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	<title>Rare Journal &#187; Better Sales</title>
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		<title>The 7 Deadly Sins of Exhibitor Staff</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/the-7-deadly-sins-of-exhibitor-staff/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/the-7-deadly-sins-of-exhibitor-staff/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 2009 21:17:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[At a trade show, the exhibiting company expects to
 showcase its best &#8211; products, services and staff. But what
 happens when the exhibit was great, the products and
 services super &#8211; and the response was not up to
 expectations?
One very real reason is Management was haphazard in
 selection of its staff &#8211; the subtle and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At a trade show, the exhibiting company expects to<br />
 showcase its best &#8211; products, services and staff. But what<br />
 happens when the exhibit was great, the products and<br />
 services super &#8211; and the response was not up to<br />
 expectations?</p>
<p>One very real reason is Management was haphazard in<br />
 selection of its staff &#8211; the subtle and no-so-subtle behaviors<br />
 of its most visible representatives were offensive.</p>
<p>The staff members were flawed by one or more of the seven<br />
 deadly sins of exhibiting staff. Are you responsible for<br />
 selecting these people &#8211; or worse, are you one of those<br />
 selected?</p>
<p>PRIDE is excessive belief in your own abilities &#8211; also known<br />
 as vanity.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are the peacock, strutting around. You are<br />
 the know-it-all, the one who interrupts conversations, talks<br />
 over the demo and gives unsolicited opinions. You want<br />
 more than your share of the limelight. Whether you are an<br />
 expert or not, you believe yourself to be one &#8211; even when<br />
 your pronouncements are erroneous.</p>
<p>ENVY is your desire for others&#8217; traits, status, abilities, or<br />
 situation.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are the gossip-monger, the one who<br />
 makes snippy comments, drops pseudo-truths about<br />
 competitors and passes along company secrets. When you<br />
 think you can get away with it, you are the back-stabber, liar<br />
 and imitator. You think that by denigrating others, you raise<br />
 your own stake and others will choose you over your implied<br />
 competitors.</p>
<p>GLUTTONY is your inordinate desire to consume more than<br />
 you require.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are an addict, whether your choice is<br />
 alcohol, drugs, food or speed. You are obsessive about<br />
 fulfilling these needs, often sloughing off show duties, often<br />
 showing up with a hangover, glassy eyes or a thick tongue.<br />
 You believe in crashing parties, maximum use of expense<br />
 accounts and you often go off alone when official<br />
 entertaining has ended. You may need to be bailed out of<br />
 jail.</p>
<p>LUST is your inordinate craving for pleasures of the body.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You may think it stays in Vegas or on the road<br />
 or as a secret. It does not. Whether it is in person or online,<br />
 today your privacy can be compromised in so many ways.<br />
 Your computer and credit cards can be hacked or stolen.<br />
 You can be followed, mugged, blackmailed, get a disease<br />
 or snapped by a cell phone. Ultimately, you are selfish by<br />
 ignoring the well being of your family and your company&#8217;s<br />
 reputation.</p>
<p>ANGER is manifested when you opt for fury &#8211; also known as<br />
 wrath.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are quick to flare up, often for no reason.<br />
 You snipe at wait-staff when lunch is not perfect, stiff the<br />
 bellman, curse the union labor and revel in making a scene.<br />
 You feel justified to yell at anyone you consider beneath you,<br />
 including your own staff. You believe fear is an acceptable<br />
 trait and makes you a commanding presence. Instead, you<br />
 are an embarrassment.</p>
<p>GREED is your desire for material wealth or gain &#8211; also<br />
 called avarice or covetousness.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are hyper-competitive. You want the<br />
 money, the toys and king-of-the-hill feeling. You are not<br />
 above cutting side deals, suggesting bribes, stealing<br />
 clients, messing with leads, indulging in gossip or passing<br />
 along secrets when you think it gives you an advantage. You<br />
 are sneaky and at the low end of the ethics scale.</p>
<p>SLOTH is when you avoid physical work &#8211; also called being<br />
 lazy or procrastinating.</p>
<p>AT A SHOW &#8211; You are never around when work needs to be<br />
 done. You skipped the pre-show meeting. You lost the<br />
 e-mail, missed the client appointment, couldn&#8217;t find the right<br />
 room. You misplaced the leads or the packing slips,<br />
