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Archive for March, 2009

Wow! 10,000 euro - The iQ Prize

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

iQ Content is an Irish company, based in Dublin. Working for clients from across Europe, their team of usability, accessibility and content experts are dedicated to creating better websites.

Yesterday, they launched the The iQ Prize: 10,000 euro for the best business plan for an internet start-up.

“iQ Content was born in the last great tech recession of 2000, so we know how hard it is for startups. But we also think recessions are a great time for creativity, good ideas and starting sustainable businesses,” said Morgan McKeagney, managing director at iQ Content. 10K! Morgan, were you drunk?

“The iQ Prize is our contribution to creating a better Ireland: a catalyst to tap into Ireland’s talent, to spark innovation, and to help create the great businesses of the future”

But the company has made it clear that they will have no equity stake in any business founded by the eventual winner of the prize, nor are they looking to invest.

“We’re doing this because we can, and because we think it’s timely and worthwhile.” McKeagney also thinks Ireland as a nation is particularly well-positioned to create world-class internet companies.

“What are the Irish good at?” he asks. “Storytelling, creativity, technology” and that’s just the start of it. I think we have a natural advantage in building web-based businesses. We’re good at it, so why not focus on it and try to build something out of it?”

Interested entrants must send in a brief 5-page business plan that shows how they will turn their idea into a great online business.

The prize will go through an initial round of applications, after which a shortlist of applicants will be asked to present their business plans before a panel of independent judges.

Visit www.iqprize.ie

Well done to Morgan and the team at iQ.

As the Market Drops, Don’t Be a Closer

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Btb Guest Author

Nigel Edelshain

The sky is falling.

Well, the stock market and many of the great behemoth financial firms that I have sold to over the last dozen years are. Let’s say many of us are not in the most upbeat mood right now.

And how does this “macro economic tension” tend to show up in sales organizations? Concern over making our numbers. And that concern over making numbers makes tense sales people. Tense sales people that tend to put too much pressure on their prospects to sign on the dotted line.

People love to buy but they hate to be sold. Sales cycles don’t really exist what really exists is a buying cycle. In our world of so many options for the buyer, we need to face facts that it’s the buyer who controls the “sales process” not the seller.

The sales person’s job (actually the whole company behind the sales person) is to be in-sync with buyer at whatever point the buyer is in the buying cycle. A typical buying cycle might look like this: (1)recognition of a need, (2) seek out options, (3) discuss/evaluate options and (4) buy.

A sales person who tries to close the buyer when they are not in phase 4 of the buying cycle will annoy the prospect/buyer and won’t get a deal. But that’s what “old school selling” tells us to do “always be closing”. Watch out because as the pressure mounts on us sales executives to close more the opposite is happening for the buyer. As the market fear grows buyers will be thinking “should I really pull the trigger on this spend or should I hold off”. The last thing that will help a cautious buyer commit is a pushy sales person!

What’s a sales person to do?

Calm down. Don’t try to close everything in sight. Stay in-sync with your prospects. Make sure you know where they are in the buying cycle. Act accordingly. If they are just starting to look at options, get them the information they need to understand and evaluate your offering.

And…prospect. Yes, whenever things get tougher in the economy sales people need to be able to put more leads into their sales funnel. You will need more prospects because either some deals will drop out due to budgets being cut etc. or some of the deals that survive will move more slowly to close than you originally thought.

You will need to “diversify” your sales pipeline as the market gets more volatile just as an investor diversifies their stock portfolio. You will want more prospects in your sales pipeline than when times were “easy”. Preferably prospects from lots of different companies and industries so your risks of being clobbered by any one company’s or any one industry’s budget cuts are reduced.

So as things get tougher don’t become a closer. Become an opener.

Nigel Edelshain - is CEO of Sales 2.0 Companies use Sales 2.0’s telesales and consulting services to take their sales to the next level, typically boosting results 3 - 10 times.

News

Fellow Top Sales Expert Diane Helbig is a contributing author to a brand new book “Chicken Soup For The Soul - Power Moms” it’s about women who sacrifice so much in order to balance their lives, whilst still pursuing their dreams. If you are looking for inspiration, this is a book you really must read - just click here to grab your copy.

