OPM Sneak Peek: Action and Reaction in the Sales Process

Posted in OPM Sneak Peak by Keith Thompson on the August 19th, 2010

Although he didn’t intend it this way, Newton’s law on action and reaction works well when we try to unravel the sales process. The sales process is a reaction to the buying process.

The mantra of “the customer comes first,” leads to the conclusion that the deliberate steps defining the buying process should initiate responses from the salesperson that form the sales process. The OPM Sales Methodology works on the assumption that the sales process is a reaction to the buying process.

If the buyer is concerned, understand the concern and work to eliminate it. If the customer wants to know more, provide the information and explain it. If the customer wants proof, provide the evidence and references to back it up. If the customer wants a better deal, reconstruct the deal and prove that it is better.

Cause and effect, give and take, push and pull, action and reaction—whatever you want to call it, the salesperson has to be adaptable to every nuance of the customer’s process and any change in direction it may take.

–Excerpt from OPM: Opportunity Portfolio Management, the upcoming book.

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The Two Dimensions of Selling

Posted in OPM Sneak Peak,Sales by Keith Thompson on the July 5th, 2010

Successful salespeople won’t often dissect the dynamics of the sales environment, and what they do within the environment, but most will agree that there are two sides to selling: using sales skills to make a sale, and using people skills to make a sale.

We call these opportunity focus, and relationship focus; the two dimensions of selling.

Opportunity Focus

Salespeople need to know how to sell. Through experience and trial and error over many years, experts have developed the science that governs a winning sales process. There are countless interpretations; hundreds of books have been written describing it, and literally millions of successful salespeople have been weaned on it. Knowing how to sell—using proven rules and experience—that’s opportunity focus.

Relationship Focus

In the sales opportunity, both customer and salesperson pit their skills against each other. The customer wants the best deal, and the salesperson who wants to win the sale without compromising their company’s profitability. The selling process has a large element of negotiation about it, and all aspects of the process create tension. Relationships, if they can be struck, used, and sustained through the sale, can ease the tension. Leveraging interpersonal skills is the other dimension of selling, and that’s relationship focus.

The key to being a successful salesperson is not just using one or the other—it’s blending both, and also knowing when to shift focus from one to another.

–Excerpt from OPM: Opportunity Portfolio Management, the upcoming book.

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SalesWays Brazil OPM Workshop #2

Posted in News,Sales Training by Dan Wood on the May 19th, 2010

SalesWays Brazil is conducting their second OPM Sales Methodology Workshop on May 25, 2010 from 9:30 to 5:30 pm.

2nd Open Workshop – “Opportunity Portfolio Management”

What makes the difference between success and mediocrity: gaining extensive knowledge about your products or the mere acquisition of the best CRM on the market? No, today you need more than just product knowledge and customer information.

To guarantee success you must be able to derive maximum value from your portfolio of opportunities. Success in sales depends on a rediscovery of the fundamentals of selling.

Do not miss the date is 05/25/2010, 09:30 to 17:30.

- SalesWays Brazil Team

For more information, visit SalesWays Brazil

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