Keeping sales up in a down market
Beyond the basics
Keep your sales up in a down market By Douglas Smith |
Salespeople are being
hammered in today’s economic environment. Entire
market segments have evaporated. Customers and companies are holding back
orders or literally have no money to buy. Opportunities and new prospects
are fewer and further between. In 2008, many salespeople earned only half
the commission they earned in 2007. Half! When you take a 50 percent pay
cut, you know what a recession feels like.
But not all sales professionals
are in a slump. Some are thriving. Some are busy growing their client base
and making good money despite the uncertainty around them. And you can
do the same. Your commitment to success starts with a dedication to your
goals and where you want to be – remember the basics
and then go beyond.
Some salespeople will
take the safe road this year, ratcheting down their expectations. You’ll hear them say: “I just want to survive” or “I need to
make it through this.” When you plan just to get by, that’s exactly what
you may do
– get by. When you plan and expect to succeed it’s a different story. As
one astute sales manager once said, “Most salespeople reach the level of
expectation they set for themselves.” He’s right on.
If you want to be one of those who will thrive this year, apply these five
tips now:
1. Don’t wait for
things to change. Unlike struggling salespeople
who sit on the sidelines hoping for an economic U-turn any day now, the best
salespeople are taking action and moving forward. They recognize the economy
may be in this mess for years and waiting and watching is a poor strategy
for success.
The movers and shakers
are moving and shaking – setting up appointments,
making sales calls and presentations, contacting their current and past customers,
and marketing like never before. Their proactive approach is creating opportunities,
leads and sales. In boom times or in bad times, you can never wait for customers
to find you. It’s your job to reach out and find them.
2. Work harder. Top salespeople understand this age-old axiom: You
can’t make more money with less effort. That’s why they are working
harder and putting in more hours than ever before.
Think about this: arriving just 30 minutes earlier and staying 30 minutes
later each day equates to an additional 20 hours every month. When you are
working 20 hours more than the average salesperson, you can make at least
20 percent more contacts and even 20 percent more sales.
3. Talk to the right people. Some
companies may want or need your product or service, but if they can’t make a decision or are restrained by
shrinking budgets, it doesn’t matter.
Successful salespeople
today are selective about where and with whom they spend their time. They
are out looking for “real” buyers: customers and prospects
who have both money and ability to buy. Every minute you spend with an unqualified
prospect is another minute you don’t have had to find a qualified one. Remember,
you can’t close a sale from a customer who can’t buy.
4. Make more contacts. Selling
is a contact sport. When times are good, business is easier to come by.
Sure, there’s competition, concern about
price and sales don’t exactly just fall into your lap. But contrast the last
few years of relative prosperity to what we see today and it’s quite a different
picture.
Customers are more cautious, more apprehensive and spending decisions take
longer. This means to land more sales, you have to make more contacts. When
capture and conversion rates go down, to maintain a steady volume of business,
your sales contacts have to go up. Top producers get this. Do you?
5. Change the way you work. Is
change difficult? You bet! That’s
why so many salespeople fall behind or fail. Successful salespeople have
stayed successful through the years by evolving and adapting to change.
As the economy and buyer habits change, smart salespeople learn to do business
in new ways. By reviewing trade publications, reading top books on selling,
attending industry conferences and client events, and networking among successful
peers, you are able to learn and apply new marketing approaches and sharpen
your face-to-face skills. This is how you stay current, fresh and on top
of your game.
While all of this may
sound like the old “back to basics” line of attack,
it’s truly more than that. Successful salespeople in today’s market have
gone beyond the basics in most everything they do.
They understand that
roughly the top 20 percent of every sales force produces about 80 percent
of most company’s sales results. To get and stay in that
top 20 percent, you have to be willing to give and do 20 percent more than
almost everyone else. That’s not only what gives you your edge, it allows
you to keep your sales up – even in a down market.
This year may not be
the best year you’ve ever had, but it doesn’t
have to be your worst. Take advantage of the fact that most of your competition
has pulled back, slowed down and, in some cases, completely left the business.
Now is the time to push forward. You have a window of opportunity in front
of you, and how you use that window is up to you.
(Smith is a nationally
recognized speaker and sales trainer who helps organizations and sales
professionals sell smarter and better. For more information, call Douglas
Smith & Associates at 877-430-2329
or visit www.DougSmithPresents.com.)
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