For the longest time, sales were built on the idea that a rep would reach out to a prospect about a product they might (or might not) be interested in, and attempt to foster a deal through cold calling and high-pressure tactics. It was a process that was built on the potential customer having no initial information.
Now, your potential learners are on a different playing field. Through their own independent research, modern buyers tend to be more well-informed about your service before they ever speak to you. Today, effective sales processes are built on reaching out to prospective learners who have already expressed interest in a course, and helping to guide them along their decision-making journey.
The best training businesses now focus on developing and maintaining relationships, rather than pushing their courses, and this helps them sell smarter. Relationship-focused sales, significantly outperform traditional, transaction-focused techniques.
Read: Understanding Buyer Behaviours To Generate More Sales
According to sales experts, becoming fascinating to your potential clients and buyers is extremely important. The way to do this, is to demonstrate your interest in them and what they do. In other words, to be interesting, you should be interested. Here are three tips to help you kick off this highly effective feedback loop.
Any good relationship starts with asking questions. But not just any old query will suffice. In order to really get to know your future learners, you have to ask the right questions.
To show your interest in a prospective customer, ask open-ended questions and be personal.
Just as important as the questions themselves, is the way in which you present them. To signify interest, use your prospect’s name throughout the conversation. Research has proven that a person’s name is an incredibly compelling word that can spark and sustain attention.
In addition, watch your tone. The goal is to come off as friendly and helpful. Keep your tone positive, to signal your interest and ability to help this person.
Finally, if you’re meeting in person, focus on your body language. Avoid actions like crossing your arms, or slouching. Instead, lean in to show focus; smile, and maintain good eye contact. All of these are small cues that can make your pitch dramatically more effective.
Just as important as asking questions, is actively listening to your prospect’s answers. Active listeners are perceived to be highly emotionally aware, and can make the people they speak to feel better about themselves. Asking astute follow-up questions that build on prospects’ answers, enables you to become more connected with your potential new clients.
But this is easier said than done, as humans tend to be naturally bad listeners.
Intentionally ask several open-ended questions next time you go to lunch with a coworker, and then try following up on each of their answers.
Also, practice letting them finish their thoughts, before you interject into the conversation. Interrupting can deter the flow of a conversation. By letting a person finish, you demonstrate your curiosity in what they have to say and your desire to hear their thoughts.
Most companies now maintain websites, blogs, and/or social media accounts, and companies that are interested, keep tabs on these channels. Again, sales are built on relationships. If you know your prospect’s story, you can actively show your interest in them by dropping strategic bits of research and kicking off a conversation that makes them interested in you.
Discover: The Training Company's Guide To Content Marketing
This is as simple as it gets. By following your prospect and their company on Twitter or Facebook, you’ll automatically get all the content they’re putting out into the world without ever having to look for it. Checking up on their story will simply become part of your day-to-day.
After you follow them, strike up a conversation. Send them a Facebook message or retweet something they posted on Twitter. This is an easy way for your name to become familiar to the people in the company, so when you reach out, they already know who you are and are primed to respond.
By subscribing to the company’s newsletters, you’re getting an inside look at how the business is operating. What do you notice about the newsletter in terms of content, language, images, etc.? What news does it advertise? How often are they sending updates out? All of these details can inform your approach when you send your initial message.
Finally, once you’ve consumed the available content, start engaging. Comment on a blog post and ask a question. Offer counterpoints to what they’re saying can spark a debate. After all, the point of gathering information about your buyer is to prepare to start a relationship. And that relationship won’t begin until you reach out and start a discussion.
To be interesting, you need to be interested in your prospects. The old sales playbook dictates that sales reps should increase their appeal by bragging, inflating their self-importance, and sometimes, bending the truth. The new playbook holds that sales reps should demonstrate an interest in their buyers to truly connect with them, and eventually convert them into a customer.
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Mike Renahan - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelrenahan/
Mike is a Customer Success Manager at HubSpot. He is a People person, data-driven, always learning and helping companies grow better.