
- 288 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
The Secrets of Successful Selling Habits
About this book
In this all-time classic, updated by Tom Ziglar to address unique selling challenges in the 21st century, you'll get coached by the masterāZig Ziglarāin what he calls "the proud profession!"
Zig Ziglar has been called the man who helped turn selling into a profession to be proud of. In this exciting book taken from a seminar given by him, Zig tells you:
Zig Ziglar has been called the man who helped turn selling into a profession to be proud of. In this exciting book taken from a seminar given by him, Zig tells you:
- How you can relate best to your customer
- The importance of maintaining a positive attitude
- The importance of servicing your accounts
- 25 successful sales habits you must develop
- Why if you're good at selling, it's the most secure job you'll ever find
- Effective use of the phone and other technology in sales
- How to turn objections into sales
- The secrets of great sales presentations
- And much more!
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Yes, you can access The Secrets of Successful Selling Habits by Zig Ziglar in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Sales. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
CHAPTER
Twenty-Five Things Every Salesperson Needs to Know
Zig
Iāve been in your sales shoes. I know what it is to absolutely have to make a sale today so you can put some gasoline in that automobile or some food on that table. The Secrets of Successful Selling is designed to help you sell today, but, far more importantly, itās designed to help you make the sale today in such a way that you can sell the same people tomorrow or next month or next year.
In my sales career, Iāve been in some homes where I could literally look through the floor and see the ground underneath. Iāve been in areas where I could look through the roof and see the skies up above. On occasion Iāve even been asked to leave. On the other side of the coin, Iāve taken the companyās largest order. Iāve felt rejection in my sales career, and Iāve felt complete exhilaration.
The concepts Iāll share with you come from nearly forty years of selling and observing the great ones, the truly successful sales professionals. In this segment, I will share what makes up the heart of your sales career, the five reasons people donāt buy from you, and many reasons they will buy from you. Iāll share more than thirty-nine professional sales skills and what I consider to be the most important part of the sales process.
In November 1975, I was in the market for a new automobile. Iād looked at a couple of Cadillacs and really fell in love with them. I thought that ā76 model was sharp. I was told a good buddy of mine that I was looking at Cadillacs, and he said, āUntil youāve talked with Chuck Bellows over at Roger Meier, youāre behind the times. Go see him. Heāll really treat you right.ā
āYou call him,ā I said, āand Iāll be on my way over there while youāre talking to him.ā He said, āConsider it done.ā
When I pulled into the parking spot, there really was only one spot left in that lot. There stood old Chuck. Even though I did not know him, I knew it was him because of his appearance, the way he was dressed, and the description Iād had. Very conservative, neatly attired. As I pulled in, Chuck opened the door for me. As he did, he said, āYou have to be Zig Ziglar.ā I said, āYes, I am.ā
Well, heās a very formal guy, so he said, āWell, Mr. Ziglar, let me tell you how glad I am to meet you, and I want to also say before I say anything else, this is truly a beautiful automobile youāre driving.ā It really was. It was a Regency Oldsmobile, fully loaded, chocolate brown, and was in great condition. So he was paying me a sincere compliment.
Thatās the first sales point I would like to make in this presentation. A sincere compliment is a good way to start a presentation. The obvious key is sincere. If Iād been driving a dog and heād said something like that, Iād have grabbed my pocketbook and run. But hereās the second sales point: the best way to make a new sale is to make that prospect feel good about a previous purchase.
Some salespeople have made you feel so dumb for ever buying that piece of junk you want to swap that you are amazed that theyāre in business. As a young man, I shall never forget that my first brand-new car was an old Hudson automobile. I was so proud of that car that I made a special trip to Yazoo City, Mississippi, where I was raised, just to drive down Main Street. I really did.
Yet when it came time to swap that car in, the ugly things the salespeople said about it turned me off completely. The best way to make a new sale is to make that prospect feel good about the previous purchase.
Old Chuck said to me, āZig, do you mind telling me where you got this car?ā I said, āAs a matter of fact, my neighbor across the street is an executive with General Motors, and he made arrangements for me to get a car through one of their dealers.ā
āDid you by any chance get one of the executive cars?ā he asked. Hereās sales point number three. A sales professional, if he really wants to be successful, will ask an awful lot of questions. Thatās the way you get information from people: ask them questions. When he asked me if Iād gotten one of the executive cars from the dealership, I said, āAs a matter of fact, I did.ā
He smiled a little and said, āIāll bet you got a good deal, didnāt you?ā Well, I donāt know how you are, but when somebody asks me if I made a good deal four years ago and implied that I did, Iām pleased. I modestly admittedānow remember this was back in 1975āI said, āYes, Chuck. This car sold for $7600 when it was new. It only had 2100 miles on it, and I got it for $5600.ā
Old Chuck looked at me and said with sincere enthusiasm, āMan, you did get a good deal on that car.ā
Iāll tell you what else I did. I just loaded the first barrel of his sales shotgun, and that brings us to sales point number four. They will give you pertinent information if you just ask. All you have to do is ask, and in most cases they will.
