Sales Training 101 – Why Consistency Matters to Sales
Professionals
With the right sales training,
sales professionals know it is important to take the time to make outbound
selling calls and set up meetings with prospects and customers. So why is it so
hard to set aside that time and get it done?
Often, as sales professionals
we feel there is very little risk to putting it off. Or, maybe we’re too
heavily focused on today’s problems to think about tomorrow’s problems—which
could be bigger and worse if we don't look for more business today. Or, we
might just have terrible time management skills and find it difficult to
schedule ourselves, letting our time be dictated by how we react to daily
events.
In addition, there are risks to
lack of consistent effort. For one thing, we don't develop the level of skills
required to get results, costing us business and allowing competitors to outsell
us. Not a very impressive performance, our boss viewing it as average or below.
Our sales training taught us better than this. If we're not working hard today
to develop business for tomorrow, we could find ourselves in a difficult
position in the future, either not meeting our sales goals, or not making
enough income to survive.
Consistency pays off for
several reasons. Practice makes us better. Experience makes us smarter. And
with this, selling gets easier. Between our sales training and our experience,
when we really need great selling skills to succeed, they are there.
·
Schedule time for specific selling activities,
such as prospecting.
·
When you’re successful, don’t get complacent.
Continue to spend time on the activities that brought you success.
·
Consistency is easier when you turn a
sometime-behavior into a habit, so commit yourself to building one positive new
habit over the next 30 days.
·
Spend fifteen minutes at the end of every day
thinking about what you should do tomorrow—and start every day by consistently
doing the top three selling activities on your to-do list.
·
Write down your goal. Read it every day. Know
what it takes to achieve it. Do what it takes to achieve it relentlessly, every
single day.
Good selling!