those who work for them to produce the results by which they are judged, consideration of their job can usefully continue by examining the nature and characteristics of industrial selling and, hence, of the salesperson’s job.

    Personal selling is only one of several possible ways of communicating with customers and potential customers but, particularly where industrial goods are concerned, is undoubtedly the most effective in terms of achieving the objective - influencing the decision to buy. It is also, even though selling costs may be a small percentage of revenue, expensive. Sales staff should therefore be treated as a scarce resource, to be used as effectively as possible.

    Selling itself is a process of bringing persuasion to bear, to;

    - Awaken awareness of a need or problem

    - Establish that the need can be satisfied by a particular type of product

    - Convince the prospective user that the salesperson’s own product can offer a superior satisfaction.

    The actual selling job for a particular product or company may embrace all three of these stages, the last two, or the last only, depending on the situation requirements.

    - An innovatory product, hitherto unknown

    - A product for which there are alternatives

    - An established market in which the user can choose from a number of makes.

    For economy of effort the salesperson’s task (and perhaps the kind of person required) should be defined accordingly.

    OTHER TASKS OF THE SALES STAFF
    Although selling is the basic justification of the salesperson’s existence and The Sales Manager’s purpose in employing them, all sales staff have to spend part of their time doing other things (e.g. travelling and preparing reports). Sales staff are, however, often also required to:

    - Provide technical information other than that strictly needed to make a sale

    - Give some kind of after-sales service

    - Conduct market research (going beyond the normal, essential supply of market intelligence about customers, competitors, etc)

    - Check credit status of potential customers

    It may or may not be that the salesperson is the best person to do such things as these. As, however, he is a scarce resource, expensive, and employed to obtain orders, the cost-effectiveness of using them for such purposes compared with other means should be examined - remembering also that there may be some loss of sales to take into account (the “opportunity cost”)

    THE SALES MANAGER’S RESPONSIBILITY FOR SALES STAFF
    Some characteristics common to most forms of selling are:

    - Smaller sales forces in industrial selling than consumer goods selling, usually dealing with a very much smaller number of clients

    - Responsibility and power to make decisions vested in the
    individual salesperson

    - The need often to deal with a number of people in the customer company in order to achieve buying decisions.

    These characteristics must influence the nature of the Sales Manager’s responsibility for their sales staff and the forms it takes.

    One effect may well be that a good deal of the market analysis and planning which is part of the Sales Manager’s responsibility, is delegated to sales staff who, to this extent, are the managers of their own territory. If this is so, the need for clear objectives and adequate overall control is stronger than if sales staff were more closely directed. This also emphasises the importance of good communication and information, flowing in both directions.

    The Sales Manager’s general responsibilities for his sales staff may be summarised:

    • Planning

    He is given resources, human and financial, and has to plan to use
    those in the most effective combination to achieve predetermined
    results. They can do this only by knowing his staff and understanding
    the nature and behaviour of costs.

    • Organising

    The way in which he develops his sales staff - whether on a general or territorial basis, or. specialising in types of product or by class of customer or end user - should derive from a study of the market, taking into account also the qualifications and the experience of the sales staff.

    • Training

    As products, markets and objectives tend to be continually developing
    and changing, training also should be a continuous process. With small
    sales forces, formal training presents difficulties, but the need to always
    seek a higher standard of performance remains.

    • Control

    This involves setting targets and standards for measurement of performance, and taking appropriate action when they are not met.

    • Motivation

    Motivation implies two effects in the sales staff: the right attitude to their job and willingness to play their part to the best of their ability in achieving aims set by their manager. It results partly from training, partly from incentives (financial and other), and perhaps most of all from the leadership given by their manager. Regular appraisal of performance and attitudes by discussion with the sales force, and observation of their work, are important for this purpose.

    RECRUITMENT OF SALES STAFF

    Selecting a person who will become a successful member of the sales force for any particular company is very difficult, whether they are appointed from within the company or are recruited from outside. It is often made more difficult than it need be by the lack of an adequate specification of the job the sales person is to do and, derived from this, a specification of the kind of person who might be likely to succeed. Such specifications introduce some objectivity into the selection process and provide some measures of comparability between candidates.

    The importance of the sales person to their company, and the considerable investment made in them, justify a systematic approach to the ways in which, as a candidate, they are assessed and decisions are made about them. The validity of assumptions made about them at the time of appointment should be checked against subsequent performance, and the reasons for mistakes investigated.

    The subjective element in selection will never be eliminated, and in at least one respect it is a valid criterion. The person chosen must “fit in” to the team comprising the Sales Manager and their sales force. If they do not do so, no matter how suitable their qualifications and experience may be, friction is likely to ensue.

    THE NATURE OF MANAGEMENT

    A Sales Manager may or may not be an outstanding sales person. The important thing is that he should be a good manager. This is their individual and unique contribution to their company.

    The essentials of management are:
    Measurement or assessment
    Planning, which includes organising
    Direction and control

    Plans, and the direction and control of activities to put the plans into effect, depend on the collection and analysis of information, from which decisions are made.

    The initial plans (say for 12 months, on which a budget will be based) results from analysis of the market and environmental factors (such as economic conditions) and from the assessment of the resources available to the manager. Control requires an input of information about performance which has to be measured against the standards set in the plans. Where there are discrepancies the manager must decide what to do about them.

    The two basic requirements for good management (apart from personal qualities which make the manager an acceptable leader) are therefore:

    Adequate information
    Decisions which take account of the relevant information

    Adequate information about markets is hard to get, and the cost of obtaining it may outweigh the advantages of having it. The Sales Manager is therefore often in the position of having to make decisions on the basis of incomplete information or assumptions. They must then rely to some extent on past experience and their own judgement of the probability that this or that will happen. The important thing in these circumstances it to record (preferably in writing) the assumptions that have been made so that, if subsequently information becomes available which falsifies these assumptions, some assessment can be made of consequences for plans based on them.

    Jonathan Farrington - EzineArticles Expert Author

    The moral right of the author, Jonathan Farrington, has been asserted.
    All rights reserved.

    This publication or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording, storage in an information retrieval system or otherwise, unless this notification of copyright is retained.

    Jonathan Farrington is a business coach, mentor, author and consultant, who has helped hundreds of companies and thousands of individuals around the world achieve their full potential and consequently, optimum performance levels.

    Prior to setting up his own consultancy, Jonathan earned his spurs succeeding in some of the most demanding and competitive market sectors. Challenging assignments took him from the Middle East and Africa to Europe and the USA, providing him with the opportunity to work with a number of the largest and most successful international corporations including: - IBM, Wang, Legal and General, Andersen Consulting, Litton Industries and The Bank of Tokyo.

    In 1995, Jonathan formed jfa with the primary objective to deliver unique leadership and sales team development programmes to both the corporate and SME sectors. Since then, he has authored in excess of three hundred skills development programmes, designed a range of unique and innovative process tools and written extensively on organisational and sales team development.
    http://www.jonathanfarrington.com