Debunking Sales Myths with Mike Schultz #216

Debunking Sales Myths with Mike Schultz #216

Selling has changed tremendously in the last 10 years. But prospecting has changed even more. Previous  research suggests that 57 percent of the purchase decision is complete before a customer calls a supplier.  This gives sellers the false impression that buyers don’t want or need to talk to them early in the buying process. They do! Mike Schultz visits Sales Babble for clarifying and debunking these sales myths with advice based on hard research.

Some Common Sales Myths

Rain Group is a sales research institute just completed a study on prospecting. They talked to 488 buyers, asking them what  is the process they have used for past purchases.

They study found it’s a sales myth that buyers don’t want to talk to sellers, eg. 67% sale done digitally. But this should slow sellers down.  71%  of buyers said they want to talk to sellers at the early part of their research. They want context. With too many choices it becomes to difficult for buyers to choose “Its the ‘paradox of choice” according to Barry Schwartz.

  • Myth cold calling is dead. Greater than 50%  of buyers prefer to be contacted by the telephone. It is second only to email. Of the buyers researched,  57% have had the seller reach out to them on the phone.
  • 82% of buyers take meetings with people they don’t know but have talked to on the phone.
  • Buyers need inspiration, start with your existing clients.

What Winners Do

It’s a myth that buyers don’t want to hear about capabilities and only benefits. The #1 content buyers want is features and capabilities. It’s buyers primary research on their industry. They want descriptions of the capabilities in context. They desire content customized 100% to their business  Not mass mail merges.

Great Sellers WAVE

  1. Winners Mindset – The Mindset of a winner is strategic,  not tactics only.
  2. Attraction Campaign – multistep and modal approach to reach out and connect to buyers. The number of attempts to reach a prospect should be 8 (not 3).
  3. Value – Get prospects to say wow that could be worthwhile (to have a call, meet, agree to demonstration or buy).
  4. Execution -Winners do all the tactical parts. They take action to turn around objections. They exercise executive functions to stay focused in a noisy world.  They have the ability to concentrate and focus for prospecting (which is the hardest thing to do).

 

Cold meetings that have a value approach will turn deals into wins. When sellers focus on value, 96% said it was influential. They want to be educated and collaborative >90%.  Yet the meetings must be interesting and add value. Most sales meetings are not valuable to most buyers. If they are impressive they will buy  things.

Take Action Plan

To get good at prospecting you have to make it 100% of your focus.   Attack it like you’re going to make it work. Build an  attraction campaign.

How To Find Mike Schultz

Website: https://www.raingroup.com

Mike Twitter: https://twitter.com/mike_schultz

RAIN Group Twitter: https://twitter.com/rainselling

RAIN Group Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RAINGroup/

Mike LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikeschultz50/

RAIN Group LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/rain-group_2/

Mike mentioned that we was happy to share a copy of the report with the audience:  5-sales-prospecting-myths-debunked

How to Prospect and Generate Leads

Here are past episodes that talk about the mindset for lead generation.

Why You’re Not Closing Sales #211

Pat Helmers Sales Babble

Pat Helmers Sales BabbleWhy You’re Not Closing Sales #211

In this solo episode Pat talks about the Sideways deal and why you’re not closing sales.  The reasons for this is not at all what you think.

In fact, it’s not so much you can’t close a deal. It’s more a case of you’ve not fully qualified the prospect. If you had properly discovered the prospects situation (their pains and desires), you would have noticed the following:

  1. They have more pressing issues. Now they may like what you have,  but they don’t HAVE to have it. They may have more pressing issues at this moment. It’s not time to close
  2. The seller (YOU) hasn’t fully explained the benefits. If you don’t frame your product or service in the context of the buyer, you don’t have a chance of closing. Focus on the buyers motivations.

Buyer Motivations

Although it changes from business to business, on the whole buyers are motivated by:

  • Higher Profit
  • Higher Revenue
  • Lower Cost
  • Higher Quality
  • Lower Frustration
  • Faster

If you’ve NOT explained your product or service in this context, you’ve NOT done your job.

