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Add You - Learn to Sell Only to Deserving Customers
10 Tips to Resign from Your Job With Pride and Professionalism terly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitiveWhile some employees fear lay-offs, often my clients find themselves in the happy position of accepting a new job and saying good-by to a current employer. Surprisingly, many admit they’re nervous about telling a current boss they’re leaving.And if you've held the same job for a long time, you may be wondering how to resign gracefully yet still protect your own longer-term career interests.1. Give the exact amount of notice required by your company policy – and no more. Every so often someone feels sorry for the company, so they stick around an extra week (or even an extra month). Inevitably, they begin to feel like a fifth wheel.2. Do not accept any job-related calls af The Ambush of Mugs! What? What are deserving customers? I want to sell to everybody, don’t I? Well… do you?Drinking tea or coffee in an interesting beverage ceramic mug and a conversation gets more interesting if the subject happens to be pottery. No mugging story when involved in the illustrious tea ceremony Cha-no-yu that essentially means water for tea. A tea ceremony based on the etiquette of serving tea.Cha-no-yu literally means tea and hot water and refers to the Japanese Tea Ceremony. An elaborate ceremony, where the tea gets prepared gracefully, with expertise and practiced motions, where the powdered tea gets measured out into a bowl, water gets added, and the tea gets whisked with a bamboo whisk to serve a guest. Intricately crafted pottery forms an important part of this ceremony.Ceramic pottery gets made Smith Manufacturing Company, one of your best customers, regularly buys from you and your company. They order pieces and parts yet seldom yield an opportunity to solve larger manufacturing, production or quality problems, choosing instead to call other companies for these services, some of which may be your competitors. They call frequently, requiring lots of assistance from your inside sales and shipping people. They seem to have many issues too, issues that frequently require your attention and those of your customer service department. They pay late, but they always pay eventually. They buy at a discount and you earn less profit than you should for an account of this type. You call on them regularly, socialize with their managers over lunch and an occasional dinner, and enjoy a good reputation throughout their firm. You may feel this is one of your key accounts. Does this scenario sound familiar? Or… does it sound all too familiar? We all have them; customers that consume a great deal of our resources. We like them. We like their employees. We spend a great deal of time there. The burning question becomes: Can we honestly continue to justify our current or growing level of investment of our resources in this account? Jones Medical is also one of your regular customers. Your business here is quite different than at Smith Manufacturing Company. Here, you provide solutions based upon your product mix and your years of experience. Your profit margins are considerably higher and their company pays your invoices promptly, taking advantage of any particular terms you may offer. Your communications with their personnel are typically over the phone or via email. You make quarterly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitive Are You Doing the Right Thing or the Comfortable Thing? s of assistance from your inside sales and shipping people. They seem to have many issues too, issues that frequently require your attention and those of your customer service department. They pay late, but they always pay eventually. They buy at a discount and you earn less profit than you should for an account of this type. You call on them regularly, socialize with their managers over lunch and an occasional dinner, and enjoy a good reputation throughout their firm. You may feel this is one of your key accounts.Businesspeople are often in a difficult position when negotiating, enforcing policy, and making decisions that impact relationships with customers, staff, vendors, and stakeholders. Many take the easy way out by procrastinating or they do the comfortable thing by just allowing the issue to continue instead of doing the right thing and deal with it.Dealing with difficult issues by hoping they will go away might feel comfortable because human beings can fool themselves for a time and pretend those issues don’t exist. But by doing the comfortable thing they open the door to long-term risk that is probably much worse and much less comfortable than the current issue. Additionally, it really isn’t all that comfortable. Does this scenario sound familiar? Or… does it sound all too familiar? We all have them; customers that consume a great deal of our resources. We like them. We like their employees. We spend a great deal of time there. The burning question becomes: Can we honestly continue to justify our current or growing level of investment of our resources in this account? Jones Medical is also one of your regular customers. Your business here is quite different than at Smith Manufacturing Company. Here, you provide solutions based upon your product mix and your years of experience. Your profit margins are considerably higher and their company pays your invoices promptly, taking advantage of any particular terms you may offer. Your communications with their personnel are typically over the phone or via email. You make quarterly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitive Profiling - Some Useful Examples throughout their firm. You may feel this is one of your key accounts.Profiling is an investigative activity in which someone searches