Nervous Knots
What causes
salespeople to ingest the most Tums®? It’s the time period during the
sales process when you don’t know what a prospect is thinking. It starts
when great prospects express interest. It mercifully ends when they
finally make their buying decision. In between you’re on that emotional
roller coaster thinking either the best or the worst could happen to your
sale. No, I can’t make that period of time go away. Yes, I can help you
manage it better.
Don’t jump to conclusions. The worst
thing you can do is to assume that your customer has doubts about
purchasing from you and is not going to buy. You might even think to call
your customer and say something like, “I
haven’t heard back from you and was wondering if you are still
interested.” Don’t do it because you’ll regret it later. Psychologists
will tell you about a phenomenon known as emotional contagion. If someone
else is sad they can transfer their feelings of unhappiness to others. If
they’re happy they transfer those feelings of joy to others. It also works
the same way with doubt. If you assume that a reason exists not to buy
from you and say it, you just might signal these doubts to your customer.
We’re innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. While your customer
is deliberating, you are also innocent. If you assume there’s a negative
you just might plant the seeds of doubt—and see it grow. When you speak
with a prospect always express the positive. Never express doubt.
Remove emotion and stick with logic. So how do you deal
with your emotions and feelings of doubt? Instead of letting your emotions
carry the day, do an assessment of where you are in the sales process. I
tend to examine what I call active drivers. Active drivers are what the
prospect is doing to drive the sale forward. I recap everything my
prospect said and did that led me to believe the sale was moving forward.
Did the customer ask for particular pieces of information? That’s a good
sign. Did the customer say he was going to call current customers? That’s
a step moving closer to make a buying decision. Did we agree on a price?
That’s a definite sign of commitment. Write down all the actions your
prospect took that moved the sale forward. By focusing on concrete issues,
you’ll calm yourself down and allow reason to govern. When you know
logically that your sale does have some foundation, you will be able to
speak confidently with your prospect.
Let it be won’t work. You may be thinking that your customer has enough information to make
a decision. He’ll call you when he’s made his decision. Right? Wrong. Your
customer is trying to make a decision. If you are in this limbo state,
then something in your customer’s decision making process is preventing
him from making the buying decision. You must find out what it is without
delay. You must contact your prospect. Once when I experienced a decision
delay, I knew that my prospect was planning on speaking with my
references. The voicemail I left said, “Just seeing if there was something
I needed to do, perhaps a gentle reminder to my customers if you needed
something from them.” I smiled when I left the message because I wanted to
convey a relaxed tone of voice. Your call to your customer could start the
same way and ask your prospect if you need to do something.
After
being in sales over 25 years, there still are times when I am faced with
the roller coaster emotions from a delayed buying decision. It’s only a
matter of time when you will also face this situation. Just make sure that
you help your prospect make a decision to buy. You can save the Tums for
someone else.
Maura Schreier-Fleming works with
business and sales professionals on skills and strategies so they can sell
more and be more productive at work. She is the author of Real-World
Selling for Out-of-this-World Results which is available at
www.BestatSelling.com. She founded her company Best@Selling in
1997. You can reach her at 972.380.0200 or
info@Bestatsellling.com.
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