• Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Women on Business

Business Women Expertise, Tips, Advice and More to Build Winning Careers and Brands

You are here: Home / Female Entrepreneurs / The Gospel of Sales

The Gospel of Sales

July 27, 2012 By Leona Charles

As an entrepreneur I know that sales are the lifeblood of my business, so when I am approached with a sales pitch I tend to take an analytical view. Recently I was searching for a vendor to complete my website overhaul and some of the pitches that I received…well they were interesting. In reviewing the pitches, I learned five most important points if you are not a marketing professional.

Always introduce yourself

This seems like common sense, but I received an e-mail that asked “Do you want any help with your website?”  I had no clue who this person was, he didn’t include the name of his company and he didn’t give me any background on his skill or area of expertise.

Never slam a potential customer’s current product/service

This kind of thing happens all of the time and if you are doing it, stop it. When you are trying to sell to a business, they don’t want to hear how stupid they were for purchasing a service/product that doesn’t work. Believe me they already know. What works better is beginning a conversation and illustrating how your product can increase the effectiveness of the one they already use or how it can help fill the gaps. If your product/service is better, trust me they will notice.

Don’t use your years to validate a purchase

When I replied and told this guy that a vendor had been selected he e-mailed me back saying, “I’ve been doing this for 12 years and I know that your site is not going to generate traffic or leads”.   Let me tell you, in professional services you need to generate traffic yes but the bulk of your work is coming from referrals. That statement from his let me know that he had no idea what I do or how I sell. If you are good at what you do, I don’t need you to tell me you’ve been doing it for 12 years to qualify that skill. The quality of your work will tell me all I need to know.

Email plus contact

E-mail is great tool and helps you out when you need an answer quickly, but it should not be the only means of contact to a prospect. This e-mail felt like spam and truthfully, I may have at least heard his pitch if he had followed up the e-mail with a phone call. The bottom line is that people buy from people, not e-mail.

Lose gracefully

The most important thing that I have learned is lose gracefully. I may not be able to use your service, but maybe someone in my network can and if I leave the conversation with a bad taste in my mouth I won’t refer you. In business you want relationships not just sales, so not getting the quick sale should not bring out the brat in you.

B2B sales are the hardest thing to do because you are not just selling to one person; you’re selling to an organization. You have to do your homework and find out what they are selling and buying and tailor your pitch accordingly.

Leona Charles

Leona Charles began SPC Business Consulting Ltd in 2007 to help businesses of all sizes get the most out of their performance. As a Six Sigma Black Belt, she brings a fresh and unique approach to Operations Consulting drawing on her 10 years of combined experience in law enforcement, government contracting, property management, customer service, non profit industry, and education.

More Posts - Website

Filed Under: Female Entrepreneurs, Marketing, Sales Tagged With: customer contact, Leadership, Sales, Women Business Owners, women businessowners, women in management, women in sales, women marketers, Women small business owners

Comments

  1. Michael Gallo says

    July 27, 2012 at 9:10 pm

    Very good points. I also appreciate vendors who take the time to educate me without the hype.

  2. Leona Charles says

    July 28, 2012 at 1:22 pm

    Thanks Mike!

Sponsors

Recommended Reading

ultimate guide to email marketing

Awards & Recognition

Categories

  • Board of Directors
  • Books for Businesswomen
  • Business Development
  • Business Executive Team
  • Business Travel
  • Businesswomen Bloggers
  • Businesswomen Interviews
  • Businesswomen Profiles
  • Career Development
  • Communications
  • Contests
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Customer Service
  • Decision-making
  • Discounts & Offers
  • Education
  • Equality
  • Ethics
  • Female Entrepreneurs
  • Female Executives
  • Female Executives
  • Finance
  • Franchising
  • Freelancing & the Gig Economy
  • Global Perspectives
  • Health & Wellness
  • Human Resources Issues
  • Infographics
  • International Business
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Job Search
  • Leadership
  • Legal and Compliance Issues
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Networking
  • News and Insights
  • Non-profit
  • Online Business
  • Operations
  • Personal Development
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Productivity
  • Project Management
  • Public Relations
  • Reader Submission
  • Recognition
  • Resources & Publications
  • Retirement and Savings
  • Reviews
  • Sales
  • Slideshow
  • Small Business
  • Social Media
  • Startups
  • Statistics, Facts & Research
  • Strategy
  • Success Stories
  • Team-Building
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Women Business Owners
  • Women On Business
  • Women On Business News
  • Women On Business Offers
  • Women On Business Partners
  • Women On Business Roundtable
  • Women on Business School
  • Work at Home/Telecommute
  • Work-Home Life
  • Workplace Issues

Authors

Quick Links

Home | About | Advertise | Write for Us | Contact

Search This Site

Follow Women on Business

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2024 Women on Business · Privacy Policy · Comment Policy