Posted at 10:45 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 12:19 AM in A-Player Planning | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 12:35 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
One of the most rewarding, exciting part of being in sales for me is getting to meet and work with so many new and interesting people. You can learn so much about business, the world and life from customer relationships, especially so if you are interested in your customer's success as much as your own. Dale Carnegie'sclassic How to Win Friends and Influence Peopleis as true today as when he wrote it in the 30s. Another guy I aspire to, John Costigan, likes to say, "be interested, not interesting". It's really that simple because to be "interested" you must...ask questions, be curious, whereas to be "interesting" you must...talk.
I get calls from a lot of salespeople - and let's face it, we salespeople are easy marks for our peers, especially those with talent, because we're most empathetic. There are a couple of things that drive me nuts when I get a sales call. First, I hate it when the caller doesn't ask me if it's a bad time to talk and just launches into a pitch. It's just not respectful and it reduces the callers credibility right off the bat. One of my favorite sales questions is "Did I catch you at a bad time?" - one of my guys used to throw in "terribly bad time", because while it may not ever be a "good" time, it is most often not a "terribly bad" time. You've got 15-30 seconds to engage - the last thing you want is for the prospect to be thinking of the meeting they have in 2 minutes or thinking of the call they were expecting from the same area code. If you are not employing this simple courtesy, make it a habit now. My Mom teases me because I even ask her when I call on the weekend!! "What happens if the prospect says it's a bad time?", an executive asked me the other day. Simple - you ask whether morning or afternoon is best to try them again and then do it. Often times, the contact will go ahead and engage right then because you are different than the other callers...
Another basic mistake I see all the time is reps not doing their homework. I'll get a call and the person knows zero about my business - no reference to shared connections, customers or partners or general questions that are out of context. There is just no excuse for this with the unprecedented availability of information - see Google, Bing, LinkedIn, whatever! So I lose interest immediately though I never hang up without closure because I do believe in a certain level of sales karma.
I already mentioned diarrhea of the mouth as a problem, but I want to rehash a topic a covered in the SE Whisperer. It seems fairly obvious, but I'm still seeing salespeople interrupting customers. I grew up in the business with a bit of the old school. One of my mentors, John Waisath, was a 30 year veteran when he took me under his wing at the Sharp dealership. He taught me that if you spoke before the customer after you asked a question, that you "lost". What it is you lose is credibility and whatever perspective and/or information you would have gained from the customer answering the original question.
I've had this happen to me where a salesperson asked a really thought provoking question and as I thought deeply about the answer, they stepped all over themselves thereby changing my answer and delaying the insight that would have been gained by the original question!! This often happens in team selling, where a manager or technical resource thinks they've got "the line" on the customer's thinking. So you ask a question and they answer on behalf of the customer - unbelievable! When I'm working with new people, I tell the team before a call that even if I ask the customer a completely idiotic question like what color underwear they are wearing to wait for the answer.
Most of these interruptions can be explained by many salespeople's discomfort with silence. But some of it comes with experience - thinking they've "heard it all", I believe many just try to show customers that they understand their problems by trying to complete their sentences. There is a better way! Listen, be curious, understand then share relevant customer success stories.
Here is an idea for you next time you are sharing dinner or drinks with your best customers. Ask them to share with you the top three reasons why they do business with your company, what they like and dislike about salespeople, how they let people in their "inner circle", etc. Ask for stories, laugh, learn...and send the good ones my way!
Do you Grok it?
Posted at 11:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
It's been a busy couple of weeks for SalesGrok. Lots of selling, planning and travelling! We even took a vacation to Riviera Maya, Mexico. Yes, we survived the pandemic! Ironically there were more people in Austin, Texas with the swine flu than in Cancun...go figure.
I've been thinking a lot about Marketinglately. I was wondering how many of you out there are 100% satisfied with your company's marketing efforts... hmm? There is a decades old love-hate relationship between these departments. When you strip away all the intricacies, it comes down to these basic facts: Sales always want more and better leads and Marketing believes all the leads are golden and Sales doesn't manage them well enough. We should talk about how marketing automation technology can eliminate this barrier another time - companies like Eloquaand ExactTargethave absolutely addressed this paradigm.
