Selling isn’t Easy

May 9th, 2008 by Keith Thompson

A while ago, I tuned into a conversation between two of our salespeople. One (a relative newcomer to sales) was commenting that given the experience of his first year in sales, “selling was easy.”

I sold for a long time, and I never thought it was easy.

I’ve talked about sales as a profession in earlier entries. As in any profession, it’s difficult to make a call on how easy it is until you have a lot of experience under your belt. Early success in sales can be the result of factors outside of your native selling skills.

I remember my first order for about $10,000. I was elated. The problem was that most people in the sales department are nice, and they pat you on the back for your first sale. But it wasn’t a sale; it was an order. I just took the customer’s call and wrote down the information. The guy whose territory I had just taken over did the spadework.

The better you get in sales, the higher you rise, and the more challenging it becomes. You are now up against competitors whose maturity evolved from the same torturous path that you followed to become successful.If selling is easy, you have no competition—and sometimes that is the case. Or, someone else is doing the work for you. But if your product is much the same as your competitors, and the salesperson you are working against has the same experience as you—selling will not be easy.

An Alternative to PowerPoint

May 9th, 2008 by Keith Thompson

Every salesperson has to make presentations to their customers, and the most common tool they use is Microsoft PowerPoint. In an earlier post, I even talked about PowerPoint as a form of “persuasion technology” in sales. But PowerPoint is not without critics; some feel that it encourages a lazy way to deliver information: first, you get the bullets into PowerPoint, then, you read the bullets to the audience. Presentation done.

Lots of stuff has been written about how to do it better, but if you are already prone to using PowerPoint, are there any alternatives?

Flypaper is interesting, because it is free. No caveats or hitches here.

Download this software and you can immediately design impressive presentations for delivery locally on your computer, or over the web. You can include video, audio, animation, and choose from predesigned models and templates. Flypaper works using a “story” model of building your presentation, and it breaks away from the “bullet method” of doing things. With Flypaper, the emphasis is on Flash-based animation that is easy to put together. Highly recommended and well worth a try.

What I findparticularly interesting is that the man behind Flypaper is Pat Sullivan. As you may already know, Pat was the founder of ACT! and later, SalesLogix; two commercially successful customer relationship management solutions. Given Pat’s background in sales, it comes as no surprise to me that he would be involved with “persuasion technology.”




A sales opportunity management system for salesforce.com’s popular AppExchange on-demand platform



For salespeople, sales and marketing managers, sales administrators, and anyone seeking better results from their sales team.


OPM sales training teaches the methodology from sales automation done right but frames it outside the arena of technology - it also builds, extends and augments those thoughts into a compelling story.



We've packaged some important methods from sales automation done right into the Excel based version of Sales Cycle Manager.


Download free chapters of the book, sales automation done right


See Keith Thompson's audio visual presentation on Sales Cycle Manager


Click to see the process:


• Palm Edition
• Windows Edition
• Lotus Notes Edition
• MS Excel Edition

© 2005 SalesWays. All Rights Reserved.