When Drew Greenblat wrote and I quote that “the
economy is starting to heat up. These is how to ready your company for the
upswing”. He listed about 10 points to grow business, little did I know that his views on how business owners can grow sales
fast is in concomitant with my understanding of the Business Development Techniques
to grow sales. Here are the lessons from John Whitehead (former Chairman of
Goldman Sachs) wisdom on growing business. We should memorize his pearls of
wisdom:
1. Don't waste your time going after business
you don't really want.
We hired a mechanical engineer from West Point
this month to help us grow sales. His focus is to help manufacturing engineers
in industrial S&P 500 companies understand why Marlin Steel, my company, is
better than our competitors. Why? Our clients are not marketing companies, nor
are they point of purchase display companies. These folks don't appreciate
quality and engineering. Instead, they are looking for the lowest price. Make
sure you point your sales and marketing team in the right direction for profitable
business.
2. The boss usually decides--not the assistant
treasurer (or the intern).
Selling to the right person, the decision maker,
is critical. Many times engineering interns will reach out to Marlin Steel for
a quote. This is a colossal waste of time for our team, who can see this as a
sign of interest and a potential sale. The last thing you want to do is devote
sales resources to uninterested buyers. It is imperative, early in the sales
cycle, that you discover who calls the shots and don't waste your time with
those who aren't likely to buy your products.
3. It's just as easy to get a first-rate piece
of business as a second-rate one. (So focus your resources.)
When we do our quarterly analysis of our best
clients, we consistently get results that stress how important our white-glove
clients are. Our top 80 percent of sales are generated from less than 20
percent of our clients. We have anointed these clients our white-glove clients
because they deserve the finest treatment. The bottom 80 percent of our clients
generate a paltry mid-teens share of our revenue and even less of our profit.
The tiny client aggravation spent to close and nurture these sales is time
spent away from your best prospects and most of your profit. Focus on the
clients that really matter--the ones that can make your year and stop spinning
your wheels with the little guys.
4. You never learn anything when you're
talking.
Ask questions of your clients. Listen carefully.
If you are talking more than 50 percent of the time, you are talking 10 times
too much. Your job is to probe and understand what the prospect's problems are
so you can save the day. You will be the preferred vendor in a competitive
economy if you are a good listener.
5. The client's objective is more important
than yours.
Don't sell what you offer. Sell what the clients
needs. By listening carefully to their requirements, you will refine your pitch
and your product offering to make sure you are addressing their needs. One of
our former salesmen would push stock material handling baskets because it was
easy. No creativity needed. He did not make it. Our best salespeople engage the
client and understand their challenges and provide solutions that are tailored
to each one's requirements.
6. The respect of one person is worth more
than an acquaintance with 100 people.
Some salespeople know many people superficially.
Their back-slapping antics might make them the life of the party but do they
really understand that particular key client? The key client could be a
life-changing client. Go the extra mile with your white-glove clients and they
will embrace you and shower you with opportunities. You can only have respect
if you know them and their business model deeply.
7. When there's business to be found, go out
and get it!
The economy is picking up. Your competition is
still hunkered down from the recession. Engage now while your rivals are
dozing. Proactively meet prospects early in the economic boom that is charging
our way.
8. Important people like to deal with other
important people. Are you one?
Get active in your business community. Do not be
a wallflower. Join associations that dovetail with your best prospects'
interests. Volunteer for industry committees and network with this select group
of high-value targets. Rise to the top of these organizations to generate
deserved prestige in your industry. The orders are bound to flow. People like
to buy from winners.
9. There's nothing worse than an unhappy
client.
First things first--alleviate the client's pain.
Drop everything and fix problems. When a problem happens at Marlin Steel (we
are human), the quality error is fixed first before any other standard
production. Our clients will not be thrilled with us but they will remember we
transparently communicated with them and we resolved the problem quickly.
10. If you get the business, it's up to you to
see that it's well-handled.
Once you nail the big clients, give them amazing
service. Meet your deadlines. Usher them through the process so they are
enchanted with your performance and they will send you repeat business and new
opportunities.
What fast growth sales techniques did John
Whitehead miss? Share them with me and I will list the best new ideas in my
column later this month.
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