5 Strategies for Selling in a Tough Market
by:
Gavin Ingham
1. Believe you can and stay positive!
One of the problems with all of this talk about recession is
that once people believe there is going to be a recession they
start to feel negative about their business prospects and only
tend to see what they believe rather than believing what they
see. Once you believe that there is going to be a recession you
tend to only notice articles, comments and statistics that
support your beliefs.
What's more, your negative beliefs quickly affect your outlook
and the way that you feel about your business prospects.
If you thought 2008 was going to be a great year for business,
your best year yet; how would you feel?
Conversely, if you thought 2008 was going to see a major
recession and that it was going to hit you and your business
hard; how would you feel?
Mighty different huh? And remember, nothing's changed here
other than your belief. Having a positive and supportive belief
structure is essential if you want to succeed in any market but
it is vitally essential if you want to keep on selling in a
tough one.
Having a winning belief system does not mean that you need to
be deluded however! In the middle of the darkest recession you
don't want to have your eyes shut! But you have to understand
that in a downturn clients want to partner with the best
companies. Suppliers that they can rely on. Suppliers that
support them. Suppliers who are going to be around tomorrow.
And if your competitors struggle, that means more sales and
more business for you.
2. Get proactive
You need to be more proactive. Much more proactive. You need to
do more marketing and more selling. You need to attend more
events and do more networking. You need to do more promotion
and more canvassing. You need to increase your sales
activities, maybe dramatically.
In a recession many companies cut their sales activites. They
figure, "If we're not going to sell anything, what's the
point?" Many individual salespeople do this too.
Cut your activity, cut your sales. You're a living, breathing,
self-fulfilling prophecy! You believe there is not much
business out there, so you feel negative. That in turn affects
your activity and your activity destroys your sales
results.
Even if there is not as much business out there, then you need
to be more active, more focused and more targeted. If your
competitors are easing off a little, now is the time to up the
anti and grab your share of the market. Even if there is a
blip, you will be strongly placed when activity picks up.
One of my friends went down to our local estate agent this week
to put his house on the market. He was told that maybe he
should wait as he might not get the price he wants right now.
They told him the market was quiet and that might not be able
to sell the house at all. Better to wait for the market to pick
up. I walked past their offices later on that day. They were
all sitting, chatting and drinking coffee. They were probably
moaning about what a bad year it's going to be. If I's have
been in that office, I'd have taken my mates house on and I'd
have been on the phone drumming up some viewings. 50 calls,
100, calls, 500 calls... Whatever it takes. I'd have found
someone.
Talk about killing your own market! If you see less business
then you need to do more sales and marketing, not less. That's
common sense.
3. Sharpen your sales skills
If a workman needs a spade and a farmer needs a horse; a boxer
needs a defence and a chef needs a recipe; what do salespeople
need? The answer's obvious - it's sales skills.
Most salespeople do not spend enough time working on improving
their sales skills and techniques. Sales training and
development is not something that many salespeople spend their
time on out of choice. Perhaps they can get away with this in a
booming marrket when sales are easy. Perhaps not. But things
will always change if the market tightens. Sales success will
go to the salesperson who really understands why people buy and
can help people make the right business decisions. Salespeople
of this calibre stand to benefit from possible changes ahead
because there will be more business for them as their
competition falls by the wayside.
Sales will not go to the journeyman salesperson, the mediocre
wannabee or the 9-5 order taker. Salespeople like these could
well be in for a rough time.
When did you last read a sales training book on selling? How
many sales training audios have you listened to over the last
month? How many sales training seminars have you atteneded in
the last 6 months? For 80% of salespeople reading this, the
answer is zero.
4. Improve your service and focus on relationships
As I write this many companies will be working out how to cut
corners. They will try to save money by tinkering with their
business offerings. They will try and eek extra profits out of
their clients by cutting the bells and whistles from their
offerings. This is not a good idea. A Swiss cow with no bells
is just a cow and no-one would send postcards of them home!
If business is tight you want to be wowing your clients with
the best service that they have ever had, from you or from any
of your competitors. You need to be going the extra mile. If a
recession bites many companies will try and discount to
survive. They probably won't (survive), but you don't want your
clients going to them as they try to keep their heads above
water! You need to "lock in" your existing clients now so that
they won't even think about going anywhere else.
Spend time with your clients. Build stronger relationships with
your clients. Make sure you truly understand them, their
concerns and their businesses. Find ways to help them and add
value over and above what they could have ever expected.
5. Leverage your efforts
In a soft market many salespeople only chase the easy stuff.
They don't chase the tough stuff. They're doing ok, they don't
have to. They're making sales right?
Wrong.
Most salespeople have all sorts of opportunities which they
squander every day and every month because there are seemingly
easier things that they can be doing. This is particularly true
in an industry or a company where leads have been relatively
easy to come by, where sales targets are relatively soft (I
could tell you which industries but I'm not going to) or where
salespeople are overpaid so don't crave the business (again,
I'll keep this to myself!).
In a tough market you must leverage all of your efforts. This
is basic sales 101 and should be stuff that you do every day
anyway... Here are just a few ideas.
Always ask for referrals. Referrals are great business but most
salespeople do not ask for them because clients often say no.
Learn how to ask for a referral properly and then build asking
for a referral into your sales process and ask for one every
time.
Upsell and cross-sell. Whether though laziness, lack of
knowledge or lack of ability many salespeople sit on accounts
where there is so much more business than they are currently
leveraging. Extending your business with existing clients will
not only make you more money, it will also strengthen your
relationships with and value to them and their businesses.
Contact dormant accounts. Most companies have hundreds if not
thousands of "dormant" accounts. There may be multiple reasons
for this from changing business practises to fall-outs with the
client. Dormant clients may well be redeemable and may have
been "lost" purely because someone forgot to ring them or a
salesperson moved on. Get in touch with them!
Follow up on all leads. I recently contacted 5 health insurance
companies over the web. Only one replied. You should not be
burning leads like this in any market. Follow up on all leads
professionally using a proven sales system like the ones I
teach in my sales training seminars and programmes and you will
close more business. New business is the lifeblood of any
business in any market.
So there we are, 5 tips to help you to sell in a recssion. This
year may well prove to be an interesting year for some
businesses and individuals. Some of this will be down to the
market itself. Much of it will be down to you and how you react
and respond to what might be a challenging year.
Here's my prediction for the year...
There will be winners and there will be losers. Which are you
going to be?
Copyright (c) 2008 Gavin Ingham
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