Results
of our Three Year Survey completed on 5,000 top producers
By
Garrison Wynn
Contrary to popular belief, the most successful
salespeople were not those who made the most phone calls
or were the best presenters and closers. There seemed to
be no common ground with best practices. We saw many top
producers who had low closing ratios but set ten times more
appointments and made more money than their competitors by
being in front of more people. Also, we saw many number-one
salespeople who could not cold-call or even work their referrals
that well. They went where their customers were: to networking
meetings, golf courses, and so forth. They met face to face
with fewer people but were very successful. We saw people
who managed their time well and many who did not, but who
made up for it by what we can only refer to as “wasting their time with
the right people.” What they had in common went beyond
best practices. They focused on their strengths and were
more competitive by getting better at what they already did
well.
Wynnism:
The key to success is doing very little of what you do badly.
We
found a group we called the strugglers—people who work
very hard to produce average results. They seemed to focus
all their strength in areas where they just didn’t
have any. We saw them working on their shortcomings over
and over again, hoping for a different result. As it turns
out, hope is not a strategy. The difference is that the top
producers used their strengths to improve a weakness.
Wynnism:
If you do nothing but focus on your weaknesses, you will ultimately
feel weak.
We
did, however, uncover seven beyond-best practices that we
believe may be the keys to sales success.
-
They explain the value of their service clearly
in about 20 seconds.
-
They develop simple and easy to maintain organizational
processes that create client care.
- They
are able to stay persistent because they have clearly defined
outcomes.
- They
spend approximately 50% of their time building relationships
with top customers.
- They
leverage existing relationships by being a solutions provider.
- They
survey their customers to find out what services they like
best and then focus their offering in those areas.
- They
manage expectations and emotions by setting those expectations
and making sure their customers feel heard.
Garrison
Wynn is a nationally known speaker, trainer, and consultant.
He is the president and founder of Wynn Solutions, specializing
in turning talent into performance.
© Wynn Solutions 2003
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