 ignored the show contracts and forgot to check in at the<br />
 office. Your excuses sound rational but after awhile, nobody<br />
 believes you. They will leave you alone and after awhile, you<br />
 will be alone on the street.</p>
<p>What does this mean? People expect good things to<br />
 happen. They remember more vividly those behaviors and<br />
 attitudes that make them uncomfortable.</p>
<p>At a trade show, the staff is the social and ethical<br />
 embodiment of a company. Individual flaws and faults may<br />
 be magnified because of the briefness of interaction. The<br />
 incidents will be remembered by the company name, not<br />
 the individual. And folks may ask &#8211; Why should I do<br />
 business with a company that hires a jerk like that?</p>
<div>
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<td valign="top">
<div class="sig">
<p>Julia O&#8217;Connor &#8211; Speaker, Author, Consultant &#8211; writes<br />
 about practical aspects of trade shows. As president of<br />
 Trade Show Training, inc,, founded in 1995,  she works with<br />
 companies in a variety of industries to improve their bottom<br />
 line and marketing opportunities at trade shows.</p>
<p>Julia is an expert in the psychology of the trade show<br />
 environment and uses this expertise in sales training<br />
 and management seminars. She is the author of The Trade<br />
 Show Reader and founder of Camp Sho-M-Sel-M, a series<br />
 of seminars about trade shows. The next Camp will be in<br />
 Las Vegas, August 22-23 &#8211; with a focus on Trade Shows<br />
 and the Unions.</p>
<p>Contact her at  804-355-7800 or check the site<br />
 <a href="http://www.TradeShowTraining.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.TradeShowTraining.com</a></p>
</div>
</td>
<td>
<div style="padding:0px; margin: 0px 0px 0px 10px; border-width: 1px 1px 1px 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: white; background-color: white;"><img height="90" width="64" src="http://ezinearticles.com/members/mem_pics/Julia-OConnor_8110.jpg" border="0" alt="Julia O\'Connor - EzineArticles Expert Author"></div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</div>
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		<title>Qualifying vs closing</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/qualifying-vs-closing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/qualifying-vs-closing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2009 00:27:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The art of effective question asking (qualifying) determines the effectiveness and the success of the &#8220;close&#8221;.EXAMPLE: Let&#8217;s assume you&#8217;re a candy sales rep.  You sell both chocolate and non-chocolate candy. I&#8217;m your potential customer.  You know nothing about me but you&#8217;re trying to sell me chocolate candy.  You proceed to tell me [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b><i>The art of effective question asking (qualifying) determines the effectiveness and the success of the &#8220;close&#8221;.</i></b><br />EXAMPLE: Let&#8217;s assume you&#8217;re a candy sales rep.  You sell both chocolate and non-chocolate candy. I&#8217;m your potential customer.  You know nothing about me but you&#8217;re trying to sell me chocolate candy.  You proceed to tell me how great the candy tastes, how exquisite the texture is, how incredible the quality of the chocolate is, and, by the way, how affordable this candy is because your company is doing a promotion on this outstanding chocolate candy.  However, you don&#8217;t sell me a single piece of chocolate candy.  WHY?<br />You assumed I liked chocolate candy and I would buy it based on the information you provided.  But the most important thing you forgot to identify or ask me is &#8220;do you like chocolate candy?&#8221;.<br />The answer is &#8220;no, I hate chocolate candy?&#8221;.  But since you never took the time to understand me as your potential new customer, you lost today&#8217;s sale and future sales a well.  <br />Better Approach:  I&#8217;m still the customer, you&#8217;re still the candy sales rep.  You&#8217;re still promoting chocolate candy.  The difference is &#8211; upon meeting me and establishing a rapport, your first question might be.</p>
<p>&#8220;Do you like chocolate candy?&#8221;.</p>
<p>My response &#8220;no, I never eat chocolate candy&#8221;.</p>
<p>Your response &#8220;you never eat chocolate candy, why?&#8221;.</p>
<p>My response &#8220;because I&#8217;m allergic to it&#8221;.  </p>
<p>QUESTION:  Do you believe it would make any difference to me, the customer, how the chocolate looks, tastes, is processed, or even how affordable it is?  Your answer should be &#8220;no&#8221;.  However, just because I don&#8217;t eat chocolate candy doesn&#8217;t mean I don&#8217;t know a number of other people who love chocolate candy.  Also, you sell hard candy not just chocolate candy, so maybe the next question would be:</p>
<p>&#8220;Do you eat any kind of candy?&#8221;.</p>
<p>My response &#8220;occasionally&#8221;.</p>
