How to Sell If You Hate Selling
Written by Craig Ballantyne
A guide on how to sell and
persuade.
Do you want to make more
money sharing your wisdom with the world?
Me too. So, how do we do
that?
First, you create value
and solve a problem. Second, you learn how to sell people on the fact that they
need your solution to their problem.
Screeeeeech.
I can hear some of you
hitting the brakes in your mind.
“Selling? I hate selling.
I’m terrible at selling. And besides, selling is for sleazy, slicked-hair
salesmen like Alec Baldwin in Glengarry Glen Ross.”
Listen, I understand your
resistance. My parents were always making snide remarks about salespeople, and
always looked at sales as a battle between buyer and seller.
But selling makes the
world go round… and it makes the world better, too.
“To sell well is to
convince someone else to part with resources — not to deprive that person, but
to leave him better off in the end,” says author Daniel H. Pink in his book,To Sell Is Human.
Even if you’re not a
“salesman,” the truth is that in every conversation, email, and interaction you
have each day, you are selling.
In that, you are
persuading. We are always trying to convince another person to share our point
of view, to accept our offer (whether of assistance or of commercial intent),
or to do something we want them to do.
Take, for example, getting
your children to brush their teeth.
You show them the
benefits. You give them a deadline. You mention the consequences for missing
said deadline. Can you see that you are always selling, persuading, and
convincing?
Here’s the good news about
selling. If you can hold a conversation with a barista at Starbucks, if you can
listen patiently, and if you can follow a system, then you can become a good,
if not great, salesperson.
To help you become better
at selling and persuading so that you can make the world a better place, I’m
giving you 5 Sales Secrets from my good friend, Bedros
Keuilian. No one is better at selling in a “California Cool” style than Bedros.
He’s the sales guru that other sales guru’s (like Frank Kern) go to for advice.
Here’s what I learned
watching the master at work.
1) Pump-Up the Positive
Past
Focus on the prospect’s
positive results (acknowledge what they have already accomplished)
Prove the concept (that
your system works)
Demonstrate your expertise
(solve a problem for them, thus proving your system)
2) Gap-Up the Present
Reality
Show them the gap between
where they are and where they want to be
Show them what’s wrong
with what they are doing now
Show them they are good at
X, but need help with Y
… and that Y is the most
important variable in their future success
3) Set-Up the Future
(“Future Pace”)
Show them you know secrets
that will change their life (solve another problem)
Show them what their life
will be like in the future once they’ve used your solution
Show social proof
(sprinkle in case studies proving it will work for the prospect)
4) Level-Up the Offer
Clearly communicate the
value
Clearly communicate the
deliverables
Clearly communicate the
expectations of the program
5) Close-Up the Sale
Remind them the value of
the results are worth 10 to 100 times the investment
Close the sale, confirm
the sale, and take the payment
Clearly communicate the
next steps in the program
Oh, and there’s one more
thing. It’s a bit of a warning, actually.
Bedros taught me not to “talk
myself out of a sale.”
It’s a habit many beginner
sales folks do. We keep on talking, promising the world, and saying things that
don’t need to be said.
Once the client is
committed, resist the urge to keep yammering on. Instead, close the sale,
confirm it, take payment, and tell them to await further instructions from your
team member in charge of delivering the experience.
That’s it.
The formula for improving the
world and bettering your life is simple. Create value. Sell the value. Deliver
value.
If I can do it, so can
you.
Source: ETR
How to Sell If You Hate Selling
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