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Does Your Business Need a Sales Evangelist? Selling in the startup environment is different than in established big business. It requires special people who have the creativity and agility to mastermind a launch into the unknown and engage prospects.

Cape Coral, Florida (PRWEB) November 17, 2008 -- Does Your Business Need a Sales Evangelist? In the new global community, there are advantages and challenges never before fathomed by the entrepreneur. The modern day startup is faced with new concepts in financing, new challenges in the competitive landscape, and an absolute imperative to move and grow fast. This makes business development and new customer acquisition all the more challenging. READ MORE HERE
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11 September 2008 @ 12:11 am
 Good post from Karl Goldfield the startup sales mentor

When you are going through sales training be sure to teach people how to be organized:

In this post Organization: Focus on Selling Activities he shares:

"If we burden the sales evangelist with non selling activities they will fail. Why? Because they have to work harder at crafting the perfect sales opportunity. They have less resources, fewer customers, no long lasting case studies, no peers, new ideas, and if good interested prospects. So, teach them to focus on the things that make sales and put on a hat and help them with those things that do not. Whether you are their manager or the CEO, take off that ego hat and get your hands dirty. Yes, you can do some of their administrative tasks, yes you can help them with their pipeline, I mean you take out the garbage and clean up the kitchen….right? How much revenue does that bring in?"

Brilliant. Be sure to read the rest of the post


 
 
03 September 2008 @ 09:52 pm
The great strategist and sales training guru has sent us to a site we should all look at. Read his article about SalesConx here:

http://salesblog.karlgoldfield.com/2008/06/web-20-and-sales-20-salesconx-wants-to-help-small-businesses-and-startups.html

SalesConx is helping sales people find great leads by using a community style environement to barter information.

While the have their doubters, it seems to be working.
 
 

One of the greatest mentors I will ever have was an executive coach named Dawn. She was the leadership coach for all of the general managers at Time Warner Cable, and thanks to the agreements we had with them, she worked with one of my startups. My boss, one of the founders, convinced the rest of the team that since I had 3 direct and 60 total reports (55 more than any other department), I probably would benefit from her advice.  He was oh so right!

 

 Of all of the many things she had to teach there is one quote I share often and live by. When Dawn took a look at my activity list and saw what I tried to accomplish on any given day she said, “Karl, if you are doing something that someone else can do, you are not doing the things only you can do.”

 

This statement struck me to the core and for a couple of days I started to examine the controlling nature that had my hands in the minutia of other people’s work. I made a concerted effort to heed her advice and in weeks my managers and admin were doing most of the busy work I felt responsible for. My reps were in charge of their own pipelines and tracking of activity. My boss was in charge of his win agendas and expectations of me. I had to learn that there were things I could not afford to sweat if I was going to become more effective.

 

My team rebelled at first, and one of my managers really struggled, but in the end I learned a lot about myself and what it means to lead. I had to watch others slip and falter, and even fail at times, but finally exposing these weaknesses was better for my team and the company. My starts finally had a chance to shine and with the new room to spread their previously caged wings, they more than made up for the faltering of others.

 

Many of you, well those of you who are at startups know it is impossible to delegate most of what you do. There are no executive assistants, support staff, or any other employees; it is just you and a few others that are equally overburdened. My advice in these cases is to stick to your priorities and only do as many little things as are necessary to accomplish the major objectives. All those other things can wait, and if you avoid them, you will find the resources to have others eventually do them.

 

In the end I would also advise outsourcing as much as you can to virtual workers. This new crop of employee is less expensive and driven to succeed. We have new worlds burgeoning on the growth of working form remote locations. For every few dollars you place in someone else’s pocket, you get back an hour that could be worth thousands. I mean who else is going to come up with the plan that makes you win?

 
 
Check this out! He is giving you cash to join the forum:

Here is the offer: Sales training for startups

Here is the link to the forum: Sales forum for startups
 
 
Why do we hound over these lanky size 0 women in high fashion? Because they are the canvas for painting the great look of clothing. If you want to be a super model caliber sales trainer? you could learn a lot from this concept.