Here’s is Diane’s recent interview on TSE Dailies. Listen by clicking on the banner below.

Social Media Wars?

I have recently been involved in some heated arguments over at The Customer Collective about the evolving role of social media in B2B sales.  Jonathan Farrington, Dave Stein, Dave Brock and I share a similar opinion as to how these tools will impact going forward. Last week, in a post by Jonathan, this dialogue took an unfortunate turn - with personal attacks by a few social media zealots.

Dave Stein writes about this is his post “The Social Media (Wars)” and in his blog, Dave Brock asks “Are the Right People Listening?”

The Future of Professional Selling

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

As a member of the Top Sales Experts team, it gives me great pleasure to introduce to the Irish Business Community.

TSE Roundtables

The TSE Roundtable Program will deliver the best sales practices of some of the most successful and globally recognized sales gurus in the world.

Each roundtable is just $99.50 for non-members. Members attend for $74.50. You can join here

TSE 2.0 launch banner

Kick Off Event: The Future of Professional Selling

Tuesday April 14th 2009 1.00 PM EASTERN (6pm GMT)


THE Most Significant Interactive Online Sales Event Of The Year

Join the debate, as five of the world’s leading sales gurus, discuss what professional selling will involve in five, ten, and even twenty year’s time

  • Does professional selling as we know it have a future?
  • What impact will Sales 2.0 have on the way we sell?
  • How will organisations train and develop their sales teams?
  • Today, what is the relative value derived from sales training courses versus coaching?
  • Will “one-size fits all” classroom training, be consigned to the annals of history?
  • Which industries are more likely to witness the death of selling as we know it today?
  • What can front-line salespeople do to protect themselves from possible extinction?
  • After this current financial meltdown, will lost jobs be re-created?
  • Will the rapid growth of online sales training and coaching continue?
  • Ongoing research shows that sales performance has been declining year after year. Why is that?
  • Quite simply, will selling ever be the same again?

Join us now ……..  hurry, places are limited!


Speaker Top Sales Expert Jonathan Farrington image Jonathan Farrington
Chairman of The Sales Corporation and CEO of Top Sales Associates based in London and Paris. He is also the author of the upcoming “So You Really Want To Be A Top 5% Player In The Game Of Sales?
Speaker Top Sales Expert Jill Konrath image Jill Konrath
A leading-edge sales strategist … author of the instant sales classic, Selling to Big Companies … an in-demand sales speaker who provides a much needed wake-up call to sales organizations.
Speaker Top Sales Expert Linda Richardson image Linda Richardson
Linda is the Founder and Chairman of Richardson, a global sales training business. As a recognized leader in the industry, she has won the coveted Stevie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Sales Excellence for 2006. Linda’s “Perfect Selling” was this year’s Sales Book Awards “Best Sales Book Of The Year”.
Speaker Dave Stein image Dave Stein
Dave Stein is the founder and CEO of ES Research, an organization that provides on-line, membership-based analyses of, and recommendations about, the sales training and sales performance and consulting marketplace and the companies that serve it.
Chairman Top Sales Expert Nigel Edelshain image Nigel Edelshain
Nigel is CEO of Sales 2.0 Companies use Sales 2.0’s telesales and consulting services to take their sales to the next level, typically boosting results 3 - 10 times.
Host Paul Simon TSE Communication Director image Paul Simon
Paul is communications director for Top Sales Experts. Through TSE, and as contributing sales editor for AllBusiness and content manager for CanDoGo, he works closely with sales experts throughout the United States and in other countries.


New LinkedIn Group - Sales Leadership Ireland

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

I have started a spanking new LinkedIn group called Sales Leadership Ireland

My aim is to give the Irish sales professionals an on-line opportunity to network and discuss issues that concern you.

I have already uploaded some info on Sales 2.0 and Competitive Selling skills to get things started. Please join us, as the more of you that do, the better the opportunities will be for everyone.

LinkedIn is now an important sales tool, it’s really easy to set up a profile and is great for developing new business relationships and SALES.

