Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Preparing for the Sales Call

Sales representatives can improve their preparedness by asking and answering for themselves questions such as:

1. What data might help me engage and intrigue my prospect?

2. What is the main objective of my meeting with this prospect?

3. What possible issues might be influencing my prospect’s buying decision?

4. How can I create desire for my product in my prospect?

5. What questions might my prospect ask me and how will I answer?

6. What hurdles can I anticipate between where the sale is now and finalizing the sale?

7. How will my presentation help my prospect understand the value I offer?

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Sales Tip: Master the Critical Skills

If you're going to sell more every year, you need to get better every year. Let's look at this a different way. If what you are currently doing would produce the results you are looking for, the results should have already shown up.

So what skills should you focus on improving? Start by honestly answering a few of these questions:

-- How much preparation are you putting into each call?
-- Are the questions you ask thought-provoking or mind-numbing?
-- Do your ideas have value for the prospect or do you find yourself just pitching the "latest" widget from the factory?
-- When was the last time you got feedback on your presentation skills?
-- What are the top three obstacles prospects throw at you?
-- How do you clearly and concisely address these obstacles?
-- What are you doing every week to help build better relationships?

It takes courage to admit you could be a better sales rep and confidence to believe you can change. It takes nothing to create excuses.

There is an abundance of sales books, tele-seminars, podcasts, webinars, and sales training programs available today. What are you waiting for?

Monday, April 2, 2012

Top Digital Trends for 2012

A recent report from eMarketer lists trends and projections for digital usage and marketing for the rest of the year. Many of the trends have significant impact on broadcast television and other media, with the top trends revolving around mobile and online video.

The top tends for 2012 compared to the year before in the U.S.:

  • Smartphone users will increase from 90 million to 107 million. Market penetration will reach 44% of mobile phone users.
  • Adult ereader users will increase from 33 to 46 million. 24% of Internet users will use an ereader.
  • Tablet users will grow from 34 to 55 million. Nearly one-out-of-four Internet users will use a tablet.
  • Online video viewers will grow from 158 to 169 million with 71% of Internet users viewing online video
  • Mobile video viewers will rise from 45 to 55 million. One-out-of-three online video viewers will watch on a mobile device.
  • Online video ad spending will reach $3.1 billion, up from $2.2 billion.
According to eMarketer, video is the fastest-growing segment of online advertising, and for good reason. The amount of online and mobile video content is exploding, and most of this content is supported by some type of video spot -- typically an in-stream ad or overlay.

Further, non-video content is often supported by in-page video ads that expand when the user clicks on them. Video ads are considered more engaging and effective than static banners.