| Add You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Sales > Planning to Succeed at Sales |
|
Add You - Planning to Succeed at Sales
The Letterhead of the 21st Century related to our career development, personal development or personal livesI have been in business for 16 years in a variety of industries - but what was common for all, was I would never let my staff mail out a letter unless it was on a company letterhead.It didn't matter if that letter was to a prospective customer, to pay an account, or to the Prime Minister, - any correspondence leaving our premises had to be on a letterhead and neatly presented.So the question I pose - as a business owner would you/or do you, allow your staff to send 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that ma Great Fundraising Ideas Reap Great Rewards Each year my company hands me down a set of commitments. Quite simply these commitments are goals that the company is asking me to obtain. Some of them are financial related (aka my quota), but most of them quite honestly are not clear goals, that are handed down by corporate head office. They are a subset of the executives goals that they are trying to get accomplished in the field. The unfortunate thing is that most of these goals are not related to what I do every day. Where most people I see, file them away not to be seen again until review time, what I do with them is take them, modify them and then make them mine.Many organizations end up looking for fundraising ideas because these organizations do not receive all of the money that they need for a great organization. There are some great fundraising ideas available, and many groups come up with new and different ideas that are better than some of those previously used. A group dedicated to making some extra money for their cause should first look at some of the tried and true ideas. These fundraising ideas have worked at least once, and these will probably work again. Each year, my team and I get together and have a day of goal setting. We look at the commitments (goals) that they have set for us, and we find ways to make them real for us. Once we have made them real, we then turn around and have a discussion about how we are going to use these goals to stretch ourselves and come up with a list of “stretch goals”. This exercise is a fun and often interesting exercise that I suggest trying if you’ve never done it before. I have a team of about 7 people that directly support me within my accounts. Each year, it is an eye opening experience to see how these people are aligned (or not aligned) to what I feel is the vision and strategy that I have set out for my territory (which I view to be my $15 Million business that I own). Quite often we have interesting conversations that are centered around our interpretations of the priorities of the company, but most importantly we spend a lot of our time, not focused on what the company wants us to do, but rather we talk from the eye of our customers and spend time focusing on what our customers want us to do. We actually set goals in each of the following categories: 1) Financial – Goals that are related to how we will beat quota. 2) Personal – Goals that are related to our career development, personal development or personal lives 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that may 8 Questions That Get You A YES here most people I see, file them away not to be seen again until review time, what I do with them is take them, modify them and then make them mine.Although I am a firm believer in not making cold calls, I still believe the telephone is probably your most useful tool. We still need to interact with our prospects and customers.Once you have a prospect on the phone, you should be using this time strictly for one thing. You should be using your phone time to pre-qualify your prospect.However, many people struggle with this process. So, how do you qualify your prospect, so you don’t end up wasting his time, and especially your time? The only wa Each year, my team and I get together and have a day of goal setting. We look at the commitments (goals) that they have set for us, and we find ways to make them real for us. Once we have made them real, we then turn around and have a discussion about how we are going to use these goals to stretch ourselves and come up with a list of “stretch goals”. This exercise is a fun and often interesting exercise that I suggest trying if you’ve never done it before. I have a team of about 7 people that directly support me within my accounts. Each year, it is an eye opening experience to see how these people are aligned (or not aligned) to what I feel is the vision and strategy that I have set out for my territory (which I view to be my $15 Million business that I own). Quite often we have interesting conversations that are centered around our interpretations of the priorities of the company, but most importantly we spend a lot of our time, not focused on what the company wants us to do, but rather we talk from the eye of our customers and spend time focusing on what our customers want us to do. We actually set goals in each of the following categories: 1) Financial – Goals that are related to how we will beat quota. 