Panic and the Rise of Micro Management - Killing Sales From Within

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Btb Guest Author

Paul McCord

I’m hearing more and more frustration from both salespeople and sales leaders as the slow economy increases the panic on the part of senior management. Sales are slowing dramatically, profits are down or have completely evaporated, and the pressure is increasing on all levels to produce, produce, produce.

Along with the pressure to produce comes the micro managing of the sales team and its leadership. Managers are having daily pipeline meetings with the members of their team. Increasingly these meetings are getting uglier and uglier with increased threats if sales don’t increase.

Middle managers are having daily calls–in some instances two or more calls per day–with the managers under them as they want an accounting for each team member’s activities, including reviewing the sales status of each and every prospect.

Management is demanding detailed reports for each prospect. If a salesperson deems a contact to be a non-prospect, managers are demanding the salesperson continue to pursue the contact in hopes of turning them into a prospect.

Each minute of the day must be accounted for. Management is accepting no excuses for not closing a sale–bad credit, not a reason, get them pay cash; no need, not a reason, create a need for them; want to wait to see what the market will do, not a reason, convince them that now’s the time to buy; cash flow issues, not a reason, get them to factor their receivables to get the cash to make the purchase.

As salespeople get bombarded with threats and each second of their day is micro managed, they resort to discounting and trying to include as many incentives to purchase as they can in an effort to get sales to get management off their back.

They quickly discover that even if that creates a sale, it creates a new set of problems as they get a lecture about how the company doesn’t discount and their job is to maintain gross and if they can’t, the company will find someone who will. Many managers resort to writing all proposals for their sales team to insure that they control every aspect of the sale.

As morale declines and sales lag even further, senior management gives more and more directives, demanding greater control and more ‘accountability’ on each employee’s part.

When today’s demands don’t create the desired result, they’re added to or changed tomorrow, spiraling in a seemingly never-ending series of demands and threats, each more ominous than the last.

And sales plunge even faster than before.

Once management panics it seems impossible to stop the downhill flow of negative consequences. The more pressure management feels, the more they try to spread the pressure downward, believing they can demand production via force.

The process inevitably produces nothing other than a bigger hole from which the company must emerge.

If micro managing is such a negative force, why do managers resort to it? The root cause may be panic, but the belief they need to micro manage their team is based squarely in a distrust of their employees–a belief that their salespeople and managers aren’t working hard enough, that the sales team doesn’t care enough, that their team is intrinsically lazy and is only looking for the low hanging fruit, not willing to get dirty and dig for the hard to find business.

If sheer force and threats don’t work, what can the management team do to stabilize–or maybe even increase–sales during this time of economic stress?

1. Don’t panic.
Of course, this is easier said than done. But panic leads to overreacting and bad decisions.  We need look no further than the US government over the past 6 months to see the consequences of panic–squandered opportunities, a diarrhea of ineffective spending in an effort to ‘do something now’ with little regard to the future, and a massive list of decisions that upon reflection many–even those involved in the initial decision making process–wish had never been made.

2. Make an honest evaluation of the situation and communicate it to the entire team.
Employees are not stupid. They are aware of the economic situation and they not only wonder what impact it has on the company, they speculate–and most often their speculation is far worse than the truth of the actual situation.

Employees–and in particular the sales team–perform best when they know and understand the company’s goals and objectives and the obstacles standing in the way of reaching those goals and objectives.

The more clearly each sales team member understands the company’s needs and concerns, the more clearly they can not only understand where they fit in, but what they can–what they must –do to help address those needs and concerns. If team members sense that the company isn’t communicating honestly with them, they begin to retreat into themselves, resisting the company’s entreaties and even the most dire threat falls on deaf ears.

3. Formulate a comprehensive and workable plan that includes participation by all parties to address market conditions.
History is replete with examples of monarchs and generals who when faced with tough opposition retreat into a bunker mentality. They become increasingly overwhelmed with circumstances, they become delusional, they begin to distrust even their closest friends and companions. In short order they are totally isolated. Their plans and orders have little to do with reality.

