Cracking the Sales Code with These Two Basic Principles

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 The classified ad screamed: “$600/Month Guaranteed!”  This was a lot of money back in the day.  I was a new high school graduate and had only a vague notion of the saying in business that “Nothing happens until somebody sells something.” I would learn soon enough.  It was my first big sales job. I would be selling vacuum cleaners, cold-calling door-to-door. But the company managers weren’t demanding sales numbers, just behaviors.  The sales training was not what I expected. The sales trainer was not Alec Baldwin in the movie “Glengarry Glen Ross,” pounding the ABC’s of AIDA (sales-speak for “Always Be Closing” and “Attention, Interest, Desire, Action”).  Sales was more than FAB. Selling was not just:   Features — describing what is. Advantages — what it does. Benefits — the value to the customer.  Instead, George, my trainer and mentor, taught two basics: Think behaviors, not ‘dollars’; and Practice influence, don’t ‘sell.’  Door-to-door selling taught me that sales is first about behaviors. Get your behaviors right, and the money follows.  The sales funnel statistics were simple. At the top, at the widest part of the funnel, was the action that I had to perform as a condition of employment for that 600 bucks.  The job was easy; knock on 100 doors a day, six days a week.  It didn’t matter what happened. No one home or not interested? I just had to bang on doors.  This behavior, I was assured, would lead to three invitations to return that evening to present the machine. For every three presentations, one sale would result.  The company numbers worked for me. As I got better, I needed fewer numbers at the sales funnel’s wide top to get a sale at the narrow bottom.  The second skill George, my mentor, taught, was to influence, to persuade.  Good sales training programs remind us the first step in the sales process is to establish rapport. The prospect must respond and then trust you.  Earning the confidence of the prospect begins with the other person making a move in the salesman’s direction. In door-to-door sales, that microscopic move was getting the homeowner to respond and to open the door.  If you’re not knocking on doors, what might that look like? That first response could be getting an email reply.    If the prospect will not open the door, or answer the phone, or return an email, there is no relationship. And there will be no sale.  Please understand, I am not minimizing the skills and the teachable science of salesmanship. Rather, I learned in cold calling that
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