In High Probability Selling, Trust and Respect are fundamental to the
relationship with prospects and customers. Being consistently forth-
coming is not just "the best policy"- it's crucial to successful selling.
Just
"I just wanted to let you know..." or "Just fifteen minutes of your time."
What does the word "just" imply in sales situations? You seem to be
trivializing your communication in order to disarm the prospect.
You're minimizing the importance of your products and services,
and your own time. If someone is truly in the market for your product
or service,it's an important priority for them. Don't trivialize yourself
or your prospects' needs.
Thank You
While gratitude in a business situation is occasionally warranted,
"Thank You" is one of the phrases most over-used, abused, and
rendered meaningless by salespeople. There is no need to thank
prospects for their time and attention. If someone is a High
Probability Prospect, they want, need, and can afford what you're
selling- and they want to talk to you. They want to do business.
Repeatedly thanking prospects and customers implies a subservient,
begging, position, which will cause a loss of respect for you. It's a
great way to sabotage sales and lose business.
Great!
The prospect says he wants you to visit him to discuss one of
your products or services, and you say, "Great!" Or, the prospect
says she is in the market for your kind of product and you say,
"Great!" You sound as if you are desperate, or perhaps have a
warped sense of values. The prospect is bound to wonder, "Is it
'great' because you rarely get those types of reactions?" Or maybe
you equate getting an order with having a baby or ending a war.
If you are a professional salesperson, doing your job is not 'great!,'
it is routine.
Look over these Top 6 Poison Words. You'll notice a couple of themes:
1) Phoniness and 2) a Subservient/Begging Posture. If you perceive
someone to be insincere and phony, do you want to do business with
them? If someone grovels towards you, what is your reaction?
In High Probability Selling, we have a list of 30 Poison Words, and
we train salespeople to eliminate them from their vocabulary. Fake
bonhomie, false concern, and manipulative patter are hallmarks of
the stereotypical salesperson. Any words that create mistrust,
manipulate prospects or indicate insincerity quash potential sales.
People want to do business with people they can trust and respect.
The words you choose can arouse suspicion, or they can reflect a
posture of trust and respect. Choose your words carefully!
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