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Hub You - Salespeople: Position Yourself With Power
A Strategic Approach To Produce A Strong Professional Services Brand ness with you.A professional services firm, just like other types of businesses, needs to develop a strong brand and a favorable impression in the minds of prospects, clients and stakeholders in their business. In smaller professional service firms, there are limited financial resources for advertising as a primary branding vehicle. Therefore, as strategic approach is imperative to maximize the impact of available resources to rand your professional services firm.How do you influence your market in a strategic way that produces a favorable image of your firm in the minds of your prospects, clients and stakeholders? Your strategic thinking business coach recommends the following strategic approach.Strategic Action #1: Select the right target market and build a target list of your most desired clients within the target market. The most desired clients should include existing clients and prospects you want to turn into clients.Strategic Action #2: Develop a strategic integrated marketing communication plan to build your brand to a well-defined audience within your target market. You should incorporate the use of direct mail, email, telephone and other one-to-one contact methods. In addition, a strategically planned public relations campaign to promote awareness of you and your brand is essential.Strategic Action #3: Enhance your firm’s reputation by demonstrating “value” that is offered by you and your fir Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of positio Wedding Tents and Marquees His eyes were narrow and bloodshot from staying out late and partying too heavily the previous night. A two-day old stubble framed his face. He was wearing a dark colored tee shirt, which he hadn't tucked in, a pair of jeans, and scuffed loafers which had probably never seen shoe polish. It was the second day of my Sales Academy seminar, and this participant in the program was complaining to the group that his customers were only interested in low price.Are you planning a wedding? If you have always wanted a beach wedding or an out door ceremony, consider the benefits of using a marquee tent to host your guests. Outdoor weddings and functions are directly affected by the weather. It is often recommended that wedding organizers consider a marquee tent to ensure a successful wedding or function. Having the option to take cover under a marquee tent is recommended, weather conditions cant be controlled, for any event or wedding there has probably months or even years of planning involved, it would be a disaster to have the day or evening ruined by fowl weather conditions. So, consider using a marquee tent to ensure that your day is a success.Extreme weather conditions to consider using a marquee wedding tent would be rain, wind, harsh sunlight, cold conditions and finally the evening can be stretched out for a longer time under a marquee tent with protection from evening dew. Setting the date for outdoor events and outdoor weddings can often happen relatively early, therefore weather predictions are often out of the question, relax in the knowledge that you have the back-up of a marquee tent.Getting a marquee tent for your wedding or outdoor function can be a simple process, firstly you need to decide on a company which can supply the type of tent you require, ensure that they can construct your marquee efficiently and provide or advise on extra services such as d I didn't say this, because I didn't want to embarrass him in front of the group, but I thought it none the less: "Do you think your appearance and demeanor have anything to do with your customers' reaction? Do you think that you may give them the idea that you are the lowest rung on the pricing scale? Is it possible that you have inadvertently positioned yourself as the Wal-Mart of the industry?" I remember, as a child, having a salesperson call on my family. He had an appointment to discuss a correspondence course for one of us. He drove a big Lincoln, dressed richly, spoke articulately, and carried himself with confidence. It wasn't a coincidence that we bought his program without quibbling about the price. These two scenarios illustrate a powerful and frequently overlooked best practice in the world of sales: Whether you intend to or not, you always create a position in the minds of your customers, and that position influences the customer's attitudes toward you as well as the buying decisions that follow.In other words, if you look like you're the low price, your customers will expect you to be the low price. It follows, then, that if we are going to be an effective, professional salesperson, we ought to give thoughtful consideration to how we position ourselves in the minds of our customers. Let's begin by understanding the idea of positioning a little deeper. Positioning has long been a term bandied about by advertising mavens and marketing gurus. They define it as the place that your brand or product has carved out in the mind of the customer. It's the pictures that enter the customers' mind when they think of your product, the feelings that your product evokes, the attitudes they associate with you, and the thoughts that they have of you. Chances are, for example, that the words "Volkswagen Beetle" evoke a set of responses from you that are different than "Chevrolet Corvette." You expect a certain degree of quality, price and service when you enter a Wal-Mart that is not the same as your expectations upon stepping inside a Saks Fifth Avenue store. Billions of dollars are spent every year on carefully crafted impressions by businesses anxious to carve out a valuable position in the minds of their customers. Alas, if only the same thing could be said of many salespeople. Just like the carefully designed impressions by advertising mediums inexorably chisel a spot into our psyches, so do the repeated visits by a salesperson embed a set of expectations, pictures and emotions into the minds of our customers. The position you, as a salesperson, occupy is a complex intertwining of the perception of your company, your solutions, and yourself. The most effective salespeople and sales organizations understand that, and consciously work to create a positive position in the minds of their customers. Creating your position Let's begin at the end. A good starting point is to think deeply and with some detail about what sort of position you want to create. What, exactly, do you want your customers to think of you? Let me suggest two possibilities: the minimum