Archive for the ‘sales training’ Category
Business Networking is the Way Around the “Do Not Call” List!
Business Networking is the Way Around the “Do Not Call” List!
(excerpt from Cracking the Networking CODE by Dean Lindsay)
Wow. Cold-calling over the phone is tough. Most sales professionals find it taxing and most consumers don’t like it much either. Think about it. Do you like to be cold-called? Does it work on you?
Cold Caller: Mr. Jun..dson?
Mr. Johnson: That’s Johnson.
Cold Caller: Oh… (giggle) sorry. Is Mr. Johnson there?
Mr. Johnson: No. (Click.)
Consumers dislike being solicited by phone so much that a law was passed enabling them to get their names on a “Do Not Call” list. A whole bunch of people – 62 million, and counting! – got themselves on that list as soon as they could. Maybe even you. I know I did. These consumers invested the time to get on this list to say a big, fat “NO thank you! Please do not call me.”
Now corporations are trying to find legal ways to keep phoning them up, sometimes even eating up consumers’ cell phone minutes. What is up with that? Why call someone who has already told you they do NOT want you to call? The Do Not Call list is a HUGE hint that these people do not like cold calls.
They do not like them in the morning.
They do not like them while they’re snoring.
They do not like them while watching TV.
Not even ‘courtesy calls’ from AT&T.
They do not like them about how to invest,
Or how to save more than all the rest.
They would not like them with a special rate.
They would not like them with an expiration date.
Not with a special offer,
Not from a hacking cougher.
They do not like this telephone Spam.
They do not like it, Spam I am. – Thank you, Dr. Seuss.
A solid and gracious way around the Do Not Call list is to get out and meet people. You can earn a fortune – and have some fun in the process – building relationships with quality business professionals through networking. Networking sets you apart from the ‘smile and dial’ boiler-room sales types who interrupt people’s dinner hour with their pitches. Think of networking as using shared interests to create and cultivate mutually beneficial relationships. It is the back-scratch boogie.
Don’t have the time?
Make the time. In today’s competitive environment, networking is an invaluable tool that no person in business can live without.
Be Progress.
Business Networking is the Way Around the “Do Not Call” List! is a excerpt from Cracking the Networking CODE by Dean Lindsay.
Sales Video – How to Get Referrals – Convention Keynote Speaker
Sales Video – How to Get Referrals with Convention Keynote Speaker, Dean Lindsay, Author of The Progress Challenge: Working and Winning in a World of Change and Cracking the Networking CODE: 4 Steps to Priceless Business Relationships
An authority on harnessing human potential and creating authentic business growth, business networking speaker Dean Lindsay is an engaging and highly sought-after business consultant and speaker. He is an active member of the Viktor Frankl Institute of Logotherapy and the American Society of Training and Development.
Dean Lindsay sees an important connection between sales, motivation, solid customer care and leadership. All are achieved by effectively positioning ideas, recommendations, solutions, products, services – even ourselves – as PROGRESS in minds of those we wish to inspire to action. All must be positioned as Progress and NOT Change. It is natural to resist change but we embrace PROGRESS. All progress is change but not all change is PROGRESS.
Dean is a featured contributor to Executive Travel, Sales and Service Excellence and the American Management Association’s Moving Ahead magazine as well as the nationally distributed audio publication Selling Power Live. He has been spotlighted as an Outstanding Speaker by the International Association of Speakers Bureaus and recognized as a ‘Sales-and-Networking Guru’ by the Dallas Business Journal.
“Dean Lindsay is an outstanding thought leader on the subject of developing priceless business relationships.” — Willis Turner, President of Sales and Marketing Executives International
Dean has served as Guest Lecturer to International Customer Management Institute as well as both the UCLA and University of Dallas MBA programs. He is a Cum laude graduate of the University of North Texas and serves on the Executive Advisory Board for UNT’s Department of Marketing and Logistics and the Board of Directors of the UNT Alumni Association. Dean’s first book, Cracking the Networking CODE: 4 Steps to Priceless Business Relationships is Recommended Reading by United Professional Sales Association and Profit magazine.
Sales Video – How to Get Referrals
Click for more info on Convention Keynote Speaker, Dean Lindsay, Author of The Progress Challenge: Working and Winning in a World of Change and Cracking the Networking CODE: 4 Steps to Priceless Business Relationships
Practical Sales Training Tip: Practice Empathy!
Practical Sales Training Tip: Practice Empathy!
(an excerpt from The Progress Challenge by Dean Lindsay)
Empathy is knowing and feeling where the other person is coming from, walking a mile in their shoes, seeing things from their point of view. Empathy involves understanding that people make decisions for their own reasons, not ours. There are always reasons. Customers have reasons, prospects have reasons, employees have reasons, coworkers have reasons. They might not be our reasons.
To enhance our level of empathy, it is paramount to focus on understanding others’ parameters for progress. We may never fully uncover where another person’s motivation, their “motives for actions,” are coming from, but those motives,
along with their parameters for progress, are uniquely theirs.
