Sales Training – A Short Course, Part II

Written by Bill Willard


“I learn by going where I have to go.” – Roethke

Sales managers and experienced producers often have training responsibilities that require them to manage this process, helping people do their best by:

• Assessing individual training needs. • Setting training goals and making plans to meet them. • Selecting and organizing training methods and resources. • Prescribing field activities, coaching, critiquing, reinforcing and follow-up.

Training is not one-sided, however. A trainer’s or sales manager’s responsibility may be to make training available, but it isrepparttar sales person’s responsibility to makerepparttar 138968 most of it. The ultimate responsibility for learning isrepparttar 138969 learners, sorepparttar 138970 manager/trainer’s role will be more of a "coach" than a "doer”.

A good trainer is a leader and coach. Michael Beck of Leadership Coaching, Inc. (www.leaders-coach.com) maintains that all leadership is by example. “The people who follow usually duplicate half ofrepparttar 138971 good things their leader/coach does and twicerepparttar 138972 poor things, say Beck. “To be dynamic, a leader must practice self-discipline, be a perpetual student, become efficient, prioritize tasks well, determine materiality, and practice delayed gratification.”

In other words, coaches usually do not get out onrepparttar 138973 field and playrepparttar 138974 game, but they must know how to help their players become winners. Sales trainers must be convincing in demonstrating successful sales techniques. This makes them responsible for beingrepparttar 138975 "player-coach," that is, someone who can play a good game, not just talk about it.

Trainers Can Kill With Kindness

Watching sales being initiated, developed and closed by a player-coach helps pre-contract candidates and new producers learn how to applyrepparttar 138976 knowledge and skills they’ve learned. Butrepparttar 138977 player-coach role can quickly reach a point of diminishing returns, especially for sales managers or trainers who have a stake inrepparttar 138978 outcome.

Why Your Email Distribution List is Your Best Source of New Sales

Written by Herb and Monica Leibacher


Don’t overlook your current customers. After all, they’rerepparttar ones who give you referrals and potentially come back for future sales.

Marty Nemzow, best-selling author and marketing expert, says that not only does gaining a new customer cost much more than retaining an existing customer, but also that every lost customer costs money to replace.

According to USA Today, it costs 40 times as much to acquire a customer and is does to keep a current one. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that forrepparttar 138967 typical transaction-based business, each new customer costs roughly $800.

The Insurance Pro Shop, which offers marketing tips for insurance professionals, suggests implementing annual reviews, client appreciation nights, and client workshops, which they say are some ofrepparttar 138968 most profitable of all prospecting activities. They say meeting with your existing clients regularly cements relationships, retains business, creates repeat sales and generates high quality referred leads.

Take a look at your email distribution list. Since these people already know you and/or your company, there's a good chance they probably like/use your product or service. What you have in front of you is a potential goldmine of referrals, re-sales, up sales and cross sales.

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