When you take the time to learn the hopes, dreams, pain, suffering and desires of a prospect, you will find out if they NEED what you’re selling. This is the thing, if people ache for what you’re selling, they will buy.

Focus on prospects that appreciate your solution. Stop wasting time on prospects that will never buy. Use your time efficiently and have lots of prospects in the sales funnel. Work lots of deals and expect each will take time to close. yet with a steady flow of deals, you’ll constantly be earning new business.

Past Episodes Mentioned

In this episode we mentioned the following past episodes. Listen today!

How To Qualify Prospects using the Questions   Listen here

In this episode you will learn how to use the SORT method for qualifying prospective clients

  • Story questions
  • Obstacles questions
  • Ramification questions
  • Transformation questions

Download The SORT Method Exercise to help you create your own custom set of SORT questions.

Five Ways to be a Qualifying Sales Olympian  Listen here

Not all athletes can compete in the Olympics, only the very best. To become a participant, athletes must qualify. This qualification generally demands entrants to complete a competition within some time, distance, height, or score. The same thing is true of prospective clients.

Master Your Cold Calling Fear With This 4 Step Script  Listen here

Let’s walk through the dialogue step by step and explain what’s going on. Each statement I made has a reason. Notice that most of them are questions. The entire script is choreographed with the following goals:

  1. Connect with the prospect so they agree to have a conversation
  2. Discover their pain or desires
  3. Assess if they are qualified to buy my products or services
  4. Show how my products/services address the problems and desire they just mentioned
  5. Get them to agree to a follow up meeting ie. get an appointment.
  6. The goal is to set up an appointment and to do this whole call in just a few minutes.

 

 

How to Make Sales with Voicemail with Dave Moravec

dave moravec sales babble voicemail

dave moravec sales babble voicemailHow to Make Sales with Voicemail with Dave Moravec #194

Sales Babble listener Dave Moravec visits the podcast to share telephone and voicemail prospecting tips. I  was a guest speaker at his CEO Sales Summit at the Integrity Data offices. I gave a talk on focused listening and qualifying. After the talk,  I fired up the digital recorder and had Dave share how he make sales with voicemail and email to solicit interest and earn an appointment.

Sales Voicemail Challenge

Do you return your voicemails?  Probably not. The common etiquette is to ask permission BEFORE calling. This is what we do with friends and family. But this wasn’t true in the past. Back in the day, you could call without permission. given there was no caller ID to screen your calls. This idea of permission is flowing into the B2B space. In fact only 4.8% voicemails get returned.  That’s a ration of  1:20.  This is the challenge.

Your challenge is to leave a good and pertinent voicemail that will solicit the prospect to take your call OR return your voicemail. One key mindset is to be relevant. Leave a relevant message and be a relevant person.

Voicemail Script

During the interview we discussed what it means to be relevant and leave relevant voicemails. Dave shared an example:

Hey Mary, you told me two weeks ago that I should give you a call because you were excited about the value our company provides. You didn’t have time at that time to learn more but you asked me to find a time that was more convenient. I appreciate that you told me that and I’d love to talk to you at your convenience. Here’s my number or if it’s easier for you this is my email address and we’ll set up a time that works. Thanks so much. 

Voicemails and Emails

People have one of two preferences: voicemail or email.  Dave uses both to discern their preference. First….

  • Leave a voicemail.
  • Send an email that mentioned you left a voicemail and share a link
  • Leave a voicemail mentioning you sent an email

Dave has a cadence: Two voice mails, Two calls. He uses a one week follow up schedule. He moves the follow up around days and times of day. For example:

  1. Leave a message Tuesday morning
  2. Follow up Friday afternoon
  3. Follow up Thursday morning
  4. Conscious of holidays and vacation times

Follow follow up until they tell you otherwise. People appreciate persistence and following up.

 

Take Action Advice

Be relevant in the message you leave. Maybe share an article that helps them, recognize they are using a competitor and you might be able to overcome an issue.   Build relationships first. If you’ve done the first relationships, when you leave the follow up message, they will recognize that first conversation created the opportunity. They are likely to appreciate it.

