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    The Top One Percent Sell with Precision
    The Best Salespeople, the Top 1%, utilize a precise, highly organized sales process that leaves very little to chance. Each step of the sales process increases the probability of successfully closing the sale.Here’s the dictionary definition of PROCESS: A uniform series of actions designed to produce a specific outcome. In High Probability Selling, the ultimate
    lid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is m

    How To Write Powerful Headlines
    The headline is the most important element in any sales message your company ever uses. It is the opening sentence you use in any sales letter, brochure, print ad, or on you Web site.The purpose of a headline is to grab your prospect’s attention. Your headline should zero in on precisely who you want to reach, your target market. For example, if you want to rea
    I don't know of an organization that does not want its salespeople to cross-sell. The big question is why it is so difficult to successfully implement a cross-sell strategy, especially across divisions. Certainly product knowledge is a real issue and so is compensation - What's in it for me? But more than that are the issues of risk and trust.

    Many salespeople are afraid to "expose" their client to their colleagues. This could be based on their own bad experience, "what ifs", or on internal horror stories where colleagues from other divisions have not delivered and have damaged relationships. Although confidence in your colleagues' ability to deliver is paramount and even though many salespeople have been burned, allowing this to impede cross-selling is a tremendous loss for an organization. The return on cross-selling across the board — to the salesperson, the client, and the organization — is fantastic.

    Everybody knows it is easier to sell to a current client than a prospect. Cross-selling increases the ties that bind and build loyalty. Cross-selling reduces vulnerability. The answer is to do it in a way in which the risks are minimized. A practical, organized approach to cross-selling is an answer: Start with the specialist. Begin to build internal relationships. Call them directly and if there are no specialists, contact other salespeople or research product knowledge resources. Ask the specialist: What questions shall I ask my client to see if there is a need? What are the qualifying criteria you need for a solid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is my

    Get Personal: Letters vs. Direct Mail
    One of the reasons direct mail works is the personal aspect. It’s ostensibly a letter from you to your prospect. Because of this, the more personal you make it, the better your response will be.If you’re mailing to 100,000 people, putting your prospect’s name on your letter is about as personal you can get. But there are times when you can – and should – send o
    se" their client to their colleagues. This could be based on their own bad experience, "what ifs", or on internal horror stories where colleagues from other divisions have not delivered and have damaged relationships. Although confidence in your colleagues' ability to deliver is paramount and even though many salespeople have been burned, allowing this to impede cross-selling is a tremendous loss for an organization. The return on cross-selling across the board — to the salesperson, the client, and the organization — is fantastic.

    Everybody knows it is easier to sell to a current client than a prospect. Cross-selling increases the ties that bind and build loyalty. Cross-selling reduces vulnerability. The answer is to do it in a way in which the risks are minimized. A practical, organized approach to cross-selling is an answer: Start with the specialist. Begin to build internal relationships. Call them directly and if there are no specialists, contact other salespeople or research product knowledge resources. Ask the specialist: What questions shall I ask my client to see if there is a need? What are the qualifying criteria you need for a solid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is m

    Feed Em Back Their Arguments!
    Does this symphony sound familiar?You are too!Am not!!You are TOO!AM NOT!YOU ARE ALSO!!AM NOT!!Familiar? It's how kids argue. I'm sure you've tried this mode of arguing decades back.Children, when pointed out that they are "xxx", tend to retaliate that their accuser is also "xxx" The accuser then balks, be
    endous loss for an organization. The return on cross-selling across the board — to the salesperson, the client, and the organization — is fantastic.

    Everybody knows it is easier to sell to a current client than a prospect. Cross-selling increases the ties that bind and build loyalty. Cross-selling reduces vulnerability. The answer is to do it in a way in which the risks are minimized. A practical, organized approach to cross-selling is an answer: Start with the specialist. Begin to build internal relationships. Call them directly and if there are no specialists, contact other salespeople or research product knowledge resources. Ask the specialist: What questions shall I ask my client to see if there is a need? What are the qualifying criteria you need for a solid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is m

    Working From Home - Legit at Home Business!
    Are you tired of all the work at home gimmicks? So was I. I was getting tired of doing the same routine everyday. I was really tired of having someone else raising my son for me. I missed out on alot things that I should have been there for. But I was not, because I had pulled a double shift that night or someone did not show up so I covered for them at the job.
    zed. A practical, organized approach to cross-selling is an answer: Start with the specialist. Begin to build internal relationships. Call them directly and if there are no specialists, contact other salespeople or research product knowledge resources. Ask the specialist: What questions shall I ask my client to see if there is a need? What are the qualifying criteria you need for a solid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is m

    Obtaining And Making The Most Of A Temporary Job Placement
    Finding a job today can be an extremely daunting task, especially if you are looking to change careers, have financial difficulty or have just graduated from college. You need to persevere because it is unlikely that you would ever actually get the first job you apply for, especially if it is the one that you really want. You have to have an edge over other candidates
    lid prospect? What key objectives should I expect? What is a sound bite and success story I can use to interest this client? What are the next steps or implementation steps to move this along? The knowledge you get won't make you an expert, but you don't have to be! However, you need at least this much information.

    If a specialist or colleague suggests, "All you need to know is my name and phone number. Have the client call me," empathize and make a second effort to get a little information to make the call worth everybody's time. If the specialist or colleague persists in being difficult, talk to your manager. As any successful salesperson knows, it can be as challenging to sell internally as externally. If your organization is serious about cross-selling, it will have to make sales-oriented product information — not just technical details — available to you.

    Certainly to close a sale you need more product knowledge than what is captured above. But the objective for cross-selling that most organizations define is to get the specialist or colleague from another division or product line in the door to leverage the current relationship. Be sure to update the specialist regarding the outcome of your cross-sell discussion and share credit publicly to help build internal relationships. With a proactive approach to cross-selling and with an attitude of collaboration, everybody wins!

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