At the moment, I'm thinking about event marketing (not event-based marketing...this time!) because my company put on a stellar executive summit in Boston last week. I'd like to share some of the details, highlights and lessons learned.
With all of the noise - hundreds of emails, webinars, banner ads, cold calls, etc., etc. we get on a daily basis - the opportunity to get face to face time is invaluable. What better way to strengthen relationships with existing customers while developing relationships with prospective customers than to bring them together? What if you could have your customers tell your prospects about your solutions and how you helped them achieve success? Powerful!
We call the summit Metamorphosisto mark the evolution of technology and our business. This was the 9th installment of a series we kicked of in 2005. Metamorphosis has been an extremely sucessful forum for our people, partners and customers to collaborate, learn, teach, and network in a fast-paced, highly interactive environment. Every year the event has gotten bigger and better...so much so that the return is greater than any other industry event we sponsor.
This year the turnout was fantastic even with the economy still sputtering along - a great indicator for the value of our technology! Our speakers and honored guests included industry titans like Bob Andersonof Gartner, Jeff Kaplanof ThinkStrategies, Dean Robison of Salesforce.com, Sanjay Jainof Microsoft, Chris Broylesof Daptiv and Lonnie Willsof CloudTrigger. OpSourcejoined us as a platinum sponsor, which was very cool since they brought another dozen attendees with them!
THE highlight of the event was our customers and partners! They delivered more than two-thirds of the content for the event with solid, real-world presentations about how they solved business and technical challenges with our technology. Take a look at the agenda to witness the quality and depth of the speakers.
Lesson learned:
-Give back - Make it easy for your customers to get involved. We funded local transportation, lodging and meals for all qualified attendees.
-Lose the spin - Avoid "pitching" your company and/or products. A brief overview is appropriate, but be pithy and focus on customer success, industry trends and business value.
-Keep it real - Encourage your customers to speak frankly about the positives and the negatives associated with their experience.
-Be spontaneous - we organized a bus tour to the Boston Commons for a pub crawl. The fun we had will not soon be forgotten!
-Follow through - The execution of a great event is the first step. It is critical to enroll participants in post-event materials - audio/video, blogs, analyst reviews, PR, etc. - to foster the relationship, keep the momentum going and to facilitate a viral effect as attendees share the event with their colleagues.
Would be interested in your feedback on what your company doing right now to drive demand...please share!
Do you Grok it?
Posted at 08:24 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
This post is brought to you by Peter Cohan, author of Great Demo! and founder of the Second Derivative, an organization dedicated to delivering innovation and consistent success to the process of creating and delivering software demonstrations. Peter has over 20 years in senior management, sales and marketing roles so enjoy and take it to heart...for the love of the customer!
We often hear the question, “How much of our company’s corporate overview
presentation should we include in customer meetings?” Good question.
The answer: as little as possible! Many salespeople and technical staff feel comfortable opening a meeting with a “brief” overview of their company. Most customers refer to this as “Death by "PowerPoint”!
Why? Because at the beginning of such a meeting, the customer is not interested in the vendor’s history. The customer is interested is seeing if the vendor can help the customer address their Critical Business Issues (CBI’s) or enable the customer to achieve their objectives.
Making the customer wait and listen to 3, 6, 10 or more slides from a standard corporate overview presentation about the vendor is just cruel! Instead, start the meeting with a “Situation Slide”. In the case of a follow-up meeting that takes place after an initial meeting, this slide simply recalls the information gathered previously from during qualification/discovery discussion(s).
You should list:
The customer’s name and job title for each major player or department.
The CBI’s, Reasons, and Specific Capabilities needed for each player or
department.
The Delta for each situation (you may want to create a Situation Slide for each major player or department involved).