Chuck walked around the car a time or two and said, āItās absolutely gorgeous. Let me get the appraiser, and weāll go give it a look. Iām going to tell you one thing, Mr. Ziglar. If this car of yours is as nice on the inside as it is on the outside, weāre going to be able to swap and make you happy, because we have such a beautiful inventory.ā
They got the appraiser, who went wherever it is they go when they do whatever it is they do looking cars over. I stood around there, waiting for them to come back, and I want to emphasize that the optimism that Chuck displayed really represents point number five: salespeople should be optimistic.
He had reason to be. Heād already said my car was nice. He had a beautiful inventory to work from, and he was giving me hope. Thatās what I want. He was giving me hope that we were going to be able to make a trade.
When they returned, I could see Chuck with a big smile on his face. I thought to myself, āHey, he really likes my car.ā Then I have to confess to you. A thought ran through my mind. I didnāt let it stay long, but it entered my mind that since he liked my car so much, I was going to be able to steal this deal. I even got to thinking maybe he was even going to pay me to swap, since he loved my car as much as he did.
Let me emphasize a point. Iām thinking like a buyer. Thatās what Iām supposed to do, because Iām buying, but sales point number six is this. To succeed in selling, you, the salesperson, must sit on both sides of the table. You have to think as a buyer, and you also have to think as a seller.
When Chuck stepped out of that car, he was grinning so wide, he could have eaten a banana sideways. Iāve never seen anything quite like it. I donāt believe Chuck has ever been to drama school, but youāre talking about a little display that he put on for me there. It was absolutely beautiful. It was amazing.
He stepped out of that car, and he closed the door. Then, like he couldnāt believe it, he opened that door, and closed it again, and he was shaking his head. He said, āYou know, Mr. Ziglar, this car of yours is even nicer on the inside than it is on the outside. Iām delighted youāre here, but Iām a little puzzled. Why would you want to trade this gorgeous automobile in right now?ā
Now thatās powerful and itās positive. Some of you might think, āWhy would he bring up something like that at this point? Youāre in there, you want to trade. What business is it of his? What difference does it make to him why you want to swap now?ā
I say thatās one of the strongest points in this entire presentation. Hereās sales point number seven. If thereās anything wrong, if there are any questions, if there are any objections, it is better to deal with them early in the presentation instead of later on as a rebuttal. This way you can sell on the offense and not on the defense. āWhy do you want to swap right now?ā
I smiled and said, āWell, Chuck, we have a family reunion on over in Mississippi, and I just think itād kind of be nice to drive this new Cadillac over there.ā
Old Chuck thought thatād be nice too. As a matter of fact, I just loaded the second barrel of his sales shotgun. At that point, Chuck got out what I call his talking pad. Thatās what all professional salespeople must have. It doesnāt necessarily have to be a big one, but he needs a talking pad so that when heās talking, he can also be figuring.
The reason is very simple. In our society, we have been conditioned to believe what we see and to doubt what we hear. All of our lives, we have heard this statement, āNow you canāt believe everything you hear,ā but all of our lives we also have heard, āListen, I saw it with my own two eyes, and seeing is believing.ā
Sales point number eight is that the prospect buys only when he believes and/or understands. When you write it out, his chance of believing and understanding is much greater.
Hereās a very significant point. Chuck is selling me both logically and emotionally. See, if you use all logic in a presentation, then youāll have the best-educated prospect in town, and heāll go down the street to buy something. If you use all emotion in the presentation, then heāll get emotionally involved and buy, but then he might cancel on you the next day or the next week.
Tie them together, and he will buy logically today, or will buy emotionally today but based on some logical reasons, and consequently he will be sold. Youāre building a career. The logic are the eyes. We believe what we see. The emotion is the voice. We are moved by the tone and words in that voice.
Chuck got his pad out, and he starting figuring. As he started to figure, that big, beautiful smile was there, but I obviously was watching him carefully, because I was involved in this pretty deeply. After heād been figuring a minute, that smile started to disappear, and as I watched that smile disappear my heart starting to sink a little bit.
I thought, āOh, no. Heās finding something, and Iām not going to be able to get that beautiful automobile.ā
He kept figuring, and that bland, neutral expression actually went into ugly. As a matter of fact, I have never seen such a high concentration of ugly in one spot in my lifetime as old Chuck was displaying right there.
As my heart started to sink, I just stood there not knowing what to do, but I give old Chuck Bellows credit for one thing. That guy is a fighter. I mean, he stayed right in there and figured and figured and figured, and pretty soon that ugly started to disappear, and it started moving back into neutral, and I caught myself pulling for him. āHang in there, Chuck. Stay with it, boy. Stay with it. Stay with it.ā
Chuck hung in there all the way. Finally, he looked up at me with a big smile on his face, and using the pad, he said to me, āMr. Ziglar, the good news to you is this. Because of our wonderful inventory, and because of the marvelous condition of your automobile, weāre going to be able to swap with you for just $7385.ā
When he said that, I screamed like a stuck pig. I said, āWhoo, Chuck, man, thatās a lot of money.ā I almost had a heart attack when he said it. Donāt misunderstand. Iām educated. Iād been reading the newspapers and seeing the TV ads. I knew the price of cars had gone up. My friends and my relatives had been telling me about it, but they were talking about something else. They were talking about their cars and their money. Old Chuckās talking to me about my car and my money.