Supermodels are not normal women. They are not even the beautiful women that have the curves most men desire. They are an awkward bunch of giraffes that have great walks that would get them stares on the streets. Sales trainers of super caliber must live in the same realm. We are not the dialers and street walkers that populate the companies we solicit. We are not the 9-5 desk jockeys or the mileage club meeting masters, no we have to be something above all of that. We are the runway model showing people how to wear the latest ideas and concepts in great selling.

Supermodels do not relate to the women in the audience, they cast a spell on them that compels them to stay in awe. Trainers must weave this magic and leave a lasting impression on the people the teach. Your training should stick in their mind like the hot dress that someone caught on the runway.
 
 
03 August 2008 @ 08:36 pm
Good trainers need some off time to refuel. I like to look at my children as subjects of my teaching ability. So often it is forgotten that the lessons we share with those in need of our expertise can also help with the children.
 
I was on the phone with one of my favorite colleagues yesterday. Tim Rohrer, from Sales and Marketing Loudmouth

The car was in the wash and the phone rang,

"Did my son call you about Message Slinger?" Tim asked after a standard hello.

"No, he did not, was he supposed to?"

"Yeah, he wanted to set up the account, so I told him to call you. Man, he just does not like to call people. You know how bad it is? Last week he called me and asked me to call to golf course and set up a tee time. I told him if he wanted to play golf, he had to do it himself."

"So, he has a problem with calling people, why?"

"He is afraid of awkward situations."

"Maybe you should send him to Toastmasters? Perhaps encourage him by giving him an extra $10 a week to go."

"Well I am paying him $40 a month to work on this for me, and if he cannot do it, perhaps I will take away $20 this month."

This is hands down one of the best sales motivators I have ever met. Yet, with his own son, his initial thought was to try and motivate him with negative impact. While this may be an eventuality, what Tim realized when I pointed it out, is that he would never start there with a re he was trying to get to change. Instead he would find positive benchmarks with rewards for adapting to new things. Think about this with your own life. How much do the sales trainings of the conference room translate to life trainings in the living room?
 
 

Here is the third list of things to look for when interviewing for the Sales Evangelist:

What to expect them to say: This is particular to the evangelist and not necessarily every great sales representative. My

recommendation is that you look for candidates that openly want to discuss certain details of your organization. Please let them

bring these up, do not ask questions that solicit these particular areas:

 

A.    How did the company start? They should be looking for the story, the goals of the founders, and what kind of work environment they will be working in. They will usually follow up this question with:

 

B.     What are the goals of the company? They may monetize or quantify through expected hires. The bottom line is they should be checking your pulse for realistic growth expectations.

 

 

C.     Who are your partners? They are going to want to know who else you are working with as this helps them see that others have respected your potential.

 

D.    They should also ask and want to know about your management and sales philosophy. Without a clear understanding yourself this will be hard to define. KNOW THIS BEFORE HIRING SALES PEOPLE. If you do not, start by hiring the person who’s role it is to make these definitions, or send me a note and we can work on this together

 
 

I am continually asked by peers, managers, and other sales people of every ilk, what are the key things to look for when hiring a sales person? Often I am also asked if there are different things to look for when hiring sales people for a startup. Our feature article today and next month will relate my methodologies when hiring sales people for companies emerging in new sectors. While several of the following points could be leveraged into the interviewing of any employee of a company, today the intent is to share unique points for hunting down evangelists. The seven key areas are:

Read more )


  1. What questions to ask
  2. What answers to look for
  3. What to expect them to say
  4. How the meeting should go
  5. The key elements of their personality
  6. DISC testing
  7. The feeling you get and trusting your instincts

 

1.      What Questions to Ask and 2. What answers to look for:

 

Let us begin with the key piece of the puzzle. If you are not asking the right questions, how can you expect to get to understand the way your prospect thinks. There are five key areas to uncover when looking for a great sales evangelist:

 

A.    Ambition – The candidate must have drive and goals beyond being a sales person in your company. Look for hungry individuals with an entrepreneurial sense. Two great questions:

 

a.       If you were not in sales, what would you be doing? Look for an answer that involves leading or owning something. The desire to learn or educate is also a big plus.

