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SAVVY
SELLING -SEPTEMBER
10, 2004
Bringing in the Sheaves
By Michelle Nichols
If you want to see your sales
figures grow -- and who doesn't? --
plant the right seeds, nurture them
with patience, and harvest far richer
rewards
My college degree is in agri-business,
which surprises many people, but believe
me, studying farming is great preparation
for a life in sales. Now I'm a city
gal, so I admit, the connection with
my future career wasn't obvious as
I slugged away writing term papers,
learning formulas, and cramming for
exams. However, the longer I sell,
the more I appreciate what our farmers
can teach us salespeople.
The most obvious connection is that
you are going to reap what you sow.
All farmers know that if they plant
radish seeds, they can't expect watermelons
or watercress. Somehow, a lot of sales
people can't quite grasp that logic.
It amazes me how often I meet sales
reps who moan that they don't have
more major-league customers. Then
I discover that they are spending
their selling time cultivating small,
cash-strapped clients instead large,
big-budget outfits. If they were farmers
and followed the same strategy, even
the jackass would laugh them off the
ranch.
DEEP-ROOTED RELATIONSHIPS. So get
clear on the profile of your target
customer. Study which prospects buy
the most at the highest profit margins
and with the greatest frequency, then
go sow for their business, nurture
the relationships, and harvest the
sales.
The wisdom that you reap what you
sow doesn't just apply to targeting
customers. It also applies to how
you treat people -- prospects, existing
clients, employees, in fact all of
humanity. If you want more referrals,
give more referrals. Take my friend
Ruben, for example, who is a very
sharp and generous guy. If I don't
know who to call or what to do in
a given situation, I'll often give
him a call to see if he has any suggestions.
At the very least, I can expect a
word of encouragement, but more often
than not, he'll make an invaluable
suggestion about how I should proceed.
In return, Ruben's business has soared
as a result of appreciative folks
like me, who are only too happy to
return favors, and with interest!
The lesson: If you want more, give
more.
Another lesson we can all learn from
the folks on the land: You can't harvest
what you only planted yesterday. For
salespeople, that means never waiting
until we are behind quota -- or worse,
broke -- before getting down to the
nitty gritty of the sales business.
Things like cold calling and checking
your files to see which clients need
to be resupplied should be as basic
to a salesperson as is keeping rabbits
out of the carrot patch to a farmer.
SEASONED WISDOM. Yet there's another
side to the sales professional's obligation
not to delay, and it's this: Make
haste, but with a sense of patience.
Farmers balance those imperatives
every day. They know that the time
required for seeds to become saleable
products can't be rushed, no matter
how pressing the need for a new pickup.
Farmers can't harvest their crops
early, and the same applies to sales
because some customers just can't
be hurried.
Finally, there is what may just be
the most important link of them all
between sales and the nurturing soil
of our nation's farms: flexibility.
Once the seeds are in the ground,
a hundred things can go wrong -- bad
weather, disease, bugs, and market
fluctuations. No matter what, farmers
must be able to adjust, perhaps by
having a cash reserve to see them
through the lean days, or maybe by
raising two crops. If the corn fails
there will always be potatoes to keep
the wolf from the door. In sales,
if one customer slams the door in
your face, it's reassuring to have
another waiting to greet you with
a smile and a purchase order. If you
are serious about selling, make Johnny
Appleseed your model and scatter seeds
everywhere. Let lots of folks know
what you do and nurture those burgeoning
relationships with attention and respect.
So get hoeing. Sow the seeds you
want to harvest in the places where
they grow the best. Nurture the sprouts
like mad, and soon you'll be piling
high your tractor with a record harvest.
Except it won't be a tractor, more
likely a Porsche. Happy selling!
"By Michelle Nichols of Savvy
Selling International. Please visit
Michelle's web site at www.savvyselling.com
for additional sales articles
and resources on selling."
(Make sure the link is live if placed
in an electronic format like an eZine
or in a web site.)
Thank you.
Copyright 2000-2005. All rights
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