The “Critical Business Issue” (CBI) is a problem that the customer sees as important enough to invest resources to address. It is best to use the customer’s words, such as, “I’m concerned about our ability to achieve our forecasted revenues this year”, which might come from a VP of Sales. In your Situation Slide you would re-phrase this as:
• VP of Sales, Acme Software
• CBI: Concerned about achieving forecasted revenues
A “Reason” is the issue behind the top-level problem that makes it a problem. In our example above, a typical Reason might be expressed by our VP of Sales as, “The reason I’m concerned about making our numbers this year is that we are having difficulty closing the technical sale – there is miscommunication and misalignment between our salespeople and the pre-sales Systems Engineers, and their demos are simply not getting the job done!” Your growing Situation Slide would then look like this:
• VP of Sales, Acme Software
• CBI: Concerned about achieving forecasted revenues
• Reason(s): Not closing the technical sale, due to miscommunication and
unsuccessful demos
The “Specific Capabilities” are those capabilities expressed by the customer as needed to address the CBI. Our VP of Sales might say, “We need training to improve the communications within the Sales Teams and to enable our demos to generate a ‘Wow!’ response on the part of our customers.” The Situation Slide would reflect this:
• VP of Sales, Acme Software
• CBI: Concerned about achieving forecasted revenues
• Reason(s): Not closing the technical sale, due to miscommunication and
unsuccessful demos
• Specific Capabilities: Intra-Sales Team communications and
demonstration effectiveness training
Finally, the “Delta” is a measure of the difference between the way things are today vs. with a solution in place. In our example, the VP of Sales might share that, “Right now it looks like we are about $1,500,000 short of achieving our annual quota.” The complete Situation Slide would then look like this:
• VP of Sales, Acme Software
• CBI: Concerned about achieving forecasted revenues
• Reason(s): Not closing the technical sale, due to miscommunication and
unsuccessful demos
• Specific Capabilities: Intra-Sales Team communications and demonstration effectiveness training
• Delta: $1,500,000 in annual revenues
Situation Slides enable the sales team to “recall the facts” and start the meeting with the customer’s issues. By presenting the Situation Slide, the sales team can confirm that (1) their information is correct and accurate or (2) determine whether there have been any changes since the last meeting with the customer.
In the case of an introductory meeting, you would use the same format for the Situation Slide, but instead of listing the specific customer’s Situation you may need to list another, similar customer’s situation (known as a “Reference Story” and sanitized to remove any confidential customer information or specific names).
Once the facts have been recalled or the Reference Story presented, you have the choice either to drill deeper into qualification questions (particularly if the meeting is “Vision Generation” in purpose) or proceed directly into a demo or other method of offering proof.
When should you present the information in the corporate overview? The answer is when the customer asks for it, specifically. Once you have shown that you have capabilities that can help the customer address their business issues, then the customer will begin to ask questions about your company – and, the answers then have relevance. For example, if the customer is contemplating a deployment into three countries, then they may ask, “Do you have sales and support offices in the U.S., Germany, and France?” Providing the answer at the beginning of the meeting makes no sense (particularly if your standard presentation describes showing sales, customer service, customization, and training offices in 54 countries around the world – the customer is only interested in the three regions they occupy).
Most corporate presentations are entirely vendor-focused. As an exercise, review your corporate overview presentation from a customer’s perspective. Ask yourself, “What information really captures my interest?” It is likely that the answer will be, “Very little!”
As a final tip, for sales and marketing teams that simply must start with a corporate overview, work to reduce it to a single slide that focuses on the top-level business issues that your tools address.
Focus on the customer’s interests first - and enjoy the rewards of crisper sales!
Copyright © The Second Derivative – All Rights Reserved.
Do you Grok it?
Posted at 12:35 AM in C-level Communication | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
To never stop learning is a common philosophy of top performers. There are myriad methods for continuing your education and personal development, such as higher education (MBA), executive seminars (Selling Power), sales training, interacting with a mentor and reading (or listening:) to books.
Over the years, I've learned some of my best stuff from reading the great sales leaders like Zig Ziglar, Tom Hopkins and Neil Rackham. One of my favorite interview questions is to ask what the candidate is currently reading. There was a candidate who told me they were reading SPIN Sellingand even had the book on the nightstand because it was so great. When I asked who wrote it and what SPIN stood for, the silence was deafening...ouch!
My goal is to consume a business book every 2-3 weeks. I believe that getting just one solid, actionable idea is worth the cover price. Now don't get me wrong, non-fiction is important as well. We all need a quality diversion now and again and you'll look pretty damn boring reading some sales tome on the beach. Case in point, my wife distracted me with last month with the Twilightbooks...there was some bribery involved, but I must say they were delightful. Right now I'm reading Digital Body Languageby Steven Woods, CTO and co-Founder of Eloqua Corporation.
