May 3rd, 2010 admin
Like many individuals that suffer from time and talent, my green thumb lacks color so I prefer to use the services of a lawn care company. It is one thing to use a lawn care firm to save time but another to waste time for poor service.
During the past two years, the organization delivers services I did not request. Within 72 hours of application the company hands off to a Call Center that repeatedly calls my home seeking payment! . Worse yet the firm has my private cell number and has contacted with me during business meetings to obtain payment for services I did not order.
Although I explain the concerns of fees- their sole purpose is to get the money. They are very aggressive.
For the third time in two years my wife and I terminated the service of TruGreen. In early April 2010, I returned from a business meeting to find a technician once again applying chemicals to my lawn even though services were cancelled. Once again I called to cancel. Suffice to say it is easier to catch a taxicab in New York City on a rainy day then get a manager to return a call.
With the inherent lack of customer service and leadership from my local office I wrote a brief note to the President and CEO of TruGreen to have my issues immediately corrected. He never called or wrote. He had a manager in the local office call me five days later to amend the issue.
The reason why service today in many firms like TruGreen is so poor is because leadership is poor. Leaders in many organizations do not serve as exemplars. Organizations exist for one reason- acquisition and retention of clients. When there is little or no service there are few customers.
Companies wonder why there is no loyalty and why brand suffers. Organizations do not create allure when poor management places a pall on culture.
More ironic is that ServiceMaster owns TruGreen. Ironic when the sister organization cannot extol the company name. Service Blaster is more suitable.
There are seven secrets for selling effectiveness. Click here For a Free Report 7 Secrets to Selling Success
Drew Stevens is one of the world’s leading authorities on business development and customer satisfaction. Drew is the author of the successful sales process book Split Second Selling. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness. To discover how Dr. Drew can assist your organization to increase their business development skills visit him at www.stevensconsultinggroup.com
Posted in Customer Relationship Management, Dr. Drew Stevens, Economic Volatility, account management, asking questions, business development, closing techniques, customer loyalty, customer relationships, customer retention, customer service, lead generation, leadership development, sales and marketing, sales as a career | Comments Off
April 12th, 2010 admin
In the last several weeks I have solicited over 20 vendors for a variety of reasons; restaurants to home improvement centers. There is a stark contrast in treatment from one establishment to the next. Most bewildering is the general lack of focus and respect for customer service. The simplest issue for any business is retaining clients by treating them well. Research over many years proves that it is less expensive to maintain your current client base rather than acquire new.
As a business development and customer service consultant I am more sensitive to the issues. However let me offer some free advice that will save organizations money, time, stress and most of all, customers.
• When a customer walks into an establishment or walks to a cashier please have your staff smile and say hello. The world’s icebreaker is an empathetic smile.
• Remember customer’s names. The sweetest sound customers hear is the name of their name, do not screw it up, repeat it the name if needed.
• Have nametags available for all employees. Nothing is more bothersome than to not know the name of staff.
• Eliminate the ready, fire, aim approach to service. Start having employees listen and question. Nothing can be heard when both sides are speaking.
• Check the baggage. Consumers do not care if employees received a ticket before work; have a toothache or the myriad of other excuses. It is about the customer not the worker. Bad attitudes are to be left at home.
• When possible have all employees wear ubiquitous uniforms especially in service establishments such as doctors, specialists, etc. It is helpful to know staff from vendors or perhaps other customers.
• Have staff address me formally unless told otherwise. Respect is the better part of valor no matter the generational differences.
• Inform staff that cell phones and the rude act of text messaging are off limits during work hours. Attention must be given to the customer not the evening date.
• Ensure background checks on delivery personnel. In the last several weeks I have noticed seven traffic infractions. The most notable – Stop sign avoidance!
• Stop the banter. When clients arrive undivided attention is to be given to them. Refrain from rumor mongering and speaking ill of the previous client.
• Offer frequent customers some type of VIP service. The most treasured become your greatest marketing avatars.
• Create a customer culture all hired need to be focused on your greatest asset- customers.
• People remember the first thing they hear and see and the last. Make a positive first impression and a memorable last.
©2010. Drew Stevens PhD. All Rights Reserved.
There are seven secrets for selling effectiveness. Click here For a Free Report 7 Secrets to Selling Success
Drew Stevens is one of the world’s leading authorities on business development and customer service. Drew is the author of the successful sales process book Split Second Selling. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness. To discover how Dr. Drew dramatically accelerate your business development and sales skills visit his sales and marketing website.
