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Posts Tagged ‘financial wholesalers’

What It Takes To Be Successful In Sales

Posted By Michael Roby | Saturday, April 17th, 2010

What does it take to be successful in sales?

Some say the most important thing is Enthusiasm.

en·thu·si·asm n.

  1. Great excitement for or interest in a subject or cause.
  2. A source or cause of great excitement or interest.
  3. Archaic
  • Ecstasy arising from supposed possession by a god.
  • Religious fanaticism.

While you need to have a passion for what you do and what you sell, it takes more than enthusiasm to be successful.

Selling is not just “telling.” Successful selling takes more than just spewing facts about products and services. It is relationship development, prospecting, making the approach, interviewing, presenting, answering objections, asking for the order, and keeping promises. Selling requires enthusiasm, product knowledge (yours and your competitors), and confidence.

con·fi·dence n.

  1. Trust or faith in a person or thing.
  2. A feeling of assurance, especially of self-assurance.
  3. A trusting relationship: I took them into my confidence.
  4. The state or quality of being certain: I have every confidence in your ability to succeed.

Expertise breeds confidence. Confidence results from knowing you are prepared, and that you can deliver and keep promises. Confidence forms the basis for enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is a choice. But still you don’t want to run around screaming about your product. Unbridled enthusiasm results in a lack of focus. It takes more to truly succeed in sales.

pro·fes·sion·al·ism n.

  1. Professional status, methods, character, or standards.
  2. The use of professional performers, as in athletics or in the arts.

Professionalism takes all of the factors listed above to a higher level. It helps you form a cogent story, run your business like a business, build and work a plan in an organized, focused manner.

So what is the most important factor?

There is no one most important key to success in sales; they are all important! Your success is a product of how well you execute on the activities and behaviors listed above, and the attitude that you bring to these tasks.  Successful salespeople are confident in their abilities, enthusiastic about their solutions, and professional in their execution.

Good selling!

A Not-So-New Idea: Dinner Seminars

Posted By Michael Roby | Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Restaurant business is down due to the economy; people do not go out as often. In the November 2, 2009 issue of Nation’s Restaurant News, trainer and professional speaker Jim Sullivan wrote, “Not that we’re out of the woods by any measure. Grocery prices are falling and restaurant prices rising. Technomic recently reported that in the past three years 21,425 units have closed in the United States, and 84 percent of those were full-service operations. That reflects the worst three-year contraction in foodservice history.”

What does this possibly mean to financial advisors? Coupled with consumer’s expressed desire for education and guidance as to where to go from here, consider a tried-but true marketing concept: dinner seminars.Advisors report seminars are more popular than any time since the 80’s, and clients are attending seminars in record numbers. Restaurants need the business. Contact restaurants to negotiate more favorable pricing for dinner seminars. By making a commitment for multiple events, and you might get a significan price reduction. Also ask for complementary gift certificates. Often you get these at a greatly reduced costs, because restaurant operators know when you have a gift certificate, you bring guests!

Americans love to eat out. They want and need economic news and education. Use the current situation to your advantage as you demonstrate to people in your community you continue to provide information and education that help them make intelligent decisions about money, and do so in a cost-effective manner.

“If you feed them, they will come.” Good selling!

Time Utilization for Financial Advisors and Wholesalers

Posted By Michael Roby | Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

This business growth idea solves a problem for financial advisors and financial wholesalers; what is the best use of your time as you mutually decide if you are going to develop a long-term advisor/product partner relationship.  Consider the following.

For the advisor:

After meeting with or hearing a wholesaler, ask yourself this question: “Is this a company, a person, and a product that may provide benefit to my clients and help me grow my business?”  If the answer is yes, for the next wholesaler appointment schedule two or three joint calls with prospects who fit an ideal prospective client profile.  The wholesaler will show you how to sell the product and you get to be a buyer’s advocate for your clients.

For the wholesaler:

After an initial call, or with advisors you have seen on several occasions without sales success, help the advisor decide if you are a fit for his/her business.  If so, do not make additional calls without joint sales calls on the advisor’s clients and prospects.  Schedule these appointments for thirty to forty minutes. Remember, telling isn’t selling. Show your advisors how to properly position your product.

Good selling!