This same phenomenon happens in the executive suite. When faced with potential crisis, senior management will often retreat to their own mental concrete bunker.  Rather than seeking the wisdom and cooperation of their employees, they barricade themselves in, shouting orders through the barred door.

In our current economy where quality prospects are difficult to find and sales must be fought for, gaining the cooperation and commitment from staff is critical.  Senior management cannot survive on their own.

If they and the company are to survive, it will take the active participation of all the work force.  Consequently, the more ownership in the solution to overcoming the company’s obstacles each member of the team feels, the more committed to the solution–and to their individual contributions to the solution–each will be.

4.  Commit the company to giving the needed support to accomplish the goals and overcome the obstacles.
When panic sets in, the cost cutting butcher knife comes out.  Management looks at every expense as a waste.  Can we use a shorter, less expensive screw here; can we make that piece of metal a little thinner?  Do we really need that much money in our marketing budget?  Slash sales training, it’s never done any good anyway.

As the butcher of the executive office is in the midst of a budget-cutting orgy, critical resources for sales stability–much less sales growth–are apt to be gutted also.  While belt tightening is necessary when business slows, a finely honed scalpel is necessary, not a meat clever.

Creating sales takes money. Salespeople need the same resources in slow times to create sales as they do during hot markets. Certainly gratuitous expenses such as client dinners and games of golf may be legitimate areas for trimming, but training, travel, clerical support, and other expenses that lead directly to or support the closing of business are not to be cut indiscriminately. In fact, when it comes to training, prospecting, lead generation, and client retention expenses, the slower the economy, the more funds should be directed to those areas.

Times are tough. That doesn’t mean that it is time for a management meltdown.

There are solutions to slowing sales.

Resorting to micro management and threats won’t produce anything other than disgruntled employees and slower sales.

However, gaining the trust, cooperation, and commitment of your team to address the issues facing the company–and by extension, themselves–can give your company the coordinated effort by all to weather this economic downturn.

Paul McCord is a leading authority on prospecting, referral selling, and personal marketing.  He is president of McCord Training, a Midland, Texas based sales training, coaching, and consulting company.  His first book, Creating a Million Dollar a Year Sales Income: Sales Success through Client Referrals (John Wiley and Sons, 2007), is an Amazon and Barnes and Noble best-seller and is quickly becoming recognized as the authoritative work on referral selling. His second book, SuperStar Selling: 12 Keys to Becoming a Sales SuperStar has just been released.  He may be reached at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com or visit his sales training website at www.mccordtraining.com or his highly popular blog www.salesandmanagementblog.com

I first came across this super article from Paul through Jill Konrath’s blog

This is timely advice for us all, micro management is a really easy trap to fall into and something we have all got to wary of.

Over at Top Sales Experts

I have always thought that PowerPoint is a limiting sales tool.

Here is a recent TSE daily interview with Mark Hunter on this very subject.

Maureen Blandford in interview with Mark Hunter

Listen as Mark tells us why PowerPoint is not nearly as important as we might like to think.

Sales Expo Update

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Sales Expo 09 has being rescheduled for June 9th.

At the event there will be trade stands from CRM companies such as Sage, agencies such as Rightfit, Sales Trainers and Coaches, Telesales / Sales Lead Generation Companies and much more.

This event is being run to help sales professional’s boost their own motivation as well as network with like minded sales professionals so why not bring a sales colleague and network your heads off?

For more information please call Lisa on 01 236 6636

Parties interested in participating at the event with a trade stand call Niall on01 236 6636

Individuals Interested in Attending the Sales Expo ‘09:

Booking details below:

Date: June 9th
Time: 5.30pm - 8.30pm
Venue: Ballsbridge Court hotel (Formally known as Berkeley Court)
Cost: €20.00

01 236 6636 or email lisa@jobsonlinegroup.ie

TSE How-To Guides: Practical Application in Real Time

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Here is a little more detail on a second TSE 2.0. feature.

Introducing Top Sales Experts 2.0 How-To Guides.

Our How-To Guides come in Video, Audio, and Article formats.

This “How to” section can be likened to a sales encyclopaedia that contains practical applications for every aspect of the sales role. As the demands placed on front-line sales professionals grow with their ever-increasing responsibilities to perform under high-pressured situations, finding quick solutions becomes vital.

