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You are here: Home > Business > Sales Training > Why Not Stop By And Say Hi - Just To Keep You In The Minds Of Your Clients And Prospects |
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Hub You - Why Not Stop By And Say Hi - Just To Keep You In The Minds Of Your Clients And Prospects
15 Effective Tips for Advertising and Marketing through the Mail - From a South African Perspective and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society.Although many of the best-known catalogues come from large companies, the mail-order business presents incredible opportunities for small businesses with the right blend of products, marketing strategies, prices and target customers. To compete successfully the entrepreneur must target a specific market. What does it take to succeed in the highly competitive mail-order indu I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and Developing A Senior Management Team It seems like every time a hot prospect surfaces or a client’s contract is about to expire a loud speaker goes off in a salesperson’s head that says “attack”. Almost everyone is guilty of this behavior. We are motivated to make our numbers, save our resources, build our books of business and make money. Americans are instant gratification animals.Effective management is crucial for a business to succeed, and it is possible only if the right candidate with the right qualifications and expertise does the job competently. The greatest challenge to good management is hiring a good team of managers to do the job assigned to them in such a fashion, as to guide the business towards its target goals in an accelerated, well- However there’s a more stable and consistent approach that we know works, yet so few of us use it with any regularity. It’s having the where with all to know that just stopping by and saying “Hi”, sending a card, calling to see how everyone is, may be the easiest way of holding onto or getting new business. It boils down to looking at clients and prospects as friends or family members. You, hopefully, phone your mom, spouse, kids, etcetera, to see how things are going, well why not do that with clients and prospects. A word of warning: don’t do it every other day, or with some annoying and phony premise. If you treat your business resources with the respect and caring that you would like, you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship. Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society. I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and Employees, Get Used to Working under Surveillance by and saying “Hi”, sending a card, calling to see how everyone is, may be the easiest way of holding onto or getting new business.Let's face it. Monitoring employees' e-mail, tracking their Internet use, logging everything done at keyboards has become the norm in Corporate America.With computer monitoring software so cheap and easy-to-apply it's no wonder that workplace surveillance becomes more and more widespread.Here are some figures from the 2005 Electronic Monitoring & Surveillance It boils down to looking at clients and prospects as friends or family members. You, hopefully, phone your mom, spouse, kids, etcetera, to see how things are going, well why not do that with clients and prospects. A word of warning: don’t do it every other day, or with some annoying and phony premise. If you treat your business resources with the respect and caring that you would like, you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship. Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society. I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and Email Mistakes That Can Hurt Your Business , you’ll find out how loyalty will build and how hard it will be for either of you to let go of your business relationship.Email is both a blessing and a real annoyance to businesses. It allows you to send a quick message to your clients or to your employees in a branch office hundreds of miles away. But it can also leave you vulnerable to viruses that can cause your server to crash, spam that can eat away at huge parts of your day, and can put confidential company information out into public Find out your client or prospect’s birthday and send them a card and make sure you sign it and write a personal note. Personalizing separates your card from the hundreds of cards your client may get over the course of a year, especially during the holidays. I always felt that those printed cards with the stamped company name and/or signature were spit out without much thought or caring. Call or stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may! Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society. I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and How to Use Humor to Diffuse Conflict r stop in and ask you prospect or client if they’d like to go to lunch and stipulate that you’re not going to speak about business, but that you figured they’d make good lunch company. Don’t talk business…but they may!Before I criticize someone, I walk a mile in their moccasins. That way, if they get mad, they're a mile away and barefoot.Humor used the right way at the right time can be just what you need to diffuse a conflict at work. The credit industry is full of great opportunities to disarm negativity. Diffusing a tense situation can help all parties involved find a mutually Find out you client or prospect’s likes and dislikes and write them down. Keep an organized file and use it. Calling your prospect to see if they’d like tickets to a sporting event that you know they enjoy may be your ticket to opening up a prosperous relationship. Sending articles, magazines, books and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society. I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and Business Plan Mistakes - The Phantom Growth Rate and the like for no apparent reason other than you know it would interest them, speaks volumes about you as a person and about your ability as a sales executive. We are all so jaded by gimmicks and insincerity that a little bit of caring goes a long way in today’s society.While visiting a friend, he asked a favor of me. He whipped out this humongous business plan consisting of two full 3-inch loose-leaf binders. Someone he knew had paid a whopping $250,000 to have this business plan prepared and my friend was interested in my opinion of it.At first I considered telling him I had something else to do and couldn't spend the next te I frequently think about a vendor who helped me out when I was just starting in business. He had no idea that my company would someday become an international entity. He would stop by just to say “Hi”, drop off premiums without asking for an order and would occasionally come by with coffee. No matter what happened that fellow could always count on me as a client. His loyalty and business friendship was handsomely rewarded many times over. Slow, steady and caring won the race! Remember building a book of business is a lot easier when your foundation is solid and you set it up for the long haul.
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