Top Ten Myths About Selling
By Deanna Barr
Are you anxious about selling
yourself and your services because of a negative view of
selling? Let's bust a few myths!
1. A salesperson can sell you
something you don't want.
People buy to satisfy needs and
wants. A salesperson may help a customer to identify their
needs and wants but customers
only buy when they believe the product or service they are
offered will satisfy them.
Selling is not about seducing or coercing the client into buying
something for which they have no
use or desire.
2. Successful salespeople use a
lot of tricks and gimmicks.
Tricks and gimmicks are the tools
of the old style salesperson. Today's buyers are too
sophisticated to put up with
these tactics. Tricks and gimmicks may still be used by some
salespeople in some industries
but these techniques are not the skills used by today's sales
professional.
3. Successful salespeople are
aggressive.
The best salespeople are not
aggressive, by the usual definition of that word. They are self
motivated, enthusiastic and
personable. The irritating pushiness that the public tolerates as
part of buying is the trademark
of the un trained, unprofessional salesperson. Top sales
people in any field are sincere,
knowledgeable, considerate, helpful and empathetic.
4. Great salespeople are born, not
made.
Great salespeople are not born,
they are trained. They resemble star athletes or entertainers
in that they may have personality
or physical traits which enhance their abilities. However
desire, training, practice and
experience will enable anyone to reach a successful level of
sales performance.
5. Selling is something you do to
people.
Selling is something you do with people,
not something you do to them. A sales
presentation is conversational in
style. It should be comfortable, not confronting. The client
needs information and looks to
the salesperson for guidance and advice. The salesperson is
helpful and supportive as the
client considers the presentation and makes a decision.
6. Selling a professional service
requires a compromise in ethics.
The salesperson is motivated only
by a desire to satisfy their customer's needs and wants.
Professionals always place their
client's best interests ahead of their own. Trust is essential
to a successful sales
relationship and a professional never compromises his/her integrity to
achieve success.
7. The public does not trust or
like salespeople.
People do not like or trust
poorly trained, poorly informed, ineffective salespeople. They
often share stories about
unethical and pushy sales service, but in the next breath praise the
experience of dealing with their
stock broker, real estate agent, or car dealer. They say,
"She's different, you can
trust her." Today's consumer wants sales service they can trust
and rely on, and they will remain
loyal to salespeople who provide it.
8. To be effective in sales you
must adopt a new personality.
The more open you are with your
client, the more you reveal who you are, the less you try
to role play an imagined sales
personality, the more effective you will be. The more you
share your values, feelings and
experiences with your clients the more comfortable they
become.
9. Marketing is replacing selling.
Selling is part of the marketing
process. Sometimes, professionals use the term 'marketing'
instead of selling, believing it
is more acceptable. There is also a mistaken belief that
marketing can replace selling and
eliminate the need for direct, one-to-one customer contact.
This may be true for some
products or services where the salesperson acts simply as an
order taker. For most products and
services, however, selling is a necessary and valuable
part of the marketing strategy.
10. All successful salespeople
are hard closers.
Surveys show that today's top
salespeople seldom spend much time on closing. Instead
they focus on finding customer
needs, demonstrating benefits and asking for customer
feedback. The professional
salesperson, after making sure his client has all the information
needed to make a decision, simply
asks if they would like to take the next step. HBM
Deanna Barr is a member of Work
at Home Moms (WAHM) and is a homebased Watkins
independent representative. To
contact Deanna Barr or to obtain more information on the
Watkins home business
opportunity, please contact Deanna at (800) 778-2159, P.O. Box
6256, Vacaville, Ca 95696-6256,
Email: WatkinsCal@aol.com, or check out her website:
http://www.freeyellow.com/members/watkinscal/index.html