Time to Break Some Rules
In the world of selling, some rules seem to apply. Some make sense.
You probably agree that it’s a good idea to follow the rule to know as
much or more than your customer. You’re also keeping the rule of offering
value to your customers. Some rules are made to be broken. Here are the
rules that I’ve broken that have helped my selling.
1. A great strategy is what sells.
A great strategy is not enough. Certainly a great strategy is
better than a poor one. What about the companies with great products and
very talented folks working for them? Some of those companies simply ran
out of funding. You may say their strategy is flawed, but that’s the
problem with strategy. The strategy tells you what to do, but not what to
do if it turns out differently than you plan. Who would ever knowingly
implement a flawed strategy? Sometimes you know the strategy is heading
south only when it’s too late to do something else. Strategy without an
ongoing assessment of its results is dangerous. So when you develop a
strategy for implementing your selling, also develop the timelines for
achieving your goals. If you get off track, realize you had better change
strategy before it is too late.
2. Relationships help you sell.
That depends on how you define relationships. You may get to know
someone well by keeping in touch with cards and letters. It doesn’t mean
you have created a strong enough relationship. It may not be strong enough
to sustain a continued business relationship if management changes.
Relationships alone don’t sustain business. Relationships that produce
results do. Getting results isn’t enough. When you’ve produced results you
must document them and present them to management. You want to get
management’s acknowledgement that you’ve done great work that helps their
company. And even that may still not be enough. You still may lose the
business if a brother-in-law has the same product to sell. It’s just less
likely to happen because you’ve proved your work is good .
3. Networking will get you business.
Networking groups abound. You could spend your entire business day
networking. I get invited to many networking groups. What I’ve seen has
convinced me that my time is better spent elsewhere. To see if it applies
to you, first identify where you get your business. It’s probably not a
networking group. Here’s what I’ve found. My consulting and training is a
business-to-business sale. It’s also an intangible. I can explain the
triggers that drive my business to someone who knows me well at a
networking function. The drivers are a company with a sales meeting
looking for a dynamic speaker, a company not making its goals, or a
company looking for ways to improve performance.
Even if I share this information in a networking group with
someone who knows me well and likes me, I know that the likelihood of that
person having a conversation about my business is unlikely. They’re not
going to do my selling for me. What is more likely to happen is that they
might remember to respond if and when someone else asks them for a
recommendation when one of these triggers is mentioned. That infrequent
occurrence is too little to help me make my goals. I find it better to
have strategic alliances with people who also call on the same types of
business that I am calling on. Joining trade associations where my
customers and prospects attend is another better use of time. Networking
just doesn’t work for me.
Some rules are made to be followed all the time. The rule that
your integrity and honesty are truly what you’re selling is important to
keep. Just remember that some rules are made to be broken—at least some of
the time.
Maura Schreier-Fleming works with
business and sales professionals on skills and strategies so they can sell
more and be more productive at work. She is the author of Real-World
Selling for Out-of-this-World Results which is available at
www.BestatSelling.com. She founded her company Best@Selling in
1997. You can reach her at 972.380.0200 or info@Bestatsellling.com.
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