When he started talking there about $7385āand thatās not the way Chuck said it; he said, ā$73-85,ā like the professional is supposed toābut when he said that with the right voice inflection, after I had screamed, he looked at me and half smiled and said, āMr. Ziglar, is it too much?ā
Now what is he saying to me? āZiglar, if thatās out of your price range, look, friend, if you canāt handle that kind of money, be a man about it. Admit it. Just say you canāt cut it.ā Do you think for one moment I would ever admit to a thing like that? There aināt no way.
But, sales point number nine is, when you use the right voice inflectionāwhich later on we will teach you exactly how to doāI, the customer, have to make an important couple of decisions. Is he asking me if itās out of my range? Thatās one thing. Or, is he asking me, āMr. Ziglar, as a wise and prudent businessman, is this $73-85 more than youāre willing to pay?ā
As a wise and prudent businessman, I plead guilty to that last one. You bet. So I said, āChuck, thatās simply more money than Iām going to pay you for a difference in these two cars.ā He didnāt argue with me. He didnāt get defensive. He didnāt try to justify the price.
With an almost casual confidence, old Chuck looked at me as he put the ball back in my court. Thatās, after all, where the decision is going to be. Sales point number ten is this: Donāt argue. Donāt get defensive or try to justify the price at that point. Give the ball back to the prospect.
So, pleasantly and gently, old Chuck stayed on the offense. āMr. Ziglar, what do you think would be a fair exchange between your nice, clean four-year-old Regency Oldsmobile and our gorgeous new Cadillac Sedan DeVille?ā
Sales point number eleven: use the Abraham Lincoln approach. Thatās what Chuck was doing. You might recall that when Abraham Lincoln was a courtroom attorney, a lot of times he would represent both sides of the story. In other words, he would try both sides of the case, and he would always say good things about the opposition. As a matter of fact, sometimes the other attorney said that Abe had a better case for their side than he had developed themselves, but Abe obviously saved the most eloquent for his own client.
Notice what old Chuckās doing. Heās saying good things about my previous purchase, but heās saying eloquent things about his own product, and thatās what you need to do. What did old Chuck say? He said āa nice, clean, four-year-old Oldsmobile Regency,ā and when heās talking about his car, āthat gorgeous new Cadillac.ā When heād say Cadillac, you could just feel the difference there. Sedan DeVille.
Sales point number twelve is this: defend the prospectās previous purchase, even if the prospect says ugly things about it. You rise above it. If the prospect says, āMan, when I got this, they just saw me coming. They really took advantage of me,ā and if you agreeāāYes, they kind of did get youāāyou know what the prospect is going to think? Theyāre going to think, āYes, that last dude got to me, but Iāll guarantee you, friend, you are not going to get to me.ā
What is the proper thing to say? Very simply this. Regardless of how ugly the prospect has talked about a previous purchase or experience, you simply say, āWell, you know, Mr. Prospect, at the time you made that decision, when circumstances were such as they were, you used the information you had, and I guarantee you that many, many of us would have done exactly the same thing that you did.ā
There will never be an individual who will not say to you, āYes, there have been times I bought something and was excited about it, and then later realized I had really not made a wise return.ā When you buy anything significant, weāve all felt like we were making the right decision.
Letās look back at the question. āWhat do you think, Mr. Ziglar, would be a fair exchange between these two cars?ā This is sales point number thirteen. At this point Chuck Bellows had invested something like twenty-five minutes with me. As a professional, he needs to find out if I really am a legitimate prospect. Twenty-five minutes is fine, but you canāt invest that much time with everybody if they are not going to turn out to be prospects. You need to find out if youāre in the same ballpark or if youāre in different ball...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Chapter 1: Twenty-Five Things Every Salesperson Needs to Know
- Chapter 2: The Heart of Your Sales Career
- Chapter 3: Success Sales Psychology
- Chapter 4: Selling Right to the Right People
- Chapter 5: The Effective Use of the Phone in Sales
- Chapter 6: Preparing Successful Sales Presentations
- Chapter 7: Buyers Must See What You Say
- Chapter 8: Questions Are the Answer
- Chapter 9: Turning Objections into Sales
- Chapter 10: The Power of Voice Inflection
- Chapter 11: The Keys to Successful Selling, Part 1
- Chapter 12: The Keys to Successful Selling, Part 2
- Chapter 13: Professional Closing Techniques
- Chapter 14: Emotion versus Logic in Selling
- Chapter 15: Selling: The Proud Profession
- Index