acceptable position, and the ideal position. At a minimum, I believe your customer should view you as a competent, trustworthy person who brings value to the customer. They believe that you generally know your products and their strengths and weaknesses, that you generally know the customer's issues, and that you can be reliably counted on to do what you say you will do. That's the least acceptable position to which you should work towards. If your customers don't think of you at least in this way, you probably should not be in sales. At the other end of the spectrum is the ideal position. This builds on the minimum, but adds a specific understanding on the part of the customer of your unique combination of strengths and attributes. It evolves as you have history with the customer until you occupy a position that is totally and uniquely yours and that carries with it the expectation that your strengths in some specific and unique way add value to the time the customer spends with you. The ultimate test of the power of your position is the customer's willingness to see you and the resulting preference for doing business with you. Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of position Career Placement Test Do YOU KNOW YOURSELF! p>These two scenarios illustrate a powerful and frequently overlooked best practice in the world of sales: Whether you intend to or not, you always create a position in the minds of your customers, and that position influences the customer's attitudes toward you as well as the buying decisions that follow.In other words, if you look like you're the low price, your customers will expect you to be the low price.Career Placement Test your strengths and weaknessesCareer placement test is taken by persons who wanted to know what careers suits them. It is also a way to determine if a person needs help in deciding what course or career he or she will take up upon finishing his or her current status. Career placement test is applicable to high school students and degree holder persons.Career placement test is particularly helpful if a person has difficulty in choosing on what path to select after graduating from high school or college. Yes, it may be helpful but not all can benefit from career placement test. This is so because on some the result of a career placement test is a far cry from what they really want to be.For this, I can say that career placement test is there only to give you a hint or to guide you but not to influence your decisions. The important thing that you should do is to contemplate by yourself and think what you really like to be in the future.Assess yourself by carefully studying your strengths and weaknesses. In reference to the results of your assessment, create options on what career are you going to take. Then choose which the best possible course is for you that will of course benefit you in the future. Perhaps, taking up a career placement test will help you come up with a good solution.But do It follows, then, that if we are going to be an effective, professional salesperson, we ought to give thoughtful consideration to how we position ourselves in the minds of our customers. Let's begin by understanding the idea of positioning a little deeper. Positioning has long been a term bandied about by advertising mavens and marketing gurus. They define it as the place that your brand or product has carved out in the mind of the customer. It's the pictures that enter the customers' mind when they think of your product, the feelings that your product evokes, the attitudes they associate with you, and the thoughts that they have of you. Chances are, for example, that the words "Volkswagen Beetle" evoke a set of responses from you that are different than "Chevrolet Corvette." You expect a certain degree of quality, price and service when you enter a Wal-Mart that is not the same as your expectations upon stepping inside a Saks Fifth Avenue store. Billions of dollars are spent every year on carefully crafted impressions by businesses anxious to carve out a valuable position in the minds of their customers. Alas, if only the same thing could be said of many salespeople. Just like the carefully designed impressions by advertising mediums inexorably chisel a spot into our psyches, so do the repeated visits by a salesperson embed a set of expectations, pictures and emotions into the minds of our customers. The position you, as a salesperson, occupy is a complex intertwining of the perception of your company, your solutions, and yourself. The most effective salespeople and sales organizations understand that, and consciously work to create a positive position in the minds of their customers. Creating your position Let's begin at the end. A good starting point is to think deeply and with some detail about what sort of position you want to create. What, exactly, do you want your customers to think of you? Let me suggest two possibilities: the minimum acceptable position, and the ideal position. At a minimum, I believe your customer should view you as a competent, trustworthy person who brings value to the customer. They believe that you generally know your products and their strengths and weaknesses, that you generally know the customer's issues, and that you can be reliably counted on to do what you say you will do. That's the least acceptable position to which you should work towards. If your customers don't think of you at least in this way, you probably should not be in sales. At the other end of the spectrum is the ideal position. This builds on the minimum, but adds a specific understanding on the part of the customer of your unique combination of strengths and attributes. It evolves as you have history with the customer until you occupy a position that is totally and uniquely yours and that carries with it the expectation that your strengths in some specific and unique way add value to the time the customer spends with you. The ultimate test of the power of your position is the customer's willingness to see you and the resulting preference for doing business with you. Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of positio Drilling Rigs an "Chevrolet Corvette." You expect a certain degree of quality, price and service when you enter a Wal-Mart that is not the same as your expectations upon stepping inside a Saks Fifth Avenue store.Good research has resulted into writing this article for you, I hope it helps.The world needs to have oil for the industrial and residential uses of the many customers. For most of the countries that use this oil the oil is transported to them. The question that few of us think of asking is why are there only a few countries that are operating drilling rigs to find deposits of oil. The answer to this question has to do with the add up of money that can be spent for the construction of these rigs.As the rigs need to be used in places where oil has been revealed they need to be for the most part absolutely self sufficient. The materials that are secondhand to make these drilling rigs need to be strong so that they will be able to contain all of the equipment which is needed to drill for oil.There will be another types of equipment which is exploited for the land based drilling rigs and those of the offshore oil rigs. As the offshore oil rigs are located at sea they are very far from the nighest shore. The crew will need various ways to arrive and leave the oil rigs when they have shore leave.For this reason you will find a helipad located on the platform of the offshore drilling rigs. There will be a different method of arriving on the rig when the people arrive by the seaward side. In some rigs there will a large basket – named an air tugger – which carries the people up to the rig.The platf Billions of dollars are spent every year on carefully crafted impressions by businesses anxious to carve out a valuable position in the minds of their customers. Alas, if only the same thing could be said of many salespeople. Just like the carefully designed impressions by advertising mediums inexorably chisel a spot into our psyches, so do the repeated visits by a salesperson embed a set of expectations, pictures and emotions into the minds of our customers. The position you, as a salesperson, occupy is a complex intertwining of the perception of your company, your solutions, and yourself. The most effective salespeople and sales organizations understand that, and consciously work to create a positive position in the minds of their customers. Creating your position Let's begin at the end. A good starting point is to think deeply and with some detail about what sort of position you want to create. What, exactly, do you want your customers to think of you? Let me suggest two possibilities: the minimum acceptable position, and the ideal position. At a minimum, I believe your customer should view you as a competent, trustworthy person who brings value to the customer. They believe that you generally know your products and their strengths and weaknesses, that you generally know the customer's issues, and that you can be reliably counted on to do what you say you will do. That's the least acceptable position to which you should work towards. If your customers don't think of you at least in this way, you probably should not be in sales. At the other end of the spectrum is the ideal position. This builds on the minimum, but adds a specific understanding on the part of the customer of your unique combination of strengths and attributes. It evolves as you have history with the customer until you occupy a position that is totally and uniquely yours and that carries with it the expectation that your strengths in some specific and unique way add value to the time the customer spends with you. The ultimate test of the power of your position is the customer's willingness to see you and the resulting preference for doing business with you. Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of positio Strategic Marketing Plans For Weighting Marketing Activities ou? Let me suggest two possibilities: the minimum acceptable position, and the ideal position.Strategic marketing plans are a must have for your fledgling computer business. With a strategic marketing plan you define a means to accomplish your overall marketing goal.The most successful businesses have a strategic marketing plan in place and they refer to it often. They use it as a living document and not something that sits on the shelf collecting dust.When developing your strategic marketing plan your first priority should be how you weight the different marketing activities available. Here is a suggested breakdown for you to consider when developing your strategic marketing plan:Spend about 50% of your time and money on a combination of marketing through organizations and referral marketing.Spend about 20% of your time and money on doing things related to speaking and teaching and seminar marketing. This part of your strategic marketing plan includes your solo seminars as well as those that you joint venture with accountants and other niche technology providers.Third priority in your strategic marketing plan is direct mail. Plan to spend about 20% of your time and money on direct mail. Here, targeting is extremely important. In fact targeting is a factor for consideration with all of the elements in your strategic marketing plan.The last and smallest facet of your strategic marketing plan should be the marketing activities that tend to work for some and not for other At a minimum, I believe your customer should view you as a competent, trustworthy person who brings value to the customer. They believe that you generally know your products and their strengths and weaknesses, that you generally know the customer's issues, and that you can be reliably counted on to do what you say you will do. That's the least acceptable position to which you should work towards. If your customers don't think of you at least in this way, you probably should not be in sales. At the other end of the spectrum is the ideal position. This builds on the minimum, but adds a specific understanding on the part of the customer of your unique combination of strengths and attributes. It evolves as you have history with the customer until you occupy a position that is totally and uniquely yours and that carries with it the expectation that your strengths in some specific and unique way add value to the time the customer spends with you. The ultimate test of the power of your position is the customer's willingness to see you and the resulting preference for doing business with you. Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of positio Are You a Winner or Whiner? ness with you.I've found that winners say “I choose to.” Whiners, on the other hand, say “I have to.”Let me explain. On a plane, I mentioned to the executive next to me that I’m a professional development consultant and speaker. She smiled, gave me a knowing nod, and before the wheels were up revealed her “pain.” She launched into telling me about her demanding and exhausting work responsibilities. She said things such as, "I have to leave home at 6:30 every morning to beat the traffic.” “I have to go to Germany next month on business.” “I have to attend a daily mini-meeting with the VP of Marketing." She prefaced all of her duties with “I have to.”I shook my head. "No wonder you feel over-stressed!” I exclaimed. “Your motor's running full speed but your parking break is on!” I recommended she release the brake. “You are a closeted whiner,” I said. “Viewing your work as a series of burdens is holding you back. Empower yourself by changing your perspective. Quit using the victim phrase ‘I have to.” Replace it with ‘I choose to,’ ‘I get to,’ or by just stating the facts.”