Short and Sweet
Speeding up your regular sales cycle is an excellent way to make your company's profits soar sky-high. So what are you waiting for?
Triumphing every day in sales is a game of inches. It's the
little stuff that can either bury you or catapult you past the
competition. One method for winning more sales is to shorten your
sales cycle. Consider some hypothetical math: It takes you three months to
close a $50,000 deal. If you can manage to whittle that window down
to a mere eight weeks, presto!—you've just padded your
P&L by $100,000 per year. Multiply that by your number of sales
reps, and you have quite the compelling reason to use any tactic
you can to shorten sales cycles. Here's how to do it: - Go for the warmed-up
clients, aka referrals
- . Referrals are beautiful things.
You've got built-in credibility because the referral trusts the
work you've done for other clients. Maura Schreier-Fleming, a
sales consultant and president of Best@Selling in
Dallas, is enthusiastic about referrals. "When an existing
customer says, 'Take the salesperson's call,'
you've really shortened the time it takes to sell," she
says. Schreier-Fleming encourages reps to meet their customers in
informal settings such as trade organizations or in a volunteer
capacity. This tactic will help abbreviate the sales cycle because
people are more likely to buy from, and recommend, known
vendors.
- Build a ladder from
one great client to the next
- . James Feldman, president and CEO of
James Feldman
Associates Inc., a performance improvement agency in Chicago,
first worked with Toyota 25 years ago. His experience with Toyota
impressed McDonald's, then Microsoft. "What you learn from
one account should be applicable to your search for new
accounts," explains Feldman. "Once you establish yourself
as an expert resource, you can leverage that
relationship."
- Put a microscope on
the little stuff.
- What's keeping your reps from
closing deals sooner? Some potential bottlenecks include problems
getting requested materials (samples, specs, pricing, etc.) to
prospects quickly and having contracts interred in your legal
department for six weeks. Delays frustrate reps and hold up that
almighty signature on the dotted line. Do everything you can to
provide reps with what they need to shave and save time.
"There may be delays in your support processes that slow down
sales," Schreier-Fleming explains. "Fix those delays, and
you'll speed up selling."
- Start with the
muckety-muck
- . Strive to sell at the
"C-level" (CEO, CFO, CTO) from the get-go, as lower-level
executives don't have the muscle to push deals through quickly.
"A general rule is that the lower down the organizational
hierarchy you're selling to, the longer it takes,"
Schreier-Fleming advises.
Feldman has worked with other client luminaries including Apple,
NBC, Walt Disney and Xerox. These are his rules to reduce the time
it takes to close deals: - Stop calling
prospects after the second call
- . If they haven't bought after two
calls, move on and look for a better prospect-one who is in the
market to buy from you today.
- If you spend more
than 90 days on any sales effort, you're wasting
time
- . There are specific times during
which companies buy for the year. If you're trying to sell to
them at the wrong time or after they've made the annual
purchase, then you are wasting precious time.
- Make sure the
company fits your corporate personality
- . Choosing the right company to work
with is an important step in speeding up the sales cycle. For
instance, the value you offer is frequently more clearly recognized
by small or midsize companies. At a smaller company, you're
often working with higher-level or midlevel executives, instead of
mid-level and lower-level managers at a large firm.
Content Continues Below
Kimberly L. Mccall (aka Marketing Angel) is president of
McCall Media & Marketing Inc. www.marketingangel.com) and author of Sell It,
Baby! Marketing Angel's 37 Down-to-Earth & Practical
How-To's on Marketing, Branding & Sales.
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