How To Find Dave Moravec

Dave Moravec is a sales manager at Integrity Data 

Dave’s email is dmoravec@integrity-data.com

You can connect with Dave Moravec on LinkedIn 

Original blogpost Voicemail…Are you returning those messages?

Cold Calling Episodes

Listen today to past episodes on cold calling, prospecting, voicemails and converting conversations to appointments:

 

How To Sell The World with Karl Weaver #177

Karl Weaver Sales Babble

Karl Weaver Sales Babble

How To Sell The World  – Advice on Selling Asia #177

In this episode we meet Karl Weaver, an international sales professional who is a wealth of knowledge when it comes to how to sell the world. Selling Asia is different than the USA . Europe too. In both cases, sales only happen once trust is built.  In this episode Karl shares 7 ways to sell in a protectionist environment by a process of creating trust.

Advice on Selling Asia

We walked through a series of steps that in many ways, mirror enterprise sales in the United States:

  1. Realize their goal is to compete with the West
  2. Protect all you laptops and stored information
  3. Learn the language or bring someone who can
  4. Give a gift and something local like Almond Roca
  5. Don’t expect an immediate sale
  6. Honor the exchange of business cards
  7. Use social media like LinkedIn and WeChat

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Advice on Selling Europe

Like Asia, European companies do not make pop decisions. They are more formal when approaching business transactions. The gesture of exchanging business cards is a good example. Like Asia, it’s treated as an honor to both give and receive a business card.

Europe is interested in gaining trust before doing business. They want substance and don’t make quick decisions.

Take Action Advice

Even if you lose a deal, keep working on the next one. It takes time to break in. Be patient. Share on social media you’re value proposition. Over time relations will build for those who grind away.

Don’t expect the immediate sale. Be in it for the long run. Don’t close the door, keep going back and try again. Continue the good battle, sell, market and use social media why you’re products are great.

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How to Find Karl Weaver

Karl Weaver 魏卡尔 is a globally trained, Mandarin-Chinese speaking, senior wireless market and Smart Phone/mobile device specialist, working for wireless technology companies on both sides of the Pacific Rim in a sales & business development capacity.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/karljweaver/

Add Karl J. Weaver 魏卡爾 on WeChat   Add Karl J. Weaver 魏卡爾 on WeChat

Building Rapport in Sales

Dig into our back catalog and learn more about the challenge and skills you need to build rapport with YOUR customers. Listen now!

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Slidebean Examples Created for Sales Babble

As I mentioned here are  couple slide decks that I created for two Sales Babble presentations. Enjoy!

https://app.slidebean.com/p/hggYElvrRX/Tips-For-Selling-Success

https://app.slidebean.com/p/tvielUvSqi/Selling-With-Confidence-for-Startups

Here are details in how why Slidebean sponsors Sales Babble!

7 LinkedIn Strategies for Generating Qualified Leads with Janis Pettit #176

Janis Pettit Sales Babble

Janis Pettit Sales Babble

7 LinkedIn Strategies for Generating Qualified Leads with Janis Pettit

If you’re running out of leads, this week’s episode is exactly what you need. Janis Pettit is an expert on the new LinkedIn interface. Today  we dig in and uncover 7 LinkedIn strategies for generating qualified leads. Janis takes us from setting up your profile, finding prospects, connecting, engaging,  moving them to a webinar presentation and on your email list. Not only does this work, but you can do the same thing on Facebook . Of course this assumes that’s where you’re prospect hang out! Stop the cold cold calling and start leveraging social media today!

Lead Generation Today

When it comes to B2B sales and marketing,  LinkedIn is the bomb. 41% millionaires are on LinkedIn with the  average income at $75K.  Members of LinkedIn are buyers. Janis gave us 7 strategies to turn those buyers, into prospects.