“For example, saying ‘I choose to leave at 6:30 to avoid the traffic’ means you are making a quality choice about making your commute easier. Saying ‘I get to go to Germany’ affirms your company’s appreciation of your special skills -- plus you are fortunate to get to go on an adventure most people will never experience. Stating ‘I meet daily with the V Here's an illustration. If you were shopping for an automobile, a low-mileage late model Taurus would probably provide you with competent, reliable transportation. So, when you think of that specific automobile, it would evoke a set of ideas in your mind all revolving around competent and reliable transportation. Now, think of a brand new Lamborghini and you would understand it to be transportation, but with a unique flair - something above and beyond just reliable transportation. That flair would be a result of the unique strengths of that particular automobile conveyed in a graphic way to your mind. So it is with salespeople. You want to position yourself in your customer's mind the equivalent of the Taurus. But if you really want to carve out a unique, memorable position in your customer's mind, you'd want them to think of you as a Lamborghini. The question then is, how do you want your customers to think of you? Once you articulate a specific picture, you can then start to build that position. Here are four essential steps to help you convey a positive position to your customers. 1. Soberly assess yourself. What sort of position are you currently occupying in the customer's mind? Be as objective as possible as you think through each of the issues listed below, and compare yourself to your competitors. How do you stand on... * your appearance * your product knowledge * your understanding of company policies and procedures * your competence with basic sales skills * your understanding of the customer * your bearing and demeanor. If you find that your rank below your competitors on any of these issues, then you need to spiff them up so that you are thought of, at least, as a Taurus. Then, you can begin to move toward the Lamborghini position. 2. Start on the inside. In my book, 10 Secrets of Time Management for Salespeople, I propose that you "get grounded." That advice is based on the observation that it is difficult to sustain a false position. It is all a whole lot easier if you portray yourself to be who you are. Integrity, meaning consistency between who you are and who you present yourself to be, is a foundation to a positive position. In order to do that, you must clearly understand who you are. That means that you crystallize, in a written document, these three issues: * Your purpose. This really speaks to your spiritual orientation. Why are you here? What is your purpose in life and in this job? Why are you doing this anyway? * Your vision. What would you like to become? What do you see as possible and ideal in your job, your career, and in your life? * Your values. What are the highest priority items in your life and in your job? What are the people, ideas, behaviors and qualities of character that are most important to you? Once you have thought deeply about these internal issues, you'll find it much easier to live them. The process of articulating them and putting them on paper keeps you focused and attentive to the deeper issues. 3. Do a sober assessment of your strengths. If you are going to position yourself in the eyes of the customer as having some combination of uniqueness, you first have to identify what those unique strengths are. What are your personal unique attributes, experiences, and passions as it relates this job? Do you have some special experience? Do you have some unique capabilities? Do you have some unique relationships? Do you have some unusual characteristics? Identify those strengths on a piece of paper, and then add a line or two on how each of those can bring value to the customer. At this point, you will have done the necessary homework to make the job of building a unique position much easier. You now know who you are and what strengths you can bring to your customers. Now comes the fun. 4. Continually seek opportunities to convey your brand. Act in a way that is consistent with your statements of strengths. For example, if you say that you are good with high tech, don't take notes on a scratch pad. Put them into a PDA. If you say you are personally attractive, don't forget to shave before you make a sales call. Be consistent - act like the person you claim to be. Find ways to utilize your strengths and emphasize your uniqueness. In one of my sales positions, for example, recognizing that I had some unique talents in speaking to groups, I consistently found ways to organize seminars and workshops for my customers in which I presented to the group. I could have made individual sales calls to six customers, but I found that when I brought all six together in a group, I was more effective. It was just me utilizing my strengths. Be creative. One of my strengths happened to be my wife, who is a gourmet cook, and extremely good with anything that even looks like food. We collaborated, and as Christmas gifts for my customers, she would make dozens of varieties of homemade cookies and candies, and I'd pack them uniquely for each customer. Within a year or two, everyone looked forward to my arriving with our annual Christmas present. Develop a reputation by intention. Decide what you want to be known for, and then work to consistently make that happen. One salesperson makes sure, for example, that he doesn't call on a customer unless he has something to share with that customer which he believes that customer will find valuable. As a result, he has no problem getting time with his customers. He's developed the reputation of always bringing something of value. If you want to be known as the most responsive salesperson, set up a system that allows you to respond to every phone call within an hour or two. If you want to be known as the fountain of product knowledge, make sure that you study every price list and piece of literature on every product you s
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