2) Personal – Goals that are related to our career development, personal development or personal lives 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that ma Marketing Lessons from Santa a list of “stretch goals”.If a nonexistent man can change the world and millions of people with a message of joy then his marketing plan surely works. Right? Then what has Santa been doing right all these years that we can learn from? Santa’s message is short--joy. His target market-- children and the young at heart. When you think of name Santa, you automatically associate it with giving, kindness, thoughtfulness, joy, magic, and usually a lighter heart. Yet, his campaign began long ago in another country with a d This exercise is a fun and often interesting exercise that I suggest trying if you’ve never done it before. I have a team of about 7 people that directly support me within my accounts. Each year, it is an eye opening experience to see how these people are aligned (or not aligned) to what I feel is the vision and strategy that I have set out for my territory (which I view to be my $15 Million business that I own). Quite often we have interesting conversations that are centered around our interpretations of the priorities of the company, but most importantly we spend a lot of our time, not focused on what the company wants us to do, but rather we talk from the eye of our customers and spend time focusing on what our customers want us to do. We actually set goals in each of the following categories: 1) Financial – Goals that are related to how we will beat quota. 2) Personal – Goals that are related to our career development, personal development or personal lives 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that ma Picture the Vision g conversations that are centered around our interpretations of the priorities of the company, but most importantly we spend a lot of our time, not focused on what the company wants us to do, but rather we talk from the eye of our customers and spend time focusing on what our customers want us to do.Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "I have a dream," and what followed was a vision that changed a nation. That famous speech is an excellent example of the power generated by a compelling vision of the future. A vision clarifies purpose, gives direction, and empowers us to perform beyond our resources. Unless you know where you are going you cannot get there. You don't "need" a vision, or a mission statement, but those people with clearly defined visions experience greater success than those who haven' We actually set goals in each of the following categories: 1) Financial – Goals that are related to how we will beat quota. 2) Personal – Goals that are related to our career development, personal development or personal lives 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that ma Melbourne Business Resources related to our career development, personal development or personal livesThe city of Melbourne, Australia is one of Australia’s most beautiful cities and a great place to start or own a business.Melbourne has a myriad of business resources.In fact, the current Melbourne Yellow Pages lists 0ver 214 different business consultants and consulting companies.But...It came as somewhat of a surprise though to see that of this number, less than 25 have their business website listed in their advert!As an Australian Internet Marketing Coach, these statistic 3) Customer Satisfaction – Goals that are related to increasing how we are viewed by our customers and how we will move ourselves from a vendor to trusted advisor postion 4) Win – Goals on key solutions, products or key competitive take outs that we will focus on. Although this could fall under financial we call it out separately because we want to ensure that we focus things that may be strategic but not revenue generating In each category we will set 2 to 3 goals. We ensure these goals are measurable (eg. We will exceed our quota by 30% this year), that they are tied to timelines (We will have two documented case studies with customer references by May 15, 2007) and that someone is directly accountable to the team for that specific goal. At the beginning of each of our sales meetings (which we have weekly either in person or via phone), we spend 5 minutes quickly reviewing how we are tracking against our goals. If we are behind we spend some time discussing a recovery strategy, and if we have met a goal we check it off our list and celebrate it. Each one of our goals are not simple, in fact we ensure that they are stretch goals. Last year for instance we set a goal to be 140% of plan by the end of the year (in our company a great year is 120%). How did focusing on that goal every week and discussing it at all times help us out? We ended up at 131% of quota at the end of the year, and as the number 1 sales team in the country. Not bad, for having spent 1 day setting goals and 5 to 10 minutes a week reviewing and focusing on them. I know that every sales person that I talk to tells me that they have goals. I often question how many of them make them a part of their weekly or daily routines (although I talk to the team weekly about them, I actually use Microsoft Outlook categories within tasks to track my activities by goals daily). I believe that the old adage failure to plan, is planning to fail holds true and ensure that I use them every day to make sure that I continue to plan to be successful and execute on that plan.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Advertising to Promote a New Tech Product Factors that Determine What You Should Offer the Celebrity Endorser Rut Busters: Changing Your Trade Show Routine
|