Trends for Every Salesperson - Part III

Daniel Burrus

Over the last two months I have shared several trends for every salesperson to know: #1 Your past success will increasingly hold you back, #2 Technology-driven change will dramatically accelerate (Rapid change is your best friend), #3 Time is increasing in value, and #4 We are shifting from the information age to the communication age.

This month I would like to share the final two trends I have identified for successful salespeople to keep abreast of changes in their industry.

#5 SOLUTIONS TO PRESENT PROBLEMS ARE BECOMING OBSOLETE FASTER

Almost every salesperson has been told to be proactive, which means taking positive action. How do you know if a certain action is positive? You wait and see. That sounds like a crapshoot with bad odds. Therefore, you need to be pre-active to future known events. To determine pre-known events, you need to look at your customer segment and identify what types of events you are certain they will experience soon. You then focus your actions on what will happen rather than what is happening. Being pre-active also means that you change the way people think. For example, if you put out a new product or service and hope it catches on, you’ll quickly learn that it can take a long time because you’re not actively changing the way people think about how the product can be used or how it might change their lives. Therefore, constantly educate your customers on the value you and your products and/or services offer so they begin to rethink the results they can achieve and the value you provide.

#6 THE VALUE YOU BRING TODAY IS BEING FORGOTTEN FASTER

Sell the future benefit of what you do. Most salespeople sell the current benefits of what they do. But your customers already know the current benefit you offer. One of the reasons customers leave you for a competitor is that you haven’t cemented the future benefit you can bring them. Your goal as a salesperson should be to establish a long-term, problem-solving relationship with customers rather than short-term transaction. Your most profitable customer is a repeat customer. Therefore, you want customers to see the benefit you can give them over time, not just in the present.


Daniel Burrus, one of the world's leading technology forecasters, business strategists, and author of six books
Copyright 2008 Author retains copyright. All Rights Reserved.

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