Do
you do your best to provide value to prospective customers but back away from
selling to them? Use these selling tips to explore your attitude to selling and
make your business and your relationships with your customers healthier.
LOOK MA, NO
WHITE SHOES!
The used car
salesmen in white shoes and belt with a loud plaid jacket has become an
archetype of selling. As a result, you may -- like me -- have tended to keep
sales in the closet, depending on the admiration of your network and the kindness
of strangers to bring in revenue.
Do you do
your best to provide value without asking for reciprocity? Do you write
newsletters, blog, offer complimentary introductory session or other benefits
to prospective clients but back away from selling to them?
How
thoughtful. How generous. How unhealthy.
Yes,
unhealthy. Because when you don't invite your customers to reciprocate, when
you don't issue clear, open, and regular invitations to buy, you consign your
business to a kind of financial anorexia.
The person
suffering from anorexia has a distorted body image, and can languish and even
die from starvation, while being convinced that they are fat. What's more, they
are convinced that being fat is a fate worse than death (literally).
FINANCIAL
ANOREXIA
Do you have
a distorted image of what it would mean to profit from serving others? Would it
be okay with you if people saw your business thriving? Or do you cling to the
notion that somehow starvation is a more artistic or enlightened path? Heaven
forfend that your clients or customers would think you are in business for the
money!
And of
course, you aren't in business for the money any more than a healthy adult
lives to eat. Yet, your business needs money just as certainly as you need
food, and the more up front, clear, and effective you are at selling, the
healthier your business and your relationships with your customers.
Sounds good
in principle, but how do you sell effectively without pressuring your customers
and alienating your audience? Keep reading.
SELLING TO
SERVE
Your
customers and clients -- like you -- have a lot more on their minds than
whether or not your work can help them. They could be crying out for what you
offer, but distracted by slings and arrows of everyday fortune: leaky plumbing,
aging parents, boomerang kids -- the list goes on and on.
In order to
help them, you'll need to open your mind to selling. How do you keep selling
from co-opting your values and your vision? The answer is to build service into
sales and vice versa.
TIPS FOR
SELLING THAT SERVES
Begin with
the end in mind. Stephen Covey had this one exactly right. (If you haven't read
his classic 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, it's well worth your time.)
Before you sell anything to anyone, remember why you are going to do it.
This first
key is the most important. If it is missing, you will run out of steam before
you even begin the sales process.
Remember the
archetype of the white-shoed car salesman*? It runs deep, and unless you
consciously establish the service foundation for selling every time you write
copy or tell someone about your work, you risk getting blind-sided by shame.
And guess what? As soon as shame starts to burble up in you, your customers
pick up on it. Yuck!
Walk a mile
in their shoes. What do your "just-right" customers need to know in
order to make a decision? What could get in the way? What are the stakes if
they fail to act?
How many
couples would not be together today if one partner hadn't been willing to hang
in there when the other hesitated? If the course of true love doesn't run
smooth, why would the course of deciding to buy something that's a good fit?
When you
stand in your just-right customer's shoes for a while, you'll see what
steppingstones they might need in order to buy something that will truly serve
them.
Are those
steppingstones for everyone? Of course not. Is that a problem? No, and to find
out why not, keep reading.
Dance with
no as well as yes. When you are clear about who you are serving and how, open
your heart even wider so that people who don't need what you offer or who are
not ready to buy, are free to decline. Rather than arming yourself against
someone's decision not to buy, open yourself to it.
Imagine a
prospective client or customer considering and then deciding against your
offer. Watch them closely in your mind's eye without pretending to know what
they are thinking. Just watch.
When you let
go of what you think that they think about you, what do you see? Do you notice
that they are simply taking care of themselves as best they know how? Good. Now
notice how your heart eases as you unhook your self-esteem from their choices.
This heart's
ease completes the circuit from intention to serve to decision to sell to
blessing all of your prospects whether or not they decide to buy. Selling
becomes a conversation in which you advocate for those folks who want and can
benefit from your work so that they can notice, consider, and decide.
*By the way,
I love my car salesman, DJ Dougherty at Peninsula Subaru here on the Kitsap
Peninsula. Why? Because he served me in every step of the sales process. Two
and a half years after buying "Blanche" from him, I still tell everyone I know about how happy
I am with my car and with the process of buying it. How would it be if your
customers told their friends about you because they loved the way you sold to
them?
* * *
No comments:
Post a Comment