If you want to add some more girth to your repertoire, check out a few of the top books on my "hungry salespeople" list below. I welcome your suggestions - feel free to send me your favorites!
It only takes 1%by Tom Freese - easy read and lots of useful tips. The "executive survey" paid for the book hundreds of times over.
Power Base Selling: Secrets of an Ivy League Street Fighterby Jim Holden - better than Selling to VITO!
The 5 Paths to Persuasionby Robert Miller (of Miller-Heimann), etc. - categories of leadership and how to effectively communicate with each.
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasionby Robert Cialdini - tremendous insight on how to influence...and defend yourself against it.
Secrets of Closing the Saleby Zig Ziglar - "You can have anything you want in life if you will help enough other people get what they want."
In Search of Stupidity: Over Twenty Years of High Tech Marketing Disastersby Rick Chapman - hilarious stories and 1st hand perspectives on why many tech companies failed.
The Tipping Pointby Malcolm Gladwell - Learn how Connectors, Mavens and Salespeople create "stickiness".
Do you Grok it?
Posted at 12:48 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
We're going to continue the conversation about where our industry is headed, namely the Cloud...but before we go there I have a little RIF to share.
Aren't you getting sick and (expletive) tired bit tired of almost every advertisement, news story or editorial opening with the tag-line, "In today's economy..." or "in these tough times..." or "the economic crisis...", etc., etc.? With the talking heads repeating these negative sound bites every minutes of every hour of every day, it's not easy to keep your focus and attitude as sharp and positive as you need it to be to achieve your numbers. The good news is that forward-thinking business leaders continue to invest in the future. They need your solutions whether you sell CRM, ERP, business services or consulting. Now more than ever it's critical for you to stay positive, motivated and focused. Turn off the TVand throw away the paper NOW and get cranking!
Last we spoke about Selling the Cloud, we talked about the business and technical benefits as well as opportunities and challenges as perceived by Information Technology leaders. I found a great article in Computerworld that will help us understand the most prevalent misconceptions about Software as a Service (SaaS). We know that uncovering and eliminating objections is key to sales. "5 SaaS myths busted", by Jeffrey Kaplan of THINKstrategieswill absolutely help you sell more SaaS...or sell against it!
For your convenience, here are the top 5 SaaS myths:
Myth No. 1: SaaS is a peripheral trend
Myth No. 2: SaaS offers just one type of application
Myth No. 3: SaaS just offers skinnier versions of more sophisticated applications
Myth No. 4: SaaS is less reliable and less secure than on-premises applications
Myth No. 5: IT professionals are uniformly opposed to SaaS
Do you Grok it?
Posted at 12:05 AM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
This post was provided by my friend and colleague, Duane Cashin. Duane maintains over 20 years as a top salesperson and entrepreneur. He helps his clients understand how to effectively differentiate themselves in today's crowded marketplace. The first time I saw him speak was at the Rackspace User's Conference it was instantly apparent that his advice was as good as gold. So enjoy and if you want more visit Duane at The Differentiation Zone!
"The bar has been raised for all of us today. Information for information's sake doesn't cut it. You have to be smarter than that. When you link the information to my situation and demonstrate it's relevance to me, then you get my attention." "I don't buy products! I buy support. I buy vision. Things change so rapidly today I need the people I buy from to stick around. I need them to be my eyes and ears as it relates to their area of specialty and give me a heads up when things change. I hate surprises." "I want to do business with smart people. In fact I don't want to do business with "sales people" I want to do business with "business people". I will only give my loyalty to someone who can make it very clear to me they study, they observe and they understand. I want to do business with people that understand risk and what it's like to walk in my shoes. I want a competitive edge." Over the last 12 months I have personally witnessed four individuals, who are new to sales, embrace the above three elements. I have watched them study, learn and apply the concepts. And I have watched them systematically capture the attention of top decision makers and successfully sell their products and services. Do you Grok it?The Danger in Relationship Selling by Duane Cashin
If you ask executives and company owners how they define effective relationship selling they will often start with what it isn't. "It's not dropping off sell sheets with product information or tickets to some game or event. It's not a slick power point in a feature rich presentation. Heck my daughter, who is in high school, can put together a killer power point." So what does it take to develop a "meaningful" relationship with top decision makers?