You can select a technique from a huge range of topics that enable you to grasp a core understanding about how to implement each technique, easily and efficiently. Each of these techniques has been categorised into twelve core sections.

  • Account Management
  • Business Development
  • Cold Calling
  • Marketing
  • Negotiation
  • Objections
  • Presentations
  • Prospecting
  • Qualification
  • Recruitment
  • Sales Leadership
  • Self Improvement

To improve your user experience we have also added icons beside each title to let you know what format the How to Guide is in.

Imagine for a moment that you have just come off the phone with a key customer. She tells you that your competitor is very keen to win her business and has offered a fantastic price. What do you do? How best to handle the situation?

Now imagine that at the click of a mouse, you can get specific advice on how to handle this exact situation from internationally acclaimed experts, people like Jill Konrath, Jonathan Farrington, Christian Maurer and Steve Martinez.

That’s what the TSE How-To Guides are, practical advice from the best at your fingertips in real time.

TSE Membership banner

Yesterday was Saint Patricks day and the TSE Daily Interview featured 2009 Stevie Award winner for Sales Education Leader of the year, TSE very own Keith Rosen.

Steve talks about why sales managers need to make a fundamental change, and coach process rather than result. Make no mistake, this is brilliant advice.

Maureen Blandford in interview with Keith Rosen

Is Provocative Selling a new kind of Selling Eloquence or just the same old Blarney?

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Ireland is a small Island on north-west of Europe with a population of just over 4 million people. Mass emigration means however, that over 80 million people worldwide are now of Irish decent. This Irish Diaspora is over fourteen times the population of the island of Ireland itself. From JFK to Barack Obama, Joyce to U2, Guinness to Riverdance, tomorrow is St Patrick’s Day; when we invite the world to join with us in celebrating all things Irish.

One famous Irish landmark is the Blarney Stone; legend has it that kissing the stone gives the gift of eloquence. Eloquence is the ability of expressing strong emotions in striking and appropriate language, thereby producing conviction or persuasion. The term is also used for writing in a fluent style.

The story goes that Queen Elizabeth the 1st requested an oath of loyalty from Cormac Teige McCarthy, the Lord of Blarney. She received a response that promised loyalty without “giving in”. Elizabeth proclaimed that McCarthy was giving her “(a lot of) Blarney”, thus apparently giving rise to the legend.

One man who definitely has the gift of eloquence is my friend and colleague, Dave Brock. Dave and I have been exchanging ideas about the concepts behind” Provocative Selling”. We thought our different views complemented each other—rather than merging them, we thought we could stimulate discussion in the community by posting both and encouraging you to read each.  Read Dave’s views in his post “The Big Idea, Solve Your Customers’ Big Problems”

So is “Provocative Selling” a new kind of selling eloquence or just the same old Blarney?

It talks about moving our thinking and methodology about selling from focusing on “What keeps our customers awake at night,” to “What should keep our customers awake at night.” The premise is in changing the objective, you change the discussion. Different conversations lead to different outcomes with the goal to find bigger problems which in turn will lead to bigger sales.

While I not entirely convinced that what keeps and what should keep our customers awake at night are actually that far apart, I am impressed with identifying the need for a different type of conversation. What I really like about Provocative Selling is its process, the how to get from A – Z bit. The simple fact of having a much more open starting point to our dialogue with prospects, will I believe lead to having much better conversations. Too many of us continue to talk customers in the same way about the same things and it’s stopped working.

Maybe there is not something spanking new here, but perhaps we do all need reminding that what we should be talking to our customers about is “how we can help them to help their customers”. The reality is that no other conversation is worth having at the moment. The combination of expertise, knowledge and skills required is high, but maybe it’s now “a must have” in the salesperson’s toolbox.

Another important facet of this approach is that it increases the worth of the salesperson, not just in the eyes of the customer; but more importantly perhaps in the eyes of the salesperson. Dave often speaks of how salespeople need to “create value in every interchange with customers” Surely the starting point must be salespeople who have first built upon their own intrinsic value before customers and sales.