  1. Make sure your LinkedIn profiles clearly states who your are. Only  focus on people who have issues that you can provide solutions.
  2. Identify your ideal prospect, find them using advanced search, send a note to connect. Expect 40% will accept. Once they accept, engage them in a conversation and ask a strategic question.
  3. Keep track of your messaging in your CRM. This engagement can take weeks per prospect. Stay organized and follow up.
  4. Find active groups and become visible by offering valuable content.  Janis gave an example of an eBook she authored. Cross post on your “status update” on LinkedIn.
  5. When people view your status update, reach out to them and connect.
  6. Create a high converting funnel, get their email and place it on an email list. From that list offer webinars to engage and convert them into clients.
  7. Work on it 30 minutes a day

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Facebook for Prospecting

The above process can be used on Facebook too. It’s all dependent on the market niche you serve. If you’re interested in:

  • restaurants
  • retail
  • small businesses

How to Find Janis Pettit

Janis can be found at her company  Small Business, Big Results

Get a free copy of her eBook “How to Get More Business Leads From The New LinkedIn” to LinkedIn Strategies for Generating Qualified Leads

Connect with her on Facebook

Connect with her on LinkedIn 

Slidebean Examples Created for Sales Babble

As I mentioned here are  couple slide decks that I created for two Sales Babble presentations. Enjoy!

https://app.slidebean.com/p/hggYElvrRX/Tips-For-Selling-Success

https://app.slidebean.com/p/tvielUvSqi/Selling-With-Confidence-for-Startups

Get a free Slidebean account today!

SlideBean Free Trial

How Value Propositions Bring Value to Your Business #167

IoT World 2017 Sales Babble

IoT World 2017 Sales BabbleHow Value Propositions Bring Value to Your Business #167

In this episode we return to IoT World (see www.salesbabble.com/166) and show how Value Propositions bring value to your business. Not only do we talk about value, we show you the topic in action.  First we finish up the IoT World interviews and meet Keith O’Byrne and Nancy Kazdan. Keith talks about how engineers are perfect for selling technology and Nancy shows how value propositions bring value when framing your selling process. We also have a guest appearance from our new sponsor Slidebean. CEO Jose ‘Caya’ Cayasso talks about the adventure of starting a start-up, why they picked the slide-deck market and how they’ve found success, again by adding value.

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Keith O’Byrne – Asavie

Asavie Technologies makes connectivity simple according to Keith. Their mobility management and Internet of Things solutions manage, scale and secure connectivity across diverse networks. Keith talked about the need to have engineers in the sales process. They already speak the language and customers appreciate that! He sees himself as a technology evangelist. Selling is a part of that. When it comes to entering the sales profession he recommends “get stuck in…” Do it, give it a try, and it’s not as scary as it seems.

Keith can be found on LinkedIn at Asavie Technologies

Nancy Kazdan – Market Share International

I saw Nancy give a terrific talk at IoT World. She believes a Value Proposition is a short framework you share with a prospect to see if they could be a qualified buyer. It’s an economical use of words to communicate exactly what value you bring to market.

Buyers want to know what you can do for them. Only talk in the language the buyer understands. They way to do this.

Focus on:

  • Narrow market niche.
  • Problem you’re trying to solve.
  • Solution that will solve the problem.

Don’t describe all of this in “technology” speak. Translate the “language” of the new technology. Commonly a Value Proposition is only 10 Words.

What do you do with your Value Proposition? Place it on your LinkedIn profile, Facebook profile,  LinkedIn Company Profile, or corporate website.

Remember it’s not about you, it’s about the value you provide.

This is Nancy’s company:   Marketshareinternational.com
Nancy Kazdan can be found here on Twitter and LinkedIn

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SlideBean Free Trial

 

 

Get a free account today!

What is Slide Bean?

Caya Cayasso  met with us to talk about sponsoring Sales Babble and why Slidebean is a good fit.

Slidebean allows you to create stunning, professionally designed sales decks in minutes, not hours. Over 2,500 sales professionals have used Slidebean’s simple, yet robust presentation tools to
successfully pitch clients around the world.

Slidebean’s state of the art presentation software allows you track your prospect’s progress within a sales deck, letting you know vital information such as how many times they’ve opened
your deck, and how much time they’ve spent on each slide.

