articleshistory.com articleshistory.com
Site Home About Us Privacy Terms of Use Place Your Link Add Your Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Hotels & Travel

News & Media

Recreation

Home Family & Garden

Jobs & Careers

Healthcare & Medicine

Health & Hygiene

Cooking & Drinking

Art & Creative

Teens & Children

Business & Services

Investment & Finance

Self Management

Technology & Science

People & Society

Online Shopping

Games & Play

Academics & Education

Relationship & Lifestyle

Law & Politics

Automobiles

Adventure & Sports

Computers & Software

Realty & Property

 

Site Home –› Business & Services –› Sales
 

Inner Game of Prospecting

 
Author: Robert Palmer
Salespeople under perform because they don't sell enough. They don't sell enough because they don't have enough prospective buyers to sell to. And they don't have enough prospective buyers because they don't initiate contact with new prospects in sufficient numbers. For many low producing salespeople, initiating first contact is emotionally uncomfortable, so they avoid it, put it off or contort it into alternative and sometimes barely recognizable contact strategies such as colorful mail outs, deflected identities ("I'm here to advise you, not to sell you anything") or calling only on limited, emotionally "safe" segments of the market. This coping style is called compensatory prospecting. It is practiced by many salespeople and some entire sales organizations and businesses.

Regardless of how manicured a salesperson's presentation technique is, nothing gets sold unless and until contact is initiated with prospective buyers. Ultra-slick presentation skills, dazzling rapport-building techniques, detailed product knowledge, clever closes and expensive sales training all are potentially valuable. But they cannot and will not return a penny of profit if salespeople don't have prospects to sell to. First things first.
Prospecting is the one defining core competency that is absolutely essential for success in sales. Prospecting by itself does not confer success. But not prospecting guarantees failure.
What has been uncovered is a discrete pattern of escape and avoidance associated with establishing first contact. The hesitation to make the initial contact is an emotional twitch that impairs the ability of otherwise talented, capable people to establish first contact with other people. It can surface in any social contact situation from requesting a raise to networking events to asking for dates.

When the hesitation is found in salespeople, it exacts a spirit-crushing toll on prospecting behavior, placing an artificially low emotional limit on the number of calls one can comfortably make. When this happens, a salesperson experiences what we call Sales Call Reluctance.

Unlike popular designations like "fear of rejection" which is broad, sales call reluctance is highly specific. No one can reject a salesperson, unless they are rejecting themselves. Some call reluctant salespeople have trouble using the telephone as a prospecting tool. Others have trouble initiating contact with prospective buyers face-to-face. Still others can call on people with lower socioeconomic standing, but not higher. They "target avoid" rather than "target market." All of them already know how to prospect. The question is whether they will emotionally allow themselves to prospect.

Call reluctance can be present at the onset of a sales career, or it can strike suddenly, without warning, in highly productive sales veterans. Its origins are multiple and complex. There is no single source, no single germ-like "timidity" to destroy. But, call reluctance can be traced to three basic sources: personality predispositions, hereditary influences and exposure to others with Call Reluctance.

Some forms of sales call reluctance can be traced to a single, traumatic early selling experience. Sometimes the cause is over-tightened performance pressures or burdensome administrative procedures. In a surprising number of cases, highly contagious forms of sales call reluctance are inadvertently carried and spread by the sales training process itself. Type is Important

Sales call reluctance is not another buzzword. It has objective reality, which means that it exists whether you think it does nor not. And, using properly designed and calibrated assessment instruments, it can be objectively measured.

To complicate matters somewhat, sales call reluctance is a moving target with a multiple personality. It can assume twelve distinct prospecting-avoidant identities. That's one reason sales trainers, managers and psychologists have had such a difficult time dealing with it over the years. They presumed it was one thing and tried to correct it accordingly.

Knowing which of the 12 types holds you or your salespeople hostage is important.

1. Doomsayer: Worries, will not take social risks.
2. Over-Preparer: Over-analyzes, under acts.
3. Hyper-Pro: Obsessed with the image and looking good.
4. Stage Fright: Fear group presentations.
5. Role Rejection: Secretly ashamed of sales careers; deflects identity.
6. Yielder: Fears intruding on others.
7. Socially Self-Conscious: Intimated by up-market clients.
8. Separationist: Won't mix business and friends.
9. Emotionally Unemancipated: Won't mix business and family.
10. Referral Aversion: Fears distributing existing business or client relationships.
11. Telephobia: Fears using the telephone for prospecting.
12. Oppositional Reflex: Argues, blames, rebuffs attempts at coaching.

Call reluctance carries with it heavy emotional and financial costs.
Most cases of sales call reluctance are acquired. The good news is that, since these behaviors are learned, they can be unlearned with proper training and modern psychological countermeasures. But not all behaviors respond best to the same treatment. That's why proper diagnosis of type is essential.

For more infomation please visit www.spqgoldtesting.com

Sales Call Reluctance is a trademark of Behavioral Sciences Research Press, Dallas, Texas.

Author Bio:

About The Author: William Wynn a Fashion Designer and Manufacturer of apparel for over 15 years. So stop by and visit me at www.plussizefigure.com for more great clothing.

You can search for this article using: Inner Game of Prospecting, Business & Services, Sales, business phone sales
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Inventory Management
 
How to Protect Yourself Against the Hidden Cost of Shipping to Trade Shows
 
Measuring Success as an IT Consultant
 
The Importance Of Implementing a Business Plan
 
Crucial Considerations about Marketing Postcards
 
Seven Required Elements of a Home Business E-Commerce Package
 
Special Kid Organizational Budgets and Small Business Solutions
 
The Businessperson's Dilemma: To Wear the Rolex or Not!
 
Work At Home Business
 
Project Management - How to Plan and Schedule More Complex Projects
 
 
 
 
 

Ecommerce Hosting - How To Choose A Merchant Account

For a number of e-Businesses, discovering the best way to accept payments is a frustrating task. As ... - Stanley Spencer
 

9 secrets Mark Twain taught me about advertising

Whether he knew it or not, Sam Clemens had quite a bit to say about advertising. Here, among his man ... - Alex A. Kecskes
 

6 Steps to an Effective Online Business

6 Steps to an Effective Online Business-What does it take to become successful online? Find out here ... - Sean Mize
 

Dollar Store Setup Tips from Leading Retail Fixture Supplier

Setting up your dollar store? Nu-Era provides valuable tips to dollar store owners that will make th ... - Scott Kolbe
 

Build Your Small Business by Building Relationships

Building relationships to build your business is just like planting a seed to grow a tree. Seeds tha ... - Charlotte Farrior
 

Sales Performance and Motivation: How to Get Your Edge Back

Performance and motivation are like chocolate & peanut butter; the combination is better than either ... - Sally Bacchetta
 
 
Site Home -> Privacy -> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.articleshistory.com All Rights Reserved.