for specific elements that characterizes a thing or a person, a social group or even an organization.Profiling is used in many different businesses. In the consultancy business you encounter profiling when a consultant is to do a job and learn (or teach) the basics about an organization. About some main characteristics and about the question: what makes this specific organization interesting and where would you - according to the profile – expect problems or best search for a solution.Financial institutions use profiling, to better service their clients. They trace the financial behavior of the client and from this information they constitute a pr Does this scenario sound familiar? Or… does it sound all too familiar? We all have them; customers that consume a great deal of our resources. We like them. We like their employees. We spend a great deal of time there. The burning question becomes: Can we honestly continue to justify our current or growing level of investment of our resources in this account? Jones Medical is also one of your regular customers. Your business here is quite different than at Smith Manufacturing Company. Here, you provide solutions based upon your product mix and your years of experience. Your profit margins are considerably higher and their company pays your invoices promptly, taking advantage of any particular terms you may offer. Your communications with their personnel are typically over the phone or via email. You make quarterly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitive Delegation Dilemmas edical is also one of your regular customers. Your business here is quite different than at Smith Manufacturing Company. Here, you provide solutions based upon your product mix and your years of experience. Your profit margins are considerably higher and their company pays your invoices promptly, taking advantage of any particular terms you may offer. Your communications with their personnel are typically over the phone or via email. You make quarterly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitiveIt’s late Friday afternoon and everyone is packaging up to go home for the weekend except Janette. Her desk is still piled high with all those important assignments. Why does Janette still have work when no one else does? She just can't let go. Others have a life, but she's too busy ensuring her importance to the company and working late. If she has her finger in every piece of the pie it will make her more important? The reality is that she does not impress anyone. Others may question her ability to perform (she always has work to do and has to stay light to do it.) The favorable portrait she hopes to paint may actually be a negative one. What can Janette do? She can set boundaries. Pick the assignments she can accomplish IT Consultant: Personality Trait Evaluation terly calls on key personnel and may occasionally take a key official to lunch. They operate in a very professional manner causing your inside salespeople, customer service staff and shipping department few problems. Since you are in the business of providing solutions, you often miss their more generic storeroom business since your "pieces and parts" competitor is often there weekly checking bins and drawers for needed low-margin, price-sensitive replacements. You have become an important resource to many key players in this company and they reward you with opportunities to serve them.In addition to knowing the difference between a lan and a laptop, to be a successful IT consultant, you need to have the personality traits that will permit you to work well with your clients, employees and vendors. Read on to evaluate if you have what it takes to be a successful IT consultant.IT Consultant Traits: Can You Exhibit Candor?You can’t be afraid to tell people the truth - even if it hurts. Be very confident, because if you aren’t, people are going to see right through it.You are going to need to come across as very confident when going out to networking, sales calls and even service calls. If you don't, people will sense fear and take advantage of it. It is very important that you work on Let’s compare both types of customer. In your mind, quickly review your existing customer base. What do you see? Are there more Smith of Jones types of companies? Where do you spend the bulk of your time and resources? Which customers bring more complaints to you from your inside service staff? Where does the bulk of your gross profit come from? Which companies generate more of your costs? What are your opportunity costs? These are tough questions requiring tough decisions. Many of us will find that we have far more customers like the Smith Manufacturing Company while actually needing to cultivate more customers like Jones Medical. How does this happen to be? As human beings, we tend to get comfortable. In fact, over time, we tend to get so comfortable that we actually get stuck in a rut and tend to remain there. Salesmen have told me that they simply don’t have the necessary time to locate and develop more customers like Jones Medical. "It is the Smith’s that pay the bills" they often say. That may look true on the surface, but underneath, the Smith-type companies are actually putting a stranglehold on your sales and earnings, causing the salesperson to experience a somewhat stable or declining income level. I have found that at some regular interval, it is healthy to review my accounts and determine where we actually invest our precious resources as well as reviewing how much time we actually spend looking for additional customers. What I have found is that we often need far fewer Smith-types and considerably more Jones-types. Our sales and profit growth is going to come from establishing more accounts like Jones M
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