Tuesday, March 26, 2013


In case you thought that sales people sprinkled "Pixie Dust" on you to cause you to buy something that you didn't want to, here is the truth. Sales people are here to help you because you came to that sales person for help. Washers and Dryers, Cell Phones, Pest Control, Beauty supplies. REad this article and feel better about your prior "engagements" with a professional sales person.

For decades, sales pundits have been advising companies to practice a "consultative" style of selling. It was bad advice then and it's bad advice now.
The idea behind consultative selling is simple. Rather than acting like a salesperson (i.e. making sales pitches), you strive to become the customer's "trusted adviser," just like a management consultant who's hired to help solve problems.
While this sounds smart in theory, in practice it's dumb because no customer really wants an "adviser" or a "consultant." Customers want somebody who will take responsibility for a crucial part of their business, not some smart**s who kibbitzes from the sidelines.
Consider: everything a company buys from another company, it could decide to do itself.  Apple, for instance, could decide to make its own screens, or mine its own minerals to make the metal cases of iPhones and iPads. It doesn't though. Instead, other companies sell those items to Apple.
The same is true with smaller firms. Suppose you're selling a service that helps small software firms support their products. Those customers could decide to build their own service centers, but instead they decided to let you own that essential part of their business.
Customers want YOU--as the representative of your firm--to be personally responsible for making certain that a crucial job gets done. In other words, rather than a consultant or an adviser, the customer wants you to be a manager.
That's an important distinction. The ultimate source of your credibility is never your ability to provide sage advice, but your ability to deliver, to solve problems, to take on the hassles that the customer would rather not think about nor bother with.
In order to sell to a business, then, you must convince the customer that you're the type of person whom they would normally hire to manage the function that your firm provides, had they decided to keep that function in-house. This means you must:
  • Have a thorough knowledge of that function
  • Understand how that function fits into the customer's business
  • Be capable of ensuring that the function achieves the customer's goals
  • Be able to manage the team that will provide that function (i.e. your firm)
  • Look, walk, talk and act like the managers inside the customer's firm
  • Be willing to put the customer's interest first--just like an internal manager would
In other words, if all you have to offer when you sell is "consultative," you might as well not bother.
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Monday, March 25, 2013

As a guy that owns a business I am really lucky to have a staff like I have and customers that say these great things about them. Like I always say, "the Customer Decides....."

"I need to tell you again personally that I found your staff to friendly knowledgable and down to earth I have in fact shared the word with all my friends. I work for the nashville fire dept and I know alot of folks. Id say we ll sell a couple anyway.
Anyway you can be assured that those folks took care of exactly what they said they would. I happened to get a bike that sorta slipped through the mechanic luckily I caught what I perceieved to be a problem when I got it home. In fact I was so convinced by your video that I didnt even ride the bike before I bought it. Thats how well done your video was done. Anyway I knew anything that was found would be handled and it was just as promised I will not buy another bike in nashville tennesse You will always have first shot.
I have delt we several dealers and the only comparison across the country Is harley in pensocola fla they were helpful when we had a stator problem last summer.
So be proud of those folks You have a great team."
gary heflin
"Please feel free to call me or have anyone who may have doubts about your dealership I will set them straight.
I would also be happy to talk with the harley corporation in reference to your dealership thats how impressed I am with your folks"