Posted in Customer Relationship Management, Drew Stevens PhD, Sales Training, customer loyalty, customer relationships, customer retention, customer service, sales help, sales skills, sales strategy, sales techniques, selling skills, selling techniques, selling tips | Comments Off
January 17th, 2010 admin
“Everything you want is out there waiting for you to ask. Everything you want also wants you. But you have to take action to get it.”
Jules Renard quotes (French Writer, 1864-1910)
As an avid reader of the conquest of American History I am often reminded of the stories of the Gold Rush. Those that sought gold traveled far to stake their claim to fortune. They traveled far and through rough terrain to capture their dream. American history is rampant with stories of those taking action and subsequent risk to seek out new futures and fortunes.
The contrast today is the laziness of many. Rather than diet and maintain nutrition individuals use a remote in search of the 6-second workout. So many are in a rush they do not signal on highways while others text and drive. Rather than make their own luck they lament by victimization therefore seeking alternatives to work.
If you want a new future stop the folly of laziness and do something. I am amazed when selling professionals and their owners blame customers, the economy and political issues for lack of business. 92% of selling falters because of a lack of a process and more importantly the lack to establish a relationship. Stop whining; stop making excuses and start creating a new future. If you want to reap you must sow. Seek out an education and invest in resources to help you. Gold miners worked for their fortune why shouldn’t you.
There are 7 techniques you can use daily to assist you preparation efforts. Get the 7 Secrets to Sales Preparation by emailing me today. Ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic” to help you gain immediate sales result!
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD is one of the worlds leading experts in sales and sales skills. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. With over 25 years of sales experience and business leader, Dr. Drew has extensive experience in assisting both entrepreneurs and selling professionals to experience higher efficiency and effectiveness. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness offering tips and techniques that immediately improve selling performance.
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January 3rd, 2010 admin
There are 7 techniques you can use daily to assist you preparation efforts. Get the 7 Secrets to Sales Preparation by emailing me today. Ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic” to help you gain immediate sales result!
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD is one of the worlds leading experts in sales and sales skills. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. With over 25 years of sales experience and business leader, Dr. Drew has extensive experience in assisting both entrepreneurs and selling professionals to experience higher efficiency and effectiveness. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness offering tips and techniques that immediately improve selling performance.
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December 30th, 2009 admin
Each day I obtain a wealth of requests from individuals to receive free tips and articles. Unfortunately social media is a Latin term denoting free. Gaining access to free information is analogous to attending a trade show. It is humorous to see attendees carrying overflowing bags of chotskies (crap) only to return home or to hotels rooms and never review the materials.
The failure to review materials and take action results in mediocrity. If you desire to alter your life and start the New Year right, get off your ass and take action. If you want to get into the field of play and alter mediocrity, stop being a spectator. Stop collecting and start doing. Become the aura of life’s trade show not the receptacle.
So many fail because they don’t get started – they don’t go. They don’t overcome inertia. They don’t begin. – W. Clement Stone
BTW. I am happy to provide free stuff, but you must get out of the stands and into the field of play.
There are 7 techniques you can use daily to assist you preparation efforts. Get the 7 Secrets to Sales Preparation by emailing me today. Ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic” to help you gain immediate sales result!
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD is one of the worlds leading experts in sales and sales skills. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. With over 25 years of sales experience and business leader, Dr. Drew has extensive experience in assisting both entrepreneurs and selling professionals to experience higher efficiency and effectiveness. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness offering tips and techniques that immediately improve selling performance.
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December 24th, 2009 admin
In the last several weeks my mailbox has become rift with emails from individuals and organizations that desire an alliance. Coincidentally each foppish message body request me to do something. Items requested include, visit this website, reply to this email, click this url or send me your address. How audacious! What is the value? What is in it for me?
What I find loathsome in each is the audacity of sending messages expecting me [the prospect] to do something. This is the unfortunate issue of selling; many people believe they can sell and that required processes can be avoided. No it cannot! Closing rates fail when there isn’t a process. As I have stated in numerous articles, posts, my books and seminars business closure is based on the acquisition of relationships. If one cannot build relationships they will not close business.
More importantly, relationships are built based on trust and intrinsic value. If the prospect needs to do something, where is the value? What is in it for the prospect when they need to do something? If sellers want something they need to create action, not the prospect. Sellers must illustrate the value THEY provide. Prospects invest in relationships not products. Prospects get annoyed when they have to do something. Stop using ho hum methods and the folly of others. If you want customers stop scrooging yourself!