<p>Your response &#8220;when you say occasionally, how often is </p>
<p>that?&#8221;.</p>
<p>My response &#8220;2 to 3 times per month&#8221;.</p>
<p>Your response &#8220;when you do eat candy, what type of candy do you eat?&#8221;</p>
<p>My response &#8220;hard-type, mint candies&#8221;.</p>
<p>Your response &#8220;have you ever tasted our incredible hard, mint candies?&#8221;.GET THE PICTURE?  <i><u>&#8220;Its all about asking, not selling.&#8221;</i></u>  Once you have identified what&#8217;s important to me, the customer, you have positioned yourself to sell me what I want &#8211; not what you have.</p>
<div style="float: left; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; border-width: 1px 1px 1px 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: white; background-color: white"></div>
<p><b>Accomplished sales trainer, recruiter, manager, and consultant.  Currently co-owner of United Sales Training (<a href="http://www.unitedsalestraining.com)" rel="nofollow">http://www.unitedsalestraining.com)</a>, a company developed out of necessity to help individuals and companies understand the importance of effective selling and communication skills, through the introduction of personalized  selling tools focused around the &#8220;keep it simple&#8221; approach.    Follow our &#8220;tried and true&#8221; system and we&#8217;ll guarantee the results.</p>
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		<title>Clear Up Blurry Communication</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/clear-up-blurry-communication/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/clear-up-blurry-communication/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 2008 21:21:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.rarejournal.com/clear-up-blurry-communication/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the top brewing companies in America is a consulting client of mine. However, during a seminar for a brewery management team, we were jolted by a &#8220;communication wake-up call.&#8221; We discovered that even though co-workers speak the same words, they don&#8217;t attach the same meanings. Here&#8217;s what happened. I asked people to write [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the top brewing companies in America is a consulting client of mine. However, during a seminar for a brewery management team, we were jolted by a &#8220;communication wake-up call.&#8221; We discovered that even though co-workers speak the same words, they don&#8217;t attach the same meanings. Here&#8217;s what happened. I asked people to write a list of simple words, such as often, sometimes, never, and usually. Then I asked them to put a percentage value next to each. For example, if I say, &#8220;He is often late for meetings,&#8221; what does often mean? 10% of the time? 50%? 75%? Etc.</p>
<p>The range of answers was amazing. Often went from 5 to 97%. Sometimes was 20 to 80%. Even never was 0 to 100%, with a fourth of the people saying it was somewhere in-between! We were amazed because we assumed everyone in the room put about the same meaning on those simple, everyday words. After all, this was the management team and they worked closely together. I&#8217;ve lead this exercise with over 200 groups working in offices, factories, hospitals, education, sales situations, even government. Incredibly, the results are wide-ranging, even among well-educated people who communicate regularly with each other.</p>
<p>What does this mean to you? It&#8217;s helpful to keep this communication phenomenon in mind when you speak with customers, make presentations, compose e-mails, memos, reports, instructions, or ask for assistance. Make your communication clearer by using numbers in place of words, illustrating with specific examples, and asking clarifying questions. Define critical terms and spell out expectations. It&#8217;s smart to recognize that we may speak the same words but not say the same things.</p>
<div style="float: left; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; border-width: 1px 1px 1px 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: white; background-color: white"></div>
<p>Doug Smart is the coauthor of &#8220;Sell Smarter.&#8221; He is a sales consultant, professional speaker, and host of the daily motivational radio show, &#8220;Smarter by the Minute.&#8221; For more information, email Doug@GrowYourSales.org.<br />
Copyright 2005 by Doug Smart</p>
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		<title>10 Tips to Explode Your Sales</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/10-tips-to-explode-your-sales/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/10-tips-to-explode-your-sales/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 2008 12:59:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.rarejournal.com/10-tips-to-explode-your-sales/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Every one of us in the selling profession is constantly looking for some way to better their salesmanship. We&#8217;re always open to suggestions, probably more than other professions, because our sales determine our income.
