Monday, October 28, 2013
Sales & Service Tip of the Week
The first
“A”, Approach sets the stage during customer interaction. You want to attract the attention of
the customer and start the thought processes of the buyer and seller. How you approach or greet the customer could
very well set the tone and influence the outcome of the sales
opportunity. In this first step you want
to demonstrate your professionalism, your desire to serve, and that you want to
do business. All of this is appealing to
the customer! In fact this could be your
first sale. The customer buys you
first; do you agree? You represent
your company to that customer for the moment (moment of truth) and they either
form a positive or negative impression about you. Your businesslike manner, positive attitude,
confidence and expertise are contagious and can influence your customers. People identify with people so allow your Approach
to reflect this human experience and get off on the right foot with all of your
customers.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Sales & Service Tip of the Week
Last week we
unfolded the 6 A’s as your selling strategy to sales success. Each one begins with an “A” – a handle to
grab on to during a sales interaction or opportunity. Have you ever missed an opportunity to sell
more or was hesitant to suggest or offer ideas to a customer? We all have, so relax! The A’s become “memory joggers” so we don’t
forget to ask as we can get busy and in a hurry. Wouldn’t it be great if selling was always 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, in a sequential order?
Unfortunately our thought processes are not always step-by-step. Selling is spontaneous and thinking on
your feet. Have you ever had a
complaining customer before ever saying, “hello”? Or, a customer that says, “I’ll take it”
without even hearing about it first?
Please don’t inform the customer that you have several more steps or A’s
to cover first. Take the order and serve
the customer! Remember, the 6 A’s are
based on customer interaction and designed to provide a service request or
sales transaction. Allow the customer to
lead the interaction and utilize the 6 A’s when you need a reminder and need to
get back on track. Master the 6 A’s and
you will provide total customer satisfaction and develop lifetime customers. It begins with the first “A” – the
Approach.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Sales & Service Tip of the Week
Let’s examine
a selling process in detail. Did you
know selling revolves around a thought process?
Doesn’t the customer go through certain thought processes or steps to
arrive at a purchasing decision? You do,
don’t you? We all do! The key is to be able to identify where the
customer is in their thoughts and match your thoughts as it relates to
suggestions and ideas to help persuade the customer to reach a decision to buy.
Sounds complicated doesn’t it? Actually we all go through these thoughts or
steps daily in our interactions with customers almost instinctively and
naturally in completing the customer transactions. Now, let’s formalize these steps in
order to better serve our customers and better yet, sell more products and
services to grow our business and make everybody happy. Sound too good to be true? Get ready, here are the steps or thought
processes to make us better as sales and service professionals. We refer to these as the 6 A’s that
will become your selling strategy to serve and sell your customers. Approach, Analysis, Active Presentation,
Answer Objections, Always Be Closing, and Apply Service. Allow the 6 A’s to become your selling
strategy for sales success!
Monday, October 7, 2013
Sales & Service Tip Of The Week
How many
customers don’t complain, you just lose them?
A Better Business Bureau statistic says 96% of dissatisfied customers do
not complain of poor service. Yet 95% of
dissatisfied customers will become loyal customers again if their complaints
are handled well and quickly.
Interesting huh? Can we avoid
possible problems, concerns or issues before they are raised? Every service action with a customer is
called a point of interaction.
There are many “points of interaction” with the customer in the
delivery of the products and services you provide. A “moment of truth” occurs whenever
and wherever there is customer contact, because that is the moment when the
customer forms a perception of your company, its people, its products and
services. The key to all this is to list
each “point of interaction” you have with customers, identify the
problems that can happen at each interaction point, and finally, list the
corrective action needed to solve it.
Keep in mind that the goal is to exceed customer expectations. Review with your team members in your
department, standardize the “points of interaction” and document the possible
problems and action needed to correct it.
It’s the first step to providing quality service!
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