There are 7 techniques you can use daily to assist you preparation efforts. Get the 7 Secrets to Sales Preparation by emailing me today. Ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic” to help you gain immediate sales result!
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD is one of the worlds leading experts in sales and sales skills. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. With over 25 years of sales experience and business leader, Dr. Drew has extensive experience in assisting both entrepreneurs and selling professionals to experience higher efficiency and effectiveness. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness offering tips and techniques that immediately improve selling performance.
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December 24th, 2009 admin
With over 27 years in the field of selling, Stevens Consulting Group has encountered numerous selling myths. Many are so focused on closing sales but fail to avoid many of the trappings of ridiculous behavior. As I have stated in many of my posts 92% of professionals lack a process in which to conduct relationships that affect business. So many fail to follow two things 1) good advice (and there is a LOT of poor advice nowadays) and 2) proper education. If there were good advice to help you close sales gaps would you be interested? Then here are seven of the top 25 selling errors.
- 1. Price
During our reach into the Millennium, advantages to selling decrease as consumers use the Internet to gain accessibility to competitors, inventory and other vital tools. The information endows the client to strengthen their negotiable position. Price negotiation now succumbs to value. Customers today desire value. Value is the benefit the client receives from a selling professionals business. Value is a competitive differentiator as clients discern the answer to the vital question, “What’s in it for me?” Clients only do business with those they trust. Forget the price equation and only sell on value.
- 2. Anyone can do it
Sales professionals are much like a general on the battlefield, an athletic coach at a game, or a chess player at a tournament: they are always thinking ahead, strategizing to determine their next move. Selling requires a desire to create relationships and a willingness to absorb useful research and articulate the results to a client. Not many have the patience and persistence that selling requires. The skills needed for selling (especially technical sales) are not found in many. Talent is innate and cannot be taught.
- 3. Sales people make good managers
There is a ridiculous notion that since selling professionals manage territories and relationships the transfer of skills rationalizes promotion to management. Not true. Research illustrates that selling professionals desire individual achievement. They enjoy the entrepreneurial ability to call upon clients, meander in their territory and create their own luck. Managing staff requires oversight, reports, and motivation and oftentimes reprimands, shunning results. Simply put, the best selling professionals don’t make the best managers.
- 4. High Motivation is Required
Many aspects of selling require technical conversations. Engineering sales professionals require a pragmatic approach meshed with analytical presentations. Every organization from non-profit to government requires selling to offset expenses. Each firm maintains a variety of cultural standards, some aggressive and loud while others peaceful and cautious. The talent of the professional emulates the organizational culture. High motivation is applicable dependent on the organization. And not all individuals are required to be gregarious.
- 5. CRM Rules
Technology for technology sake is ridiculous. Numerous software and Internet applications assist speed and workplace efficiency. However, many individuals tend to use technology to augment human interaction. Relationships control selling situations. CRM or Customer Relationship Management assists pipeline management. Sellers control relationships with dialogue, language, and discussion not electronic software. Applications must be used to help the relationship not become a substitute for it.
- 6. Internet increases selling effectiveness
The most important part of any business owner is to prepare for each and appointment. The successful professional will always know the client or even the prospect. The Internet is most accessible and enables spontaneous information. Selling professionals might discover useful competitive and industry information that aids the client. However the Internet, like CRM, is not meant to augment the business relationship. Electronic mail and the Internet will aid immediacy of required customer content but it will never substitute for positive relationship building. And forget those social networks, they do little to build business.
- 7. One must always be closing
Building business is about relationships. The discussion with prospects should always be about value, not about fees, or prescriptive programs. If the discussion is not about value, then you or your people have surrendered control of the discussion, and the result will never be on the terms you would prefer. When the discussion is on value and the prospect is convinced of the wisdom of a relationship with you, fees are academic. When business is closed it is based on the adulation of the relationship. Stop worrying about the number of widgets and start worrying about the number of relationships.
There are 25 Myths of Selling to aid in your sales success email me today and I will send an ebook with the others. Ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic”.
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD is one of the worlds leading experts in sales and sales skills. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. With over 25 years of sales experience and business leader, Dr. Drew has extensive experience in assisting both entrepreneurs and selling professionals to experience higher efficiency and effectiveness. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness offering tips and techniques that immediately improve selling performance.