Top salespeople are constantly looking to add to their repertoire of knowledge and expertise. There is a subtle yet powerful difference, between finding opportunity and having the ability to go and create it. Could it be that in many ways? Provocative Selling is what top salespeople are already doing.

As for the luck of the Irish, well I have always agreed with those who say that you make your own luck. Have a Happy Saint Patrick’s Day one and all.

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

Recruiting Top Sales Pros is now HARDER (not easier)

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Many businesses believe that the recruitment of quality salespeople is now easier than ever. Their logic, more salespeople looking for fewer roles, so filling any available sales roles should be easy.

Many businesses that previously had outsourced the recruitment process now are choosing to handle it internally. It’s seems like an obvious cost saving. With no need to pay sales recruitment specialists, the overall recruitment cost decreases.

I am going to introduce you to a counter-argument. I believe that recruiting top sales people is now not easier than before but actually harder than before. The principles of my argument are also pretty straight forward.

Firstly, it is true; there are more sales professionals in the market looking for sales roles. However in an overall sense, these people do not represent  better sales performance, they represent lesser sales performance. In terms of letting people go, businesses need now more than ever to hold on to their top sales performers. So to equate lots of available salespeople with lots of available good salespeople is misguided.

Here’s the second, but none the less important factor as I see it. What about the individual salesperson attitude to the risk of changing roles. If the top salespeople continue to be valued by their current employers, they will lightly view changing now as having much more risk (better the devil, you know)

We have some first hand experience of how difficult it is right now. Some of our own clients have decided to recruit internally. The reports so far have had a common theme, many CVs but with an overall poor quality. In the recent recruitment/head-hunting assignments we have continued to be involved with, a much larger part now involves reassuring sales people about moving during the downturn.

Businesses need to take a step back and consider all the factors before embarking on a course of action. What might seem obvious at first rarely is. Top 5% sales performers can deliver huge ROI.  A little investment in one now could be one of the very best ways of combating the downturn.

Fantastic New E-book on Sales Training

Our TSE Captain, Jonathan Farrington has just released a new E-book

“The Problem with Sales Training”

It’s critical reading for purchasers and providers of sales training alike.

Need Sales Training? Let’s Sit Down and Talk about it

Monday, March 9th, 2009

The following is the rough transcript of a recent call I had with a Sales Director of a large Irish Company.

Mr X: Hi Niall, This is _________ __________, I am the Sales Director with ___________ ___________ What I’m looking for a two day sales training course to brush up on our selling skills. What would that cost?

Me: Hi __________, thanks for your call, let me briefly tell you about what we do. We specialise in providing bespoke in-house sales training solutions. We invest a lot of time in identifying how best we can help, come up with a plan to achieve sales results, and build a training programme around this. Can you first tell me a little about the company, what you sell, to who and what prompted you to call me at this time?

Mr X: We sell _____________ to _____________; we have a team of 20 field based salespeople. The salespeople feel that they would benefit from some sales training; times are tough and they believe that it would help them to make more sales.

Me: Great, Let’s hold that last thought “to make more sales” what I would like to do next with your permission, is for us to meet up, introduce myself and Btb training, how we work and investigate with you, if and how our sales training solutions can help to make more sales. How would sometime next week suit?

Mr X: Frankly, Niall, I don’t see that there is any need, what I am looking for is a two day sales training course, plain and simple. Can you send me a proposal including costs? All the other training companies were able to; they didn’t need to meet up.

Me: I understand but again our focus is ensuring actual results, so let me explain to you why I feel that it is necessary for us to meet up. If the overall objective of this process is to increase sales, I do not yet know how I can help, and even if I can help, the training solution I might recommend will likely be different to a two-day course on basic selling skills. This first meeting allows me an opportunity to investigate, to better get to know you, the company, the problems and the solutions. In short, if I can help and how I can help. I cannot commit to a project unless I have established this, in other words I will need to be sure that I can deliver ROI. This first meeting is very much for my benefit, and hence there is no fee, nor is it a commitment to do business. I will only seek that commitment after I have demonstrated that I can help to increase sales.