Although these tips seem simple, they are a combination of values that, properly planned and properly applied, will give you an advantage [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every one of us in the selling profession is constantly looking for some way to better their salesmanship. We&#8217;re always open to suggestions, probably more than other professions, because our sales determine our income.</p>
<p>Although these tips seem simple, they are a combination of values that, properly planned and properly applied, will give you an advantage over your competition.</p>
<p>These are usually not taught to the new salesman and are often over-looked by a veteran salesman. Many people do them naturally, while others need to be reminded. Properly applied, they&#8217;ll make you more successful. Without action, they&#8217;re just words on paper&#8230;or your monitor.</p>
<p>If you want to stand out from the crowd, if you want to rise above the noise, if you want to be thought of as extraordinary, here are 10 simple tips that will take you to the top.</p>
<p>#1 &#8211; Do The Usual Things In An Unusual Way.</p>
<p>Any salesman can deliver a quote or sample. Make sure you do it differently than your competition. If they mail it, you need to have it delivered by a courier. When you lose an order, do it with &#8220;style and a smile &#8220;. When I lose one, I ask for the next one in advance.</p>
<p>My customers know by now I&#8217;m going to do this and sometimes have one waiting for me. It might be smaller than the one I wanted, but it&#8217;s sure better than nothing. And losing with class is one sure way to grow your stock in their eyes.</p>
<p>You don&#8217;t have or want to be extreme or offensive, just memorable, in a good way. The quality of being different is a sought after trait of successful salesmen and will pay enormous dividends.</p>
<p>#2 &#8211; Constantly Think About Ways To Help Your Customer.</p>
<p>A successful salesman never sells on intrinsic value alone. He adds a personal touch that is unique to him. He makes his product into a service, with his ideas being the extra feature that only comes from him and his company. Find new avenues for them to explore. Send them business. Talk them up at trade shows. Show them ways to make more money and spend less.</p>
<p>#3 &#8211; Keep In Constant Contact With The Customer.</p>
<p>Constant contact is essence of salesmanship. If the only time you contact your customer is when you ask for an order, you may as well not contact them. You won&#8217;t be welcome there for long. I call my customers with tips, leads, technical findings and suggestions on a regular basis and do so without asking for or referring to an order. Often, this leads to an order that I never saw coming. Don&#8217;t be a pest, be a member of their team.</p>
<p>#4 &#8211; Have An Uncommon Spirit Of Service.</p>
<p>Willingness to go above and beyond was instilled into me in the US Army. My years as a salesman have reinforced that ten-fold. Going to another town, 120 miles away, at night, on my time, to pick up a box of parts we left on a dock and delivering them to a jobsite a 2AM won me more orders than I could have ever gotten any other way. Whatever it is that you have to do, in your industry, to make your services more valuable than your competition, you need to do it.</p>
<p>#5 &#8211; Have Consideration For Coworkers.</p>
<p>You&#8217;re only as good as your team is. They&#8217;ll determine how far you go. The customer will only listen and forgive you so many times. Blaming it on your truck drivers, the shipping department, billing or manufacturing will only buy you a few buckets of forgiveness. After that, it&#8217;s all on you. Don&#8217;t make the mistake of thinking you can treat them poorly and get away with it. They have long memories and nothing is secret for long.</p>
<p>#6 &#8211; Treat Your Customers Employees With Respect.</p>
<p>Never treat your customer&#8217;s employees with less respect than you do them. You never know when they&#8217;ll have the ear of the person with purchasing power. Whether it&#8217;s a truck driver who comes to your dock, the receptionist, the accounts payable department, it doesn&#8217;t matter, they deserve your respect. I always imagine they know my grandmother and that they&#8217;ll tell her if I&#8217;m not as nice as I should be. In the past, I&#8217;ve gotten orders from having been nice to a customer&#8217;s truck driver, who broke down in our parking lot, as he pulled away from the dock. I let him use my cellphone to call his boss and his wife. I went to my house and got him some sandwiches and a drink and brought them back to him and then waited there for the tow truck to come get him.</p>