Here are some of the key elements executive decision makers tell us they want in a business relationship:
Relationship selling can give us all a powerful advantage and help us differentiate ourselves in today's crowded markets. If we take the advice of executive level buyers we will realize our greatest success in transitioning our approach from thinking and acting like "sales people" to that of "business people"!
Posted at 12:58 AM in A-Player Planning | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
The Cloud is REAL. The Cloud is HOT. The Cloud is NOW!! The Cloud solves all of your problems and...it even makes breakfast for you every morning! A bit of embellishment there at the last, but you must agree that the industry noise is as loud as the15" Kicker Solo-Baric Subwoofers you wanted back in high school.
The industry buzz is so extreme around this technology, I hereby predict that "the Cloud" will be win the top spot in 2009 on the list for buzzwords customers most despise. Pretty safe bet given that executives surveyed by Network Computing marked "Web 2.0" and "SOA" as the most loathed in 2008 and 2007 respectively. Whether customers love or hate the terminology, there is no denying that demand for this technology will grow to epic proportions. With that, I wanted to start a conversation about what Sales needs to know and how we can benefit. Consider this part one of a series...
So what is the Cloud anyway? After reviewing too many sites to name, I found the coolest definition of Could computing on a fairly new Berkeley University blog, Above the Clouds: "Cloud Computing refers to both the applications delivered as services over the Internet and the hardware and systems software in the datacenters that provide those services. The services themselves have long been referred to as Software as a Service (SaaS). The datacenter hardware and software is what we will call a Cloud."
Many of us in tech sales have been selling Cloud stuff for years - at the simplest level, the Cloud is really "the Internet" - a bunch of hardware and software running in data centers around the world.
Talking with executives across industries, I have found that the main differences between then and now center around power, packaging and value.
With the Cloud, business leaders have gained enormous power to deploy business systems faster and cheaper than ever. Another power element is vitually unlimited bandwidth and processing
power (think of the effort of bringing up a 1,000 servers for a few days to support a Superbowl ad campaign vs. renting the space on Amazon EC2). The Cloud ostensibly frees the business from onerous investments in infrastructure and waiting in line behind IT other IT imperatives (like getting Sharepoint to work!). The value components include the financial benefit of realizing the acquisition as an operational expense vs. a capital expense (and all the committees that go with capital appropriations requests (CAR)) and the shortened return on investment (ROI) cycle. Nevermind that the average SaaS subscription exceeds the total cost of ownership of traditional software within 3 1/2 years...the name of the game is speed (It's not the big that eat the small, it's the fast that eat the slow- great read BTW)...and SaaS delivers speed (or as a Marketing wizard might say....business agility!).
SaaS salespeople have gained extraordinary leverage through the Cloud delivery model because they can sell more effectively top down. With a greatly reduced need for IT interaction, it has become practice to accelerate sales cycles to a fraction of the norm with support from the executive suite...so much so that IT has limited to zero visibility to what is coming. As eWeek cites in a recent article, "Fear and Loathing of Cloud Computing"IT is finding new ways to resist the Cloud beyond security and control issues. In the end, such resistance will serve as an opportunity for leadership as IT executives and their counterparts strive to "strike the right balance between cloud computing services and on-premise applications to (maximize) benefit of the business they serve."
The "2009 Cloud Computing survey", conducted by Kelton Research, interviewed 502 C-level executives and IT decision makers across 17 countries provides more insight on the opportunities and challenges for selling the cloud. Here is a brief summary:
Opportunities
-71% of global executives overwhelmingly agree that cloud computing is a real technology option
-4 out of 5 respondents report that existing internal IT systems are too expensive
-Top benefits for Cloud computing as "recognized" by respondents:
+ Improve ability to be flexible (70%)
+ Focus on the core business (65%)
+ React more quickly to market conditions (62%)
+ Gain access to the latest technologies (51%)
See any problem with these top benefits? The survey indicates that these benefits were "recognized", but not necessarily "realized" - why? I'll wager the inability to realize these benefits are directly correlated to the extent to which the benefits can be measured in tangible terms. These buckets seem to general to measure don't they? Where is the reduction to OpEx, for example??