Mr X: I think what you are saying is that you want an opportunity to increase your price?

Me: LOL, __________ it is highly lightly that the overall solution that I will recommend will require more than two days training, so yes, this would mean more cost. We tend to work with clients on an ongoing basis. I would be taking a long-term view point, that being said, new clients generally will hire us to first, do a stand alone project. The reality is that unless you see results, you won’t rehire and we are happy to work with you on this basis. Can I ask, what has been your experience of other trainers?

Mr X: I think that sales training every now and then, is good to remind salespeople about the right ways of doing things and to motivate, but after a while it’s forgotten and you need to start again.

Me: You are absolutely right, traditional sales training focuses on imparting knowledge; so much of what is taught is quickly forgotten. That is why you find you have to retrain the same skills over and over. We would take a different approach, in that we would create long-behaviour led changes, with each course looking to build on and teach new skills. I also agree that sales training needs to be ongoing. As part of or meet, I would like to continue to discuss these training experiences, and identify how we can ensure a longer-term skills change.

Mr X: For now, I just need a proposal for two days training with costs and names of who you have worked with. If we are interested, I can come back to you about the meeting.

Me: I’m afraid I won’t be able to put together a proposal at this stage, for the reasons I have already mentioned. I can however give you names and numbers of some clients in your space. Perhaps, I could set up a call so that you can have a conversation with them about our approach, and how it compares to other training providers. How does that sound?

Mr X: I will only be interested in talking to references after we had made a decision to go ahead with whomever.

Me: OK, I’m sorry then, I don’t think that there is much more I can say at this stage, if you change your mind or if you would like to consider a different approach next time, please do let me know. I will send you an e-mail to recap on our conversation and include my contact details. Thanks for your call.

Mr X: We are in a recession, you are supposedly a top sales trainer and you refuse to quote for potential business. Think you are in the wrong business, Niall. Goodbye.

I have tried to be as truthful as I can about what was said. My initial thoughts were that the individual, because of previous bad sales training experiences, has no faith in sales training as a solution. He is possibly being requested by the sales-team to provide training and is looking for the cheapest available option.

I took the call on my mobile, walking to and from meetings, perhaps I could have taken a different approach, but I get the feeling that the net result would have been the same.

I have received a large number of these types of calls since I became a trainer. Some might say that “the customer is always right” but I will continue to refuse to quote for sales training until I have established that I can help. It’s just a pity that more training providers don’t have the courage to do the same.

Over at TSE 2.0 today.

One of the most clued-in business consultants on the planet, Dave Brock of Partners In EXCELLENCE. Listen as Dave talks Counter-intuitive:

Rather than driving harder and faster, do we really need to take a step back and evaluate how we can do things better.

Maureen Blandford in interview with Dave Brockr image

Like what you hear, Well why not come and join us.

TSE Membership banner

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

TSE Dailies – KICK-START Your Day

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

As I have already mentioned on this blog, I am now a member of the Top Sales Experts team. TSE is a collection of the world finest sales gurus, all under one roof.

TSE Membership banner

TSE has many truly excellent resources with more on the way. Rather than take you through the full list, I thought I would pick one at a time and give a little more detail.

The TSE Daily Interviews

Maureen Blandford, founder of the MindTime Group and author of “Branding Doesn’t Work in B2B interviews a different expert, Monday through Friday.

As you put the key in the ignition of your day, tune in to a power-packed interview with one of our experts.

This tool is designed to be an easy add-on to your morning office routine. And, all interviews will be archived, if you miss one or you want to share with your team.

Although free to everybody, subscribers to TSE have the unique opportunity to request topics they would like to hear covered.

Yesterday was my first day in the hot seat, all feedback welcome.

Post Updated 05/03/09

Chairman of the Sales Corporation, CEO of Top Sales Associates, based in London & Paris, and our own Captain at Top Sales Experts (when does he sleep!?!), Jonathan Farrington says the best word to describe TSE 2.0 is Comprehensive. For more information on Jonathan and the myriad ways he helps sales organizations, you may find him at www.jonathanfarrington.com and www.jfblogit.co.uk