For most of us, what we learn first sticks with us for a long time, often throughout our lives. Nursery rhymes, along with what we consider right and wrong. The acorn doesn't fall far from the tree.
It happens to salespeople, too. Because our early training is indelible, it stays with us to guide us.
These days, with all of the challenges in the market for annuities, health insurance, and even life insurance, you may face new demands and expectations. Those new demands and expectations may call for you to make strategic changes to keep up, stay relevant and close more sales.
Here are five of them.
1. Change your thinking about what you know
Salespeople are known for being sure (sometimes overly sure) of themselves. Although it takes self-confidence to keep going, it also has a risky downside. It can lead to believing we know more than we do. And nothing kills sales faster than arrogance.
(Related: 11 Sales Pitches That Kill Sales)
A website designer's creativity gave him an initial edge with a prospective client. In spite of his obvious talent, he lost the job. His presentation was his downfall. It was obvious he had not taken the time to understand the organization or its services. He was so focused on what he was selling, he didn't have a clue as to what his prospect wanted to buy. In other words, he didn't know what he didn't know.
Unless salespeople consciously challenge their thinking, they hand sales to the competition. We all benefit by asking ourselves these questions: What am I missing? What don't I know? Are my assumptions correct?
2. Change the way you prepare presentations.
Do you think you're at a place where you can "wing it" or all you need to do to get ready for a presentation is to make a few notes, a quick outline, or go over it in your mind? If so, you're deluding yourself and short changing your employer and your customers. You may be good, but you're not that good.
Like it or not, here's the truth: If we don't write it, we only think we know it. This is what happened to the arguably brilliant Hillbilly Elegy author J.D. Vance when he went for job interviews at a prestigious Washington, D.C. law firm while at Yale Law School.
The last interviewer asked me a question I was unprepared to answer: Why did I want to work at a law firm? It was a softball, but I'd gotten so used to talking about my budding interest in antitrust litigation…that I was laughably unprepared. I should have said something about learning from the best or working on high-stakes litigation. I should have said anything other than what came out of my mouth: "I don't really know, but the pay isn't bad! Ha ha." The interviewer looked at me like I had three eyes, and the conversation never recovered.
It happens when to us all when we're under pressure. We lose control and "default" to whatever comes to mind. Before we know it, we're talking jibberish. And, like J. D. Vance we can believe why we did it. It happens when we don't prepare; when we don't write it down.
3. Change the way you present.