Posted in Drew Stevens PhD, Sales Training, sales help, sales skills, sales strategy, sales techniques, selling skills, selling techniques, selling tips | Comments Off
December 21st, 2009 admin
Let’s face it: We’re all guilty of multitasking. And the madness has to stop.
Come on, be honest. How many of us can refrain from incessantly checking our BlackBerry while attending an important webinar? When chatting with a client on the telephone about moving the sales cycle forward, are you simultaneously perusing the box scores on ESPN.com or watching a snippet of “The Simpsons” on YouTube? Never mind that with this kind of behavior the clock becomes your enemy. The real crime is the lack of retention that defines multitasking.
Read more at: http://tinyurl.com/yfna4aj
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December 21st, 2009 admin
In past generations a winning smile, tenacious follow-up and a strong work ethic were often the benchmarks of a successful sales career. However projections of a loss of up to 40 percent of the sales workforce by 2010 as Baby Boomers retire and the demands of an expanding global market have changed the face of selling for 21st century businesses, non-profit organizations and even educational institutions.
According to a recent Business Week article, the job U.S. employers say is hardest to fill is sales representative, citing the difficulty finding people with the technical expertise and business saavy to explain complex products and services to consumers.
Read more at:
http://www.slu.edu/x33147.xml
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November 19th, 2009 admin
It is the age of information and knowledge, but it is ironic how lazy many have become. Each day I am amazed over the emails, newsgroups and other electronic media requesting innovative methods to sell. Folks if you or others like you are not making your numbers and seek answers to your selling woes look within! If you seek The Secret, here it is… there isn’t any. There are four issues prevalent in today’s society:
- Selling is a relationship business. And, your relationships should be with buyers not gatekeepers. I suggest a quick review of your address book and CRM system. As they say in the database world; garbage in, garbage out. Further look around you and determine whom you speak with and whom you network. Filter your network to only include those that can make a purchase decision.
- Selling requires a process. If you have never been taught how to sell and your organization does not provide training- invest! There is nothing more sickening then the person that wanders in the woods without breadcrumbs. The process of selling is similar to a GPS system; it guides you toward your markets, your buyers and your eventual contracts. Research shows that failure to have a solid process negatively impacts your closure rates. I am amazed and those that desire results but refuse to invest in expertise. Do you join a gym yet never exercise?
- If you build it they will not come. I tire of stupid organizations that believe their product and service sells itself. Recently a young man approached me about coaching and he requested reimbursement from his structural engineering company. The President stated, there is no need to invest in training since engineers do not need to know how to sell. This pomposity ruins organizations and profits because they will not or ever will invest in their greatest asset- sales. If you work for such an organization or your present manager shares such beliefs- leave. Trust me the business will not be around long.
- So many even those reading this post feel victimized by customers, competition, the recession, etc. These are excuses not solutions. Stop hiding behind rocks, rugs and rooms and begin to invest in things that help you become innovative. While there is much uncertainty during a recession, there are assurances. 1) Growth and innovation spark during recessionary times. 2) Those that move are not captivated by fear. 3) Those that go against the tide thrive. Start learning, growing and educating not getting stuck in the malaise of Internet promises. Create your own original opportunities. By gosh do something!
There are 12 techniques you can use daily to assist you sales efforts. If you seek a quick 12 step tip sheet for selling efficiency email me today. And ask about our Free 30 Minutes “Sales Acceleration Coaching Clinic”.
©2009. Drew J. Stevens Ph. D. All rights reserved.
Drew Stevens PhD works with organizations to dramatically accelerate revenue. Dr. Drew is the author of six books including Split Second Selling and the soon to be released Ultimate Business Bible. He is also the creator of the Sales Leadership Certificate one of only 14 programs in the United States offering an accredited degree in the profession of selling and has a top ranked podcast called Sales Fitness with Dr. Drew. To gain a free 30 Minute Coaching Session or to request Secrets of Ultimate Business Success contact Dr. Drew today get the proper prescription for your success.
Posted in Customer Relationship Management, Dr. Drew, Dr. Drew Stevens, Drew Stevens PhD, Sales Training, account management, asking questions, business development, closing techniques, cold calling, communication, customer loyalty, customer relationships, customer retention, exceeding customer expectations, lead generation, leadership development, pipeline management, practice management, price objections, prospecting, sales and marketing, sales as a career, sales coaching, sales effectiveness, sales help, sales management, sales trends, selling skills, selling techniques, selling tips, selling to c-level, tip of the week | 1 Comment »