Don't be afraid to Close the sale by Bob Morey
Too many salespeople have it backwards. They're afraid to ask for the sale or follow-up with customers because they don't want to appear "pushy." However, you stand a much better chance of offending a customer by not asking un-flinchingly for the sale or by neglecting those follow-up calls to cinch the deal.
Let me explain. Put yourself in the prospect’s shoes for a moment. Do you like to be treated as a serious buyer? How do you feel when salespeople disregard you and trivialize you as a customer? Do you feel "small" when they act like you're wasting their time and don't have the money to make the purchase for what you're looking at? Of course you do, and so do your potential customers. We all want to be respected. We want to be taken seriously. We're offended when we get the "brush off." Therefore, do you really think your prospects will feel "pressured" or "pushed" when you ask them to buy something? Doesn't asking them to buy give them the benefit of the doubt that they can buy? And doesn't that show that you have a higher regard for them? Of course it does.
If you aren't asking people to buy because you don't want to seem "pushy", chances are that deep down you’re using the perception of pushiness as a crutch. You're afraid to ask for the deal. You're afraid of hearing "no." So you hide behind the cloak of being a "professional" and not "high-pressuring" your customers.
Another reason you may be afraid of asking for the deal is because you know deep down that you haven't earned the right. Maybe you don't know your product well enough, or you didn't take enough time to build rapport with the customer and identify their needs. You can't fool yourself, and if you're not doing a quality job during the sales process, you're not going to feel confident enough to ask for the sale, and by all rights, you should feel reluctant to ask for the sale because you know you don't deserve it!
So stop hiding behind fear of putting on "pressure" or behind your own incompetence and turn pro, because pros ask for and get the order.They know that the difference between pressure and persistence is technique. They realize that customers want to be sold and want to be asked to buy, so they give them what they want. They don't always hear "yes", but they know how to use "no" as an opportunity to find out what the customer is objecting to so they can overcome it and make the sale.
So let's make sure we have this straight: you don't offend people by asking them to buy, you offend them when you don't! The same goes for follow-up. When you don't follow-up persistently with a prospect, you're telling that prospect that:
o They're not worth your time.
o You don't think they can afford the product anyway.
o You don't think they were really interested.
o That you're a weakling of a salesperson!
Following up persistently with a customer shows that you put a high value on their business. It shows that you're willing to earn their business and not just wait for it to fall into your lap. It sets you apart from the 99% of other pretenders in sales that won't go to the trouble to make the calls.
Following up can be one of your best competitive advantages; a real edge in a crowded market. Start doing a better job of closing and following up; basics, basics, basics, and watch your sales soar without having to wait on any more ups than you already are. Instead, you'll be doing a better job with the opportunities you have; one of the keys to rising above the crowd in sales
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