 

b.      What is your greatest personal accomplishment? Look for an athletic or academic achievement, the next best is something that involved making large sums of money. While buying a house, simply finishing school or getting married are great accomplishments, they show a security side of character. We want desire to over achieve. Graduating top of your class, or winning a tournament championship, that is what the sales champion remembers.

 

c.       Tell me the story of your best sale to date. Look for names of companies, people in the process; a great answer starts with, “Oh that is when I sold XYZ to Jeff over and ABC company…” This is the answer of a winner.

 

A couple to avoid:

 

d.      Where do you see yourself in five years? If you cannot give a perfectly rehearsed answer to this question that involves moving up the ladder, you have not been in enough interviews for sales jobs. Try question a. in it’s place.

 

e.       Tell me what motivates you. Again, brace yourself for the most typical of responses. How can you extract creativity from a candidate if your questions are lacking of it?

 

B.     Ideals – INTEGRITY IS #1! The modern day sales person must be a pinnacle of business morality. Questionable activity eliminates trust, and in today’s business relationship this is very important. Your sales people are representing your company. The integrity of your team will create the perception of your own integrity. No matter what else is in play, or how much you like someone’s abilities or personality, if you sense a dishonest nature, do not make a hire. Now place on top of this standard opinion that of the evangelist. Your prospects have to trust the sales evangelist to be a business partner with a valuable new idea. There is a greater perceived risk in a new company and a new industry. Without the trust there are only uphill battles. Most of a person’s tendency to be honest can be solicited from how the interview goes. Look for physical behavior as well as asking a basic question.

 

a.       Eye movement. There is much to debate in this arena, but I am one who believes. At some point early in the interview, determine if your candidate is left or right handed. This should be easy, as they should be taking notes. If not, you have other problems to address. When you ask a question, examine which way they avert their eyes. Look for long looks up and to the opposite direction, or quick looks to the opposite direction without moving up or down. These are signals that the person is constructing their answer. Long looks to the direction of their writing hand means they are remembering something…this is good.

 

b.      My favorite question to ask an interviewee is simply, “Is it OK to lie?” The instinct for anyone asking this question is to say “no”. We have been taught that lying is wrong and usually it offsets people to be asked this question so frankly. There are definitely times it is not just OK, but better to lie. Your wife asks if she looks fat in her new dress, or perhaps your three year old wants to know more about Santa Claus. These lies are actually helpful, as they avoid damaging someone emotionally. If your candidate emphatically says no, they are lying and you can start to wind down your interview. If they say yes too quickly, there is again danger that they have a habit of telling lies to accomplish their objectives. Even someone who is prepared for this answer, the evangelist we are looking for will wrestle with how to answer this question. They should answer it like answering a difficult question honestly. Example: “Well in business it is usually unacceptable; there are times when it is necessary to lie. When my wife asks me if she looks fat…” This is the person you want answering the questions of your one day or current customers. This is a person of integrity.

 

C.     A quick wit – I read an article the other day that gave sound advice. It suggested at some point during the interview to talk about the product and then propose to present some common objections to the candidate. The great sales candidate will handle those objections, the mediocre will attempt and fumble, and the poor will say they do not know enough. The key is not to ask questions that are too specific to features, and more in the realm of issues related to perception. Examples:

 

a.       “Your product is too expensive.” Look for the Feel, Felt, Found answer to this and any other objection. It may be as old as sales itself, but it is empathetic and very helpful in relating other people’s experiences. When it comes to price, sharing how others have felt it paramount.

 

b.      “We just do not have the time to deal with something like this right now.” Try to avoid those who talk respond with, ‘You can not afford to put this off’, or ‘ you should really reprioritize.’ These statements are more or less telling the prospect that they are not making intelligent decisions. A good salesperson will again empathize with the constraints their prospect are under and learn more about what the assumptions are in time and effort. Usually this objection is bred from an unwillingness to learn more, not a lack of time.

 

c.       “We do not see value in doing (What you offer) instead of (The status quo).” This will be the toughest for the candidate as some knowledge of industry and product will be essential. If they did any preparation for the interview, they should be able to give an acceptable response.

 

To be continued….

 
 
 
 

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