To be a Business Attraction Magnet, always think, and say: “What that means to you, Mrs./Mr. Prospect, is…” Commit to doing what is best for the customer, ever striving to help provide the right product or service to meet their needs. Sure, we want to profit, but the customer’s profit is key to ours. Practicing empathy includes understanding that customers do not want our products and services – they want what they think our products and services can do for them.
One of my client companies is among the largest trade show booth manufacturers in the USA. They design, build, and transport the huge trade show booths you see at the big conferences around the country and world. At the very beginning of a program I was conducting for their sales teams, I stated bluntly, “No one wants a trade booth.”
The room went silent. The reps looked at the Vice President of Sales and each other as if to say, “What?”
Finally, one of the sales managers in the back raised his hand and said, “No, Dean. They actually call us up and order trade show booths.”
I said, “You bet. They order trade show booths, but a trade show booth is not really what they want.”
Again more silence. Then the Vice President of Sales spoke. “You’re right, Dean. Our customers don’t want trade show booths – they want profit. We must be able to show them how investing in our trade show booths will help them to profit.”
Business Attraction Magnets know it is not the goal of having the product or service itself that creates the momentum. It is the perceived benefits (feelings realized) behind having or utilizing the product or service that creates the momentum.
Be a BAM (Business Attraction Magnet)!
Be Progress.
(Practical Sales Training Tip: Practice Empathy! – is an excerpt from The Progress Challenge by Dean Lindsay)
Funny Sales Cartoon on Remembering Names
Funny Sales Cartoon on Remembering Names!!
Click link for Funny Video Clip on how to Remember Names!
Listen as if your lifestyle depended on it. IT DOES!
Business Attraction Magnet #3. Listen as if your lifestyle depended on it… IT DOES!
Link to: Business Attraction Magnet Key # 1: Become Buzzworthy
Link to Business Attraction Magnet Key # 2. Ask Progress-Based Open Ended Questions
Solid listening goes hand in hand with asking powerful questions. I don’t mean “listen” as in taking in sounds and passively processing them. As BAMs, we must LISTEN with all we’ve got. This is a basic but sometimes challenging principle to consistently put into practice. It means that, for the duration of our contact, we step outside of ourselves – our own needs, our every preconception – and attend entirely to someone else.
Everyone has a need to talk and be heard. Listening helps us treat others as if they were the most important people on the planet because – in their minds – they are. Many professionals forget to involve the prospect and drone on about how great their ideas or their company is, forgetting to ask probing questions and listening for ways to show how they can be progress for the other person.
Sometimes our motivation to actively listen is not all that high. We think we can get by without really focusing. This is a huge mistake. The ability to understand and value what others say is critical to being a BAM. So be determined to focus on and understand completely what others are trying to communicate. It is close to impossible to uncover someone’s parameters of progress when you’re preoccupied with previous conversations, unfinished tasks, or the impression you’re making.
Good listeners absorb and reflect on what they hear. They are active in the listening process. This requires energy and motivation, because listening is more than just hearing. We must become active listeners rather than passive hearers.
Repeating back (as questions or tentative statements) what you think you’ve heard the other person say helps avoid mind-misreading errors. Good clarifying questions offer the person a chance to rephrase their thoughts and say precisely what they mean.
Be Progress.
FREE Trade Show Tips – yes more
FIVE MORE Free Trade Show Booth Tips – Running a Successful Trade Show Booth (part one)
Insight from CODE Cracking for Trade Show Booth Success
Working a booth at a trade show can be such a powerful way to network, reinforce existing relationships, and build name recognition that I wanted to offer some trade show tips into making the most of the investment. The key is to find ways to encourage visitors to stop and comfortably begin building a solid relationship with you. Here is the first batch of trade show tips. I will offer more insight from on running a successful trade show booth over the following weeks.
Free Trade Show Booth Tip # 1
Build rapport by being friendly and nonthreatening.
A smile goes a long way in welcoming people to visit your booth.
“Every business is built on friendship.” — James Cash Penney
Free Trade Show Booth Tip # 2
Create the right first impression.
Stand and be interested in making contact. Do not sit, read, drink, eat, or smoke in the booth. Don’t just chat away with the people working the booth with you. This makes you less approachable.
Free Trade Show Booth Tip # 3
Keep the booth looking sharp.
Do not let the booth get disorganized, cluttered, or untidy. Throw trash away. If skirted, the space under the table is a great place to store boxes and stuff. Many trade shows last weeks. Even if it is a lengthy show, do not let your booth get run down.
Free Trade Show Booth Tip # 4
Avoid drinking alcohol or eating spicy or garlicky foods.
Bad breath is bad business – as is slurred speech and inappropriate behavior. You do not want to be remembered as the drunk guy, or halitosis girl.
Free Trade Show Booth Tip #5
Ask open-ended questions — Avoid asking questions that can be answered with a yes or no. Create a list of questions to ask that begin with who, what, where, when, why, or how. This will stimulate thought and encourage conversation. Relate questions to the event, industry, product/service and its benefits, or to a specific situation.
Examples of Stimulating Questions:
What brought you out to the show today?
How could you see using this (product/service)?