Slidebean also allows you to collaborate with your entire sales team in real-time. Which means that as many or as few of your team’s members can work on the same presentation, no matter
where they are.

Unlike Powerpoint and Keynote, Slidebean allows you to share your sales deck in URL form. This means you don’t have to worry about saving, downloading, and sending large files across email.

Having the presentation in URL form also means that you can don’t have to worry about technical difficulties when presenting your sales deck in person, because Slidebean’s presentations work on any web browser. Best of all, you can create a free account and start designing your sales deck today at Slidebean.com/ babble . Once you’re ready to unlock your presentation use offer code Babble to
save 10% off your first purchase. Slidebean. Presentations Made Simple.

Get a free Slidebean account today!


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SlideBean in the Media

The free cloud-based presentation tool that is storming the business world with head turning content is being lauded by the press:

Slidebean Presentations that Design themselves

YouTube Slidebean Presentation 

Startup Slidebean Launch 

Terrific Slidebean article by Hongkiat

Slidebean review on FinancesOnline 

Slidebean on Facebook

Slidebean on Twitter

Slidebean on LinkedIn

Value Proposition Examples

Here are past episodes that discuss Value Selling and how to build a Value Proposition. Listen today!

Sales Advice From Silicon Valley, Sales Babble at IOT World #166

IoT World Sales Advice Silicon Valley

IoT World Sales Advice Silicon ValleySales Advice From Silicon Valley, Sales Babble at IOT World #166

Today’s episode is an audio travelogue of the IoT World Conference. IoT (Internet of Things) World was held in Santa Clara, California the week of May 15th, 2017. We interviewed a number of sponsors and exhibitors regarding sales advice from Silicon Valley, the capital of technology innovation. In this episode we meet with startups, technologists and non-seller sellers. The goal is to better understand the unique challenges of promoting emerging technologies and secondly how to grow revenue early on in the adoption curve.

Gavin Whitechurch – Founder of IoT World

Gavin calls IoT the 4th Industrial revolution. To quote Wikipedia “It’s the fourth major industrial era since the initial Industrial Revolution of the 18th century. The Fourth Industrial Revolution can be described as a range of new technologies that are fusing the physical, digital and biological worlds, and impacting all disciplines, economies and industries.”

That’s what we saw at IoT World: intelligent microcontrollers, sensors, actuators and other smart devices all connected and managed intelligently across the internet.

Dana Liedholm – Director Partnerships Comtech Telecommunication Systems

Dana believes that the best way to generate leads and new opportunities is partnerships. Why? No one vendor provides end-to-end solutions. Each vendor is a link in a chain. For example, Dana’s company provides location services (using GPS to pinpoint). Any enterprise or company that requires knowledge of a devices location could be a potential partner AND a potential lead. We found the idea of fostering partnerships was recurring through the entire conference.

The biggest challenge Dana faces is the glacial speed of adoption. It’s taking longer than expected. Only early adopters understand the value her company provides. She advises the listener to be patient and partner. Furthermore, don’t try to boil the ocean. Do a little at a time, bit by bit.

There is a natural bell curve when it comes to the adoption of technologies. To learn more, dig into the archives on episode 22. Geoffrey Moore describes the chasm between early adopters and the majority, plus steps startups can take to bridge the trough of sorrows.

Gert Jorgenson – VP Sales Delta Micro Electronics

The best example of a non-seller seller is Geert Jorgenson, a former engineer turned sales manager. At the event Geert exhibited four products where they owned the IP (Intellectual Property). When prospecting, Geert only focuses on qualified clients who have an clear understanding of the value. Some of Delta’s products include:

RFID – sensor nodes, energy harvesting and toll road
RFID – tire pressures, and intellegent bandages

Geert believes in the ability to speak the language of the customer. Currently he is looking for engineers to become sales people. It’s easier to train engineers the skills of sales, than to train sales professionals the language of a technology. If you’re an engineer, there’s a job out there for you in sales.

