The
Number One Key To Long Term Success in Sales
When I look back over my long
career in medical sales, there was one thing that I always
did consistently. My customers always told me that this
was the main reason they did business with me. Quite honestly,
I was shocked to learn that every sales person didn’t do
the same thing. But after speaking to many of my old customers,
I realize that this was truly the key to my success. Do
you want to know what it is.
Don’t be shocked when I tell
you. It’s so simple, so obvious, but many sales people just
don’t do it. I was glad for my competitors who didn’t, because
their failure to do this one thing opened many, many doors
for me.
Are you ready? Okay – here
it is:
Always do what you say
you are going to do!
I know what you’re thinking
– “That’s it? That’s the key?”
Yes. That’s the key. Notice
I underlined the word always. It doesn’t say “most of the
time, or “usually.” It says always, and I mean always.
Everyone in business makes
promises and commitments on a daily basis. Either you volunteer
to do something, or a customer or prospect asks you to do
something. Following up on this commitment is the key to
long-term success in sales.
I believe the number one
quality you can have in business is to be trusted. Earning
trust is as simple as doing what you say you will do and
being who you say you are. For example, if you tell people
you are honest and ethical, you had better be honest and
ethical without any deviations – ever, or the trust is gone.
The seemingly little things
add up big time towards the trust factor. Have you ever
told a customer, “I’ll find out that information and call
you tomorrow,” and then two or more days passed until you
called them? Or have you ever said, “I’ll deliver that to
your office in a day or two” and then get it there in a
week or two, or not at all? If this sounds too familiar,
then it could be one of the reasons that your business is
not growing like it should.
Here’s a tip. Ask yourself,
“Do I do everything that I say I am going to do all the
time?” Be brutally honest with yourself and If you’re not
sure if you can, then ask some of your customers that you
have called on for a year or longer, Just be prepared for
some shocking news.
Here’s How It’s Done
Now I’m going to tell you
how to do what you say you are going to do all the time
without failure.It’s going to take
some effort on your part, but I promise you that the small
amount of time invested will yield huge dividends.
I have a good memory, but
it’s not good enough to remember every detail and every
commitment that I make. So I write them all down! And I
don’t write them just anywhere – I write them in my personal
planner in a way that demands that I take action.
Here is what I do, and before
you ask, the answer is yes – I do it for every promise or
commitment that I make. Whenever a customer, prospect, friend,
associate, or whomever asks me to do something, my immediate
concern is what and when. So if a customer asks me, “Mace
can you call me tomorrow afternoon so I can give you that
information,” the first thing I’m going to do is get out
my calendar for tomorrow afternoon and see if I have a realistic
time slot to call him. If I’m booked solid with appointments
or I’m going to be tied up training or speaking, then I
won’t commit to that day. I’ll check the next day and if
it’s good I’ll say, “tomorrow is not good, what time can
I call you the day after.” If that works, I enter it in
my planner like an appointment – because it is an appointment!
Now here is another thing
that I do, because it works for me. Have you ever entered
an appointment or task in your planner and then you became
so busy doing something you didn’t check your schedule until
it was too late? That is one of the reasons I use an electronic
PDA as my planning device. It allows me to set an alarm
to remind me of the commitments that I have made so I don’t
forget. When the alarm goes off, I excuse myself and make
the call. Done!
What happens if I get tied
up and can't keep the appointment? I call the customer and
let them know that something has come up so they don't think
that I forgot or I'm irresponsible. I reschedule the commitment
with them and enter it in my PDA, or if time is lacking,
I tell them that I will call them at a time to reschedule
and then enter that in my PDA. Do you get this?
Let’s review because this
is important. Before you agree to a phone call, a delivery
date, a sales call, or anything when a time is specified
– get out your planner and make sure the time will work
for you. Only then should you commit and enter it as a must-do
appointment. Personally, nothing drives me crazier than
a contractor or vendor who promises to meet me somewhere,
doesn’t show, and then when I call him, he tells me that
he got tied up on another job!
Have you ever heard the phrase
under-promise and over-deliver? This works great for commitments.
Try to schedule yourself some extra time for getting back
to someone and then get back to him or her sooner. Ninety-nine
percent of the time it will be appreciated.
Here is another pearl that
will take you a long way towards success in sales. Make
sure you are aware and follow up on the promises that your
managers, associates, or anyone else in your company makes
to customers or prospects. Take responsibility for making
sure that whoever made the promise, follows up on it.
I had a manager named Ted
who my customers loved whenever they were around him. He
was charming and charismatic but he had the fault of telling
them that he would call them next week to invite them to
his beach house for the weekend, or to get together with
the spouses for dinner, and then he would never call. This
would upset my customers – a lot!
I learned that any time
Ted had contact with my customers; there was a good possibility
that he promised them something. Initially, I tried asking
Ted, but his charisma was often offset by his short memory.
So I would contact every customer after they met with Ted
to ask if he made any commitments by asking, “Did Ted say
when he would be in touch with you again?” Once I learned
that Ted was supposed to get back to them on anything, the
following day, week, or month, I did several things. First,
I marked it on my calendar for the date that Ted was supposed
to follow up. Second, I called Ted’s secretary and asked
her to put it on his calendar. Third, I called Ted and discussed
the importance of him keeping that commitment. When the
date rolled around for Ted to get back in touch, I followed-up
to make sure it happened.
Why would I go through all
of that? Because when anyone in my company makes commitments
they don’t keep, it makes me look bad. I wasn’t going to
let that happen with Ted and I'm not complacent about it
now. Make sure all of your associates, managers, and support
people do as they say when it comes to your customers.
So there you have it – the
number one key to long-term success in sales. It’s simple
in concept, but it takes some effort to make it happen.
Remember, if you are someone that people can trust, then
little can stop you.
P.S. For those of you who
just finished this article and said, “that’s simple – I’m
going to do that,” don’t forget to also honor the commitments
you make to yourself. If you don’t start doing this today,
then when?
© Mace Horoff, 2006
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Mace Horoff is a professional speaker
and medical device sales trainer. He
was a successful, award-winning sales representative
in the medical device
industry for over 22 years. Mace is founder and
president of Sales Pilot
Consulting, a company dedicated to training medical
device representatives for
success. He can be reached at (561) 333-8080 or
email.
For information on
having Mace speak for your group or to learn more
about Sales Pilot training
programs, visit www.MedicalSalesTraining.com
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