How important is (benefit) in your present situation?
What are your most important needs in (situation)?
How familiar are you with our product/company/service?
Be careful not to overuse common and overused questions, like:How are you doing today?
Can I help you?
Are you enjoying the show?
Our new program: CODE Cracking for Trade Show Booth Success is now available. Contact us for Details – Dean@DeanLindsay.com 214-457-5656
A BAM Dozen: Solid Sales Questions from BAM Sales Training Program
A BAM Dozen: 12 Solid Open-Ended Questions for becoming a Business Attraction Magnet
Link to: Business Attraction Magnet Key # 1: Become Buzzworthy
Link to Business Attraction Magnet Key # 2. Ask Progress-Based Open Ended Questions
Please find your own voice when asking these questions. We must be truly interested in finding a way to help.
Be a BAM Sales Training Program #1: How did you get interested in your line of work?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 2. If a journalist were to write about what’s been happening in your industry over the past six months, what might they write?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 3. I connect with new people all the time; how would I know if someone qualified as a solid contact for you?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 4. How would you define progress for you/your business?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 5. What major shifts do you foresee in your industry?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 6. Where do you see your greatest challenges?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 7. Why do these challenges persist?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 8. What difficulties will you face if you don’t meet these challenges?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 9. What actions are you taking to overcome these challenges?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 10. What results are you expecting?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 11. Who is involved in the decision-making process?
Be a BAM Sales Training Program # 12. If you could solve these challenges, what kind of progress would you make?
Also, encourage prospects and clients to expand on their answers by asking:
Would you tell me more about that?
Could you please elaborate?
Could you clarify…?
How so?
What did you mean when you said…?
Do not ask too many questions or ask them at a rocket-fire clip. People should not feel they are being interrogated. Being interrogated is neither attractive nor enjoyable.
insight from The Progress Challenge by Dean Lindsay and featured in the Be a BAM! Sales Training Program
Link to: Business Attraction Magnet Key # 1: Become Buzzworthy
Link to Business Attraction Magnet Key # 2. Ask Progress-Based Open Ended Questions
Ask Progress-Based, Open-Ended Questions.
Link to: Business Attraction Magnet Key # 1: Become Buzzworthy
Business Attraction Magnet Key # 2.
Ask Progress-Based, Open-Ended Questions.
In the medical profession, it is known that prescription without diagnosis is malpractice. The same is true for Business Attraction Magnets. We must ask a variety of open-ended questions to diagnose the situation, so our recommendation (prescription) will meet the need.
“The art and science of asking questions is the source of all knowledge.” – Thomas Berger
There is a classic story, told in sales circles, of the inept salesman trying to explain to his boss why he closed only one sale per month. “You know, you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink,” the salesman says, shrugging his shoulders. “Make him drink?” the manager replies. “Your job is to make him thirsty.” That sounds good enough, but there’s a fundamental oversight here: Clients and prospects are already “thirsty.” They are thirsty for peace of mind, pleasure, profit, prestige, pain avoidance, and power. They are thirsty for progress. We must uncover others’ particular parameters for progress if we hope to make them thirsty for the progress we offer.
The most powerful way to uncover the prospect’s parameters for progress is to ask open-ended questions. These questions commonly include the basics of:
- Who
- What
- Where
- Why
- When
- How
Click for: A BAM Dozen: 12 Solid Open-Ended Questions for becoming a Business Attraction Magnet
a “Be a BAM!” SALES TIP – Become Buzz-worthy!
insight from The Progress Challenge by Dean Lindsay and featured in the Be a BAM! Sales Training Program
Become Buzz-worthy — Key # 1 to Becoming a Business Attraction Magnet
Business Attraction Magnets provide so much value, so much heat, and so much enthusiasm that customers are inspired to talk about them. A BAM is worthy of attention, worthy of the spotlight, worthy of wattage, and worthy of referrals.
As Progress Agents, we must not only show enthusiasm for our work – we must HAVE enthusiasm for our work. If we want prospects to get excited about our products and services, we need to have that excitement first. Likewise, if we want others to believe in our products and services, we must believe in our products and services first.
To win the prize, we must be the prize. Enthusiasm shows in the way we hold ourselves and in the passion we have for our jobs and our lives. If we want loyal customers and referrals (and we do), then we need to feel worthy of loyal customers and referrals. I am sure you have sensed by now that, whenever possible, people do business with people they like. Passion for our lives and belief in our work make us attractive and likable. They draw people to us.
In sales, we have got to be on. Have game. Bring heat. Same is true for customer-service professionals and those in leadership. Buzz. Buzz.
Next Up: Key #2 to Becoming a Business Attraction Magnet — Ask Progress-Based, Open-Ended Questions.
For info on the Be a BAM Sales Training Program Click here
Be a BAM!! – Become a Business Attraction Magnet!
Be a BAM! -
Become a Business Attraction Magnet!!
Become a Business Attraction Magnet!!- an excerpt from The Progress Challenge by Dean Lindsay and featured in the Progress Agents’ Be a BAM! Sales Training Program




