A Sales Guy Consulting Blog

Selling to Monkeys [Sales Skills]

Posted by Jim Keenan on Thu, Aug 09, 2012 @ 10:25 AM

wildlife-monkeys-hear-no-evil-see-no-evil-speak-no-evil

 

If you sell, getting people to change their minds or switch is part of the job. Sometimes people already have what you’re selling and you need to get them to try something else. You need to get them to switch. Getting people to switch is like selling to the monkeys; hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil. No one is paying attention.

We don’t like to switch. We are normally very happy with our choices and unless there is a compelling reason, we will defend our choices to the end. We don’t want to listen to anything new, because we’ve heard it already. We don’t want to see an alternative, because we’ve seen it all before and we don’t want to talk about anything new, because there is nothing new to talk about. Considering a change without a compelling reason calls into questions our original decision and we don’t like to think we originally made a mistake

Getting people to try something new is hard. It’s even harder if you don’t have a compelling reason.

People don’t switch just to switch. This is especially true in b2b sales. To get your customers to switch, create a compelling reason. Make it difficult NOT to change. It can’t be because your new. New isn’t compelling. Save your customers 2X more money. Grow revenue by 25%. Increase productivity 2 fold. Shorten production by 15%. Reduce operating costs 30%. Shorten the sales cycle by 30 days. Make a real impact.

Selling to the monkey’s isn’t easy, they aren’t going to pay attention for a different banana. You need to bring ice-cream covered in chocolate. They’ll pay attention then.

Topics: making your number, solving customer problems, increase sales, Sales Advice, selling skills

Sales Advice - Sell with Sincerity

Posted by Jim Keenan on Fri, Jun 01, 2012 @ 07:18 AM

This is a guest post from Kyle Porter, Founder at SalesLoft.  SalesLoft is a Boulder Techstars company. They are creating a killer sales tool for sales people.  Their goal, provide sales people with timely, actionable information, that will get them closer to the sale.

Kyle offers some great sales advice in this post, enjoy! 

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A year out of school, I was running a division of a professional services company. I sold software development to regional tech companies. Our buyer was busy...& they had a lot of "recruiter-type" sales reps calling them asking for stuff. 

 

It was a crowded sales landscape...I had to learn to break through the clutter.

 

It's worse today. Buyers are busier than ever & they won't let you waste their time. In order to connect, build relationships & get a shot at solving buyers issues, you have to do more. I call "doing more", selling with sincerity. In my opinion it's the best way to sell.

 

Sincere sellers:

  • Don't ask questions which they should already know the answers. They ask the follow-ups
  • Only sell to those whom they genuinely think they've got a good shot at helping
  • Find out about their buyer's company (history, milestones, agendas & mission)
  • Find a way to make their buyer smile.

Back at eHire, we did these things and about 9 months into my gig there, I found a really cool trick. Here's an example of stacking your cards in the favor of sincerity.

 

The landscape: We sold software services. It was best to sell those services to people who needed them. 

 

The problem: The buyer was busy and it was hard to break through the noise

 

The solution: Built a web scraper that would go to the top 80 prospect sites & monitor any new job postings. Whenever they'd add new ones, it would automatically email me with the results.

 

The result: I knew every-time one of my top 80 prospects was looking for software resources, I'd call them immediately with the solution and convert more leads to closed deals than by any other prospecting method. 

 

It was an "out-of-the-box" way to get an edge & make the engagement much more sincere. 

 

Think about it...what can you do to come to your buyer with more sincerity?

Topics: connecting with customers, sincere selling, solving customer problems, Sales Advice, Sales Consulting