Cameron Ka Klotz – Obidots – Business Development

Obedotz is an application enablement platform that brings intelligent devices to the cloud. Cameron’s product is used to build dashboards and management software including data analysis. They help companies move from prototype to development. Cameron’s greatest challenge is getting clients to believe that they can build a platform themselves using Obedotz.

Cameron believes that great sales is simple: Be nice, kind, and intelligently answer questions. If you need to convince people the value of your system, they’re not ideal clients. Sales is just a conversation. Next it’s key that all members of a company have a service mindset. That’s what differentiates great companies from the rest.

IoT Sales Hype

The primary sales advice from Silicon Valley is simple:

  • Partner
  • Understand and embrace the adoption curve
  • Speak the language of the customer
  • Complete commitment to adding value to your customer.

Selling new technologies takes time. Tenacity is key.

The branding of IoT is free marketing. It’s not just hype. The branding of IoT makes it easy to explain to the value of intelligent devices on a network, prospects are already bought into the concept. For companies in the tech space, hopping on the coat-tails of IoT could be a profitable decision.

How To Connect With Our Guests

We appreciate our guests time and patience while being interviewed in the frantic aisles at IoT World.

Gavin Whitechurch – Knect365

Gert Jorgenson –  Delta/Asic

Dan Liedholm – Comtech

Cameron K Klotz – Ubidots

Business Development and Entrepreneurial Mindset

We have many past episodes on selling technology from the ground up. Listen to the following startup topics for advice you can implement today!

How To Schedule Sales Appointments with Automated Emails with Neil Kristianson #157

Neil Kristianson Automated Email

Neil Kristianson Automated EmailHow To Schedule Sales Appointments with Automated Emails

In this episode returning guest Neil Kristianson shares his automated email expertise. How many times have you walked away from a networking event or a conference with a truckload  of business cards wondering how you’re going to follow up? Neil tells us exactly what to do to keep those leads warm and convert them into an appointments with automated emails. 

 Problems With Follow Up

People collect leads at an event. Then they struggle with what to do with them. Maybe they send an email, maybe two. But that’s the national average. Studies say you need to follow up at least 8 times before you can convert a lead to a conversation.

Things you must do:

  • Get them out of social media into a place you can control. Create your own email list.
  • Prospects read their email.  You’re not at risk of losing them like you do with your FB or LI account.
  • Email is easier to follow up with vs a social media venue.
  • Don’t add them to your generic blog list without permission.
  • Ask permission by giving tips on your topic. Get them to put themselves on your email list.
  • Let them download something of value.

Email systems are all permission based. Don’t buy a list and just add them. That’s a No No!

Gmail  canned response

Use this for the first email you send to your prospect.

How To Use Gmail Canned Responses

 

Engaging Email Keeps Prospect Warm

You must get people to interact with your emails. Google looks at the behavior of the readers of your email. If they are not opened, you will be moved to the promotions tab.

  • Plain text emails are more likely to be opened then fancy pretty emails. Google prefer genuine authentic emails.
  • Create a welcome series of 5 – 7 emails.
  • Each email should talk about one thing. There should be 1 call to action. Don’t confuse the reader. Focus on the core thing.
  • Have a story… Email #1 What’s your problem, #2  the issues you face, #3 solutions they can use.
  • Create Lead Magnets: Downloads, video, free consulting call, etc…..
  • Email has two games…. a short term sell and a long term nurture.

How To Find Neil Kristianson

Join the Sales Babble Facebook Group

There are daily postings on the private Sales Babble Facebook Group.

Lead Magnet Episode

Listen to this past episode on How to Build a Lead Magnet  with Yoon Cannon.   These are used to get people on your email list.

Lead Generation Strategies

 

 

How To Generate Leads with Relationship Selling with Michael Ross

how to generate leads with relationship sellingHow To Generate Leads with Relationship Selling with Michael Ross

Today we meet a seller in the trenches. Michael Ross is a business owner, sales manager and sales guy who believes that relationships are the bridges where value is transferred. In this episode Michael shares practical advice on who, what, where and how to connect with others in the marketplace. Michael has just published his second book “A Clear View” and today he’s going to share concrete advice on how to generate leads with relationship selling .

