| Selling technique is the body of methods used in the profession of
sales, also often called selling. Techniques in use vary from the highly customer centric
consultative
selling to the heavily pressured "hard close". All techniques borrow a bit from experience and mix in a bit of guesswork on
the psychology of what motivates others to buy something offered to them. Mastery in the techniques of selling can offer very high
incomes, while failure in it is nearly proverbial. Coverage of the latter is popularized in the Arthur
Miller play Death of a Salesman.
Because selling faces a high level of rejection, it is often difficult for the practitioner to handle emotionally, and is
usually cited as the most common reason for leaving the profession. Because of this many selling and sales training techniques
involve a lot of motivational material.
- Prospecting
- Presentation
- Questions
- Selling the sizzle
- Closing
- Pre-closing questions
- Tie downs
- Handling objections
- Confidence
- Empathy
Good selling involves asking questions to elicit the prospect's needs and desires and finding the appropriate product or service that
meets those needs and that the prospect is willing to pay for. If good prospecting (qualifying) is done, then the prospect may
already be well suited to the product or service and the salesperson simply needs to lead the prospect to act on the desires and
needs they have. A good salesperson is much more knowledgeable about their product or service than the prospect could ever likely
be and can offer valuable information and insight to the decision making process.
In addition, an ethical salesperson will always make sure the prospect receives more
value from the product or service they have purchased than they have paid.
References
- How to master the art of selling Tom Hopkins, Warner Books, 1980 & 1982, ISBN 0-446-38636-7
- Secrets of Closing the Sale Zig Ziglar, Berkley Publishing Group, 1985, ISBN 0425081028
|