A Cost-Effective Way To Create The Number Of Impressions It Takes To Produce Sales!

 

 

 

 

i

Hire 

Sales 

People

 .

com

 

A Great Resource For Employers And Job Seekers

 

 

"Vital Piece" 

Of The Selling

 Puzzle

    

 

Closing Sales Is Not A Problem, It's A Process

By Virden J. Thornton   

     In my opinion, the most overrated topic in sales training is the subject of closing. In year’s past, it seems the object of most sales training courses was to fill the heads of participants with as many closing techniques as possible. The logic was simple, if the “Ben Franklin” close didn’t work, you could rummage around in your head for the the “secondary question” technique, the “order-blank” method or the “forced choice” close to tie off your sale. Selling in the old school of training was basically learning 54 or 84 ways to close.

     Today, most successful sales professionals know that if you use a consultative sales process, one with a series of selling steps like those listed below, the close (asking for the business) will literally take care of itself. Closing is an integral part of the following; a solid sales process--not a specific stand alone technique:

  • Building rapport and trust;

  • Obtaining your prospect's attention;

  • Probing for problems, opportunities, needs and values;

  • Demonstrating products based on the specific needs you have discovered,

  • Asking trial closing questions and answering objections, then

  • Asking for the business.

     By first building rapport with a prospective customer or client, a sales or service industry professional can create the trust that our research shows is vital to consistently obtaining sales success. Through using an attention getting provocative question and then taking away your offer, you can open your prospect's mind to answering your questions and later accept the suggestions that you make in your sales presentation. By asking open-ended, probing questions, you can learn about hidden needs and problems that can be solved by your products and/or services. Through effectively demonstrating your products and/or services, answering objections and asking trial closing questions, you then set the stage for closing the sale. All that is left in this process is to ask for the business.

                   

     In my self-directed learning manual entitled Sales Success Strategies, (see http://TheSellingEdge.com/manual1.htm) I explore the steps that must precede a successful close. This unique learning guide won't give you a dozen closing techniques to memorize, nor a list of power words that will impel your prospect, client or customer to sign on the dotted line, because these words and closes simply don't work with today's sophisticated consumers. If you take time to review them and apply them to your daily sales activities, the ideas discussed can make a significant difference in your ability to regularly generate business for your company or professional firm.

 

 

VIRDEN THORNTON is the founder and President of The $elling Edge®, Inc. a firm specializing in sales, customer relations, and management training and development. Clients have included Sears Optical, Eastman Kodak, IBM, Deloitte & Touché, Bank One, Jefferson Pilot, and WalHMart to name a few. Virden is the author of Prospecting: The Key To Sales Success and the best selling Building & Closing the Sale, Fifty-Minute series books and Close That Sale, a video/audio tape series published by Crisp Publications, Inc. Menlo Park, California. He has also authored a Self-Directed Learning series of sales, coaching & team development, telemarketing, and personal productivity training guides. To obtain a substantial discount on two of Virden's new manuals, 101 Sales Myths and Organizing For Sales Success, just click on either of the titles above.

Note: You can contact Virden at virden@TheSellingEdge.com. You can also see an expanded bio-graphy at http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/bio.htm.

All of our training guides are copyrighted. However, you have permission to reprint the training ideas on this site on a non-exclusive basis providing the following two conditions are met.

The copyright symbol and the byline in full must be printed along with the article, and Author's name and contact information must be included.

If an article is to be republished on an electronic web site, the copyright symbol and the byline in full must be included including the author's name and contact information and the www address linked to this website.

 

Check Out This Field-Tested And Proven Closing Skills Manual In A Downloadable Format. For More Information Just Click On The Manual Cover

        

Closing: A Process, Not A Problem (.pdf Version)    $15.95          

  Download Today!  

 
Home \ About Us \ Advisory Services \ Author's Biography \ Personal Coaching \ Workshops \ Books & Manuals \ Contact \ Sales Tools \ Privacy Policy \ Disclaimer
---------------------------------