Bringing value to the marketplace

You want to make money. That’s the goal of business. But you want to help people along the way.  How can we do this?Answer the following:

1. What is your target market?
2. Who should you reach out in that market who has influence?
3. Who can you partner in the market to mutually help one another?

Michael share the Zig Ziglar quote:

“If you help enough other people get what they want about of life, they will help you get what you want out of life.”

This is so true. Move from a getting standpoint to a giving standpoint.

How To Generate Leads

Start with local meetups. Pick a vertical market and find out where they hangout. e.g. credit union summits for IT services  as a sponsor or vendor.  Ask good quality questions. You will find two types of people: the qualified and the not qualified. Ask questions about the business, staffing, what’s working, what’s not.  If you meet someone in person try  to get them on the calendar ASAP.

J Abrams  the king marketer says that most businesses undersell their clients by 65%. Ask for recommendations and introductions. Don’t hesitate to ask your circle of influence to help you. They too can show you how to generate leads with relationship selling.

Social Selling for Lead Generation

Marketing campaigns should be tied around social media. Cold calling gives you self-efficacy, confidence, and gives you progress  forward.  If I can do this now, you can do it later. Address your fears and prove you can do more in the future. Note that Social selling conversion rate is very very low. Meeting people creates conversions, visibility and trust.

He quotes Tom Hopkins…

“you’re job is to alleviate pressure.”

Michael’s not meeting with people just to sell a product, but to build relationships that can create greater opportunities.  Be intentional how you connect with people. Virtual relationships have their limits

Take Action Advice

Focus on activity over “sales”. Take an analytic perspective e.g. 10 appointments for 2 closed sales. Focus on the 10, not the 2. Do the best job you can and you’ll like the results. Process not Results.

How To Find Michael Ross

You can find Michael on the web:

If you send an email, with “Pat Helmers” in the subject line

Two booksOvercoming the Character Deficit” (synopsis on lack of character in society) or “A Clear View” (on self image) for guidance on how to generate leads with relationship selling.

Other Sales Babble Episode

Michael mentioned the sales giant Tom Hopkins in a quote. Tom was on Sales Babble!   Tom Hopkins “When Buyers Say No” episode is well worth a listen. Check it out today!

 

 

How To Sell a Software App with Jason Criddle #149

How To Sell a Software App with Jason Criddle #149

Jason Criddle is the founder of the Smart App Company. In this episode Jason walks us through the story of the roll out of the Smartrapp app. They started with zero sales and grew it to success. We talk about how to sell a software app and the power of  building an Idea from the prospective of an  investor. Also how you should build a  business from the perspective of customers, how to present a need to engage qualified prospects, the importance of building a beta product to get market feedback and then how to ask for the sale and scale those sales up.

Jason is the author of the bestselling book Outgrow – Become Valuable. Today’s conversation shows a concrete example how Jason did exactly that.

An Idea Does Not Make a Business

To go from ideation to creation takes work. Jason shares tips on this process on how to sell a software app, as well as how to start a startup. We  kicked off the conversation with the concept that the IDEA does not make a business. It starts with revenue:

  1.  Make a Sale: The way you know you have a business is when you make your first sale.  Make your first sale to an investor.
    • Build your idea  from an investors perspective.
    • Build your business from a clients perspective
  2. Present a Need – instead of telling ask if they have a need you can fulfill (See the film Wolf On Wall Street)
  3. Build a Beta Product – Listen to users  and analyze data. Knock on doors and build rapport.
  4. Ask for the Sale – Get users to buy, whether or not they agree to buy provides tremendous input to your product
  5. Build an anchor client ( a recognizable customer build trust and rapport).
  6. Follow Up!

How To Find Jason Criddle

To learn more about Jason and how to sell a software app you can find him here:

http://jasoncriddle.com/

http://thesmartrapp.com/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncriddle

https://www.facebook.com/thesmartrapp/

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Startup Mindset

Here are some other episodes the discuss the entrepreneurial mindset. Listen now!