Challenges
-By a 5-to-1 ratio, executives report that they trust existing internal systems over cloud-based systems due to fear of security threats and loss of data and system access
-The majority of companies (61 percent worldwide) are not using cloud computing systems at this time.
-More than 80 percent of those who use only internally owned IT systems do not plan on integrating any form of cloud computing in the next 12 months.
If this data (while somewhat counterintuitive) could talk it would say, "If you want to make your quota, you'd best focus on companies that have adopted SaaS!"
In summary, Cloud computing will be a force for market and revenue growth for years to come. SaaS, Business (or Managed) Service Providers (BSP/MSP), and other companies that leverage Cloud computing at the core will maintain a distinct competitive advantage. So if you're not there, I recommend you take a strong look. If you are there, congratulations...and tell the rest of us how it goes!
Do you Grok It?
Posted at 11:00 PM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
It is an honor and a pleasure to welcome Rick McAninch to SalesGrok as a guest blogger! Rick is a master of our craft and he has some invaluable advice on how to be successful in any economic climate. I've learned almost everything I know about value based selling from Rick. Enjoy!
There’s a lot of dispute over the origin of the famous quote, “may you live in interesting times.” Many people believe it to be an old Chinese curse. Others think of it as a blessing. I think we can all agree that for people in the sales world, these sure are interesting times!
What’s happening in your world? Many people are seeing orders fall off and prices collapse. Budgets are frozen or slashed, approval levels for even the smallest of purchases are rising to the highest levels, and many projects are being cut. More of the same is expected for 2009. Can a salesperson survive these “interesting times?”
The answer largely depends on you. I’m a firm believer that it’s easier to change your own behavior than it is to change someone else’s. So what do you need to change in order to succeed?
In good times, it’s often enough to discuss the buyers problems and how your products can help. Many times this leads to building a plan for evaluating and buying the products and services in question.
But what about now, you ask? Clearly, something more is needed.
First off, buyers are out there spending money every day – they’re just being more careful about it. They’re asking tough questions about the impact that each purchase will have on the business objectives and business issues they face. They want to know what makes one solution better than another and why they should pay more for it. They’re looking for solid ROI – but they also have a lot of interest in what’s in it for them personally.
So why not help them answer these questions?
With a little preparation, you too can have a conversation with the buyer about their business. Check out the press releases on their web site, read an analysts report, and Google for other sources that help you understand potential business issues. How are they dealing with the latest challenges in their industry? What about that new initiative or product launch you read about recently? What is their highest business priority and WHY is it important. Anticipate and confirm their business issues are and you will build credibility in their eyes, and understand the world they are making purchase decisions in. Here’s a tip: business issues usually involve what needs to happen to generate revenues and profit!
Business issues give you the “context” for your conversation about problems and ideal solutions – so go ahead and develop these areas with your buyer too. Make sure you highlight problems that might impact their business issue that your products solve better than your competitors.
What’s next? Well now that you’ve discussed their business challenges and the best way to solve them, it’s time to discuss the value they see coming with success? If they can fix their business issue, what does it mean for their company? For them personally?
Make sure that you are having this conversation with the right person! Again, I recommend the direct approach. Why not ask “who else besides yourself is involved” and “what’s important to them?” Ask this of everyone you talk to and see how their answers compare.
Last but not least, go ahead and build that plan for evaluating and buying your product or service. But ask yourself this: does your buyer care when YOU get the order? They are more likely concerned with THEIR priority business issue. So make sure you build your plan along with them and anchor it with their business issue. It is, after all, their reason to change!
Build habits around these behaviors and you won’t just survive in interesting times – you’ll thrive!
About Rick McAninch Rick has been coaching sales leaders in use of the ValueSelling Framework® since 1996. He specializes in working with companies that are facing challenges created by the changing economy, acquisitions, increased competition and a host of other sales management complexities. Rick has consulted with leading companies worldwide including: Sun Microsystems, Microsoft, Ingenix, Blackbaud and many other technology, service, financial and healthcare organizations. You can reach Rick at rick@valueselling.com.
Posted at 12:04 AM in Demonstrate Value | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Happy New Year, Grokers! Hope you brought in the New Year with a bang!!
After all the family time, revelry and hang over remedies, I took the time to write down a few goals for the year - like "take a 2 week vacation with the family" and "buy $20,000 in Gold". For the last five years, I've written a few top priority goals for the year, put them in my sock drawer and look at them every morning. Guess what? It works so do it!
OK, I'm one of those superstitious types that must eat black-eyed peas and cabbage (for luck and wealth dontchaknow?) on the 1st day of the year. This year we were out of cabbage so I had to make a grocery store run at half time. Many thanks to the good folks at Walmart for coming through!
Posted at 11:55 PM in Personal Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The Holidays are upon us. Despite all the doom and gloom, there's still a bunch of business going on. Hopefully, you've got lots to be thankful for this year!!
While it's easy to get caught up in all the "other" stuff going on, like Christmas shopping, College Bowl selections (excluding my poor Aggies!) and family travel, there is a mounting pressure this time of year for all of us Sales folk.
If you don't have your deals well down the path, you're looking at a 2009 transaction. Depending upon your market, you might be lucky enough to catch a client trying to rid themselves of budget excess before year end. It sure doesn't hurt to ask, but don't count on it unless you serve government or healthcare!!
Posted at 01:57 PM in Demonstrate Value | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Most of us tech sales folks have a partner who carries the water for us on the bits and bytes of the technology. Whether your company calls them Systems Engineers, Sales Engineers or Solution Engineers; everybody knows and loves the "SE". Let's face it, most of us would be lost without our SE. Not only do they bring brainpower, knowledge and ideas, but also (and almost as important) gobs of credibility. Unless your SE is a real whack job, customers tend to take their word as gospel.
Posted at 12:19 AM in C-level Communication | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
What a rollercoaster ride since the last post. We’ve seen a giant maelstrom of economic bad news cripple consumer and investor confidence. The irony is that the market will not rebound until confidence is restored, but this won’t happen until the positive news outweighs the negative. Good luck with that if you happen to watch television or read the paper. You’d think these talking heads get paid variable on the number of negative stories they report – hell, maybe even commission on every negative word!!
Posted at 11:51 PM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The call came in with four business days left in the month. The voice on the other end was tense and urgent…a sale had been forecasted this month and there had been no response from the buyer in more than a week.
About four months prior, I helped a colleague get into a sales cycle with my company. He sold me on trying the demo for a few weeks (Puppy Dog Close!). I saw the benefits over our current supplier and introduced him to the head of Sales, who is always looking for ways to increase Sales productivity. After a successful trial period with a few power users, we got support from my boss who was in fact the “Executive Sponsor” to move forward.
Posted at 10:11 PM in Negotiate & Close | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Selling Power and every other sales rag has been running articles and web videos about the impact of Web 2.0 and Sales for the past few months. Most of the discussion centers around innovation in business applications, like salesforce automation (Force.com), info mash-ups (InsideView), closed loop Marketing (Eloqua), compensation management (Xactly) and social/business networking (LinkedIn).
No doubt that these business applications are a critical part of our success, but I'd like to focus in another aspect of how the world of Sales has been forever changed by Web 2.0.
Posted at 06:33 AM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In the technology space it’s all too easy to get carried away with all the cool acronyms. If I had a nickel for every abbreviated technology snippet I’ve come across in eWeek, Information Week, Intelligent Enterprise, CIO and all the other trade rags over the years, I’d have a private island in the South Pacific! Some of the freaking articles never even provide the long form - thank goodness for Google, eh?
Posted at 12:27 AM in C-level Communication | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
All of us seek the answer to this question in one form or another. Some of us think about it more often than others, thus separating the best from the rest.
Let's face up to the fact that a Salesperson doesn't necessarily need to be the best to make a good living or even make more money than those with superior skill. I’ve met many who talk so much about their company, their products or themselves that I couldn’t help but wonder how they could ever connect with their customers. The hard fact is that sometimes being in the right place at the right time with a company and/or product in heavy demand is enough to make one appear great. Look at IBM, Dell, Microsoft, Oracle, Cisco, VMWare..if you can answer the phone and put a few sentences together, you’re there! Call me jealous, but it doesn’t seem fair that a Dell rep takes an inbound call that results in a million dollar sale while some of us do the same work to get in front of CEO just to start the process of a million dollar sale! Wah, Wah!
Posted at 03:15 AM in Demonstrate Value | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