<p>#7 &#8211; Never Be Satisfied With Your Accomplishments.</p>
<p>No salesman who&#8217;s looking toward the future is ever satisfied with what he did today. He knows he&#8217;s one week of being a slacker away from being so far behind that he&#8217;ll never get back to the top. There are more people out there that you didn&#8217;t sell today than there are those that you did. I don&#8217;t even like for my boss to show me my sales numbers from month to month. I&#8217;m afraid it will cause me to ease off. Set realistic, attainable goals and if you reach them, reset them a tad higher and forget you already exceeded them.</p>
<p>#8 &#8211; Have a Large Capacity For Friendship.</p>
<p>The ability to make friends &#8211; and keep them &#8211; is one of the greatest assets a salesman can have. The majority of business sales come from friendships. Invariably, he with the most friends is the man with the most business. The greater your capacity for making friends, the greater your capacity for making money. The two are inseparable. If you think of your customers as your friends, you&#8217;ll never try to deceive them or treat them unfairly. Many who purchase will wait for their favorite salesman to visit, even when they&#8217;re offered a better deal from one of those who treat their customers coldly and say, &#8221; Hey, it&#8217;s just business &#8220;</p>
<p>#9 &#8211; You Need A Keen Understanding Of Human Nature.</p>
<p>If you set out to study human nature, you&#8217;ll never have to worry about having learned it all. The field is ever changing, but always stays the same. The more contacts you make, the more you&#8217;ll learn. The more you learn, the more you earn. As you begin to understand your customer&#8217;s inner workings, you&#8217;ll see avenues for injecting your ideas and wooing him over to your way of thinking. You cannot treat all your customers the same way. If you do, you&#8217;ll only attain a miniscule portion of your potential. Every person you meet has their own way, it&#8217;s up to you to find their buttons, and it&#8217;s not up to them to change their ways to help you.</p>
<p>#10 &#8211; You Must Be A Tireless Worker.</p>
<p>It goes without saying that most of the better than average salesmen are hard workers. Nothing worthwhile is easily attained and sales are no exception. Properly directed effort is more valuable than education will ever be. Properly educated and directed effort is the stuff that makes dreams come true. If you will work smart and hard, in sales, the sky is the limit. Action, effort, hard work &#8230;.whatever you call it, is what it takes to succeed. Educated and directed effort will never, ever let you down.</p>
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		<title>Hiring Tips for Business Owners</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/hiring-tips-for-business-owners/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/hiring-tips-for-business-owners/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Dec 2008 05:04:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I have encountered so many rude customer service people over the phone. Those rude and impatient people shouldn&#8217;t have been hired to be there in the first place. I learned over the years to only hire high quality people to run your company and business.
If you hire the wrong kind of people to do the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have encountered so many rude customer service people over the phone. Those rude and impatient people shouldn&#8217;t have been hired to be there in the first place. I learned over the years to only hire high quality people to run your company and business.</p>
<p>If you hire the wrong kind of people to do the wrong kind of job, that&#8217;s when your business and company will suffer the consequences sooner or later. If you hire the right kind of people to work for you, your company will flourish and your customers and clients will want to do more business with you in the future.</p>
<p>These are 5 qualities that you want the most from your employees:</p>
<p><B>#1 HIRE ONLY HAPPY &#038; POSITIVE PEOPLE!<B></p>
<p>Happy people creates happy atmosphere at your work place and they will treat your customers will friendly, happy and kind attitude. Happy people tend not complain too much! They are happy to do their job! Negative attitude is very infectious, it&#8217;s like virus, it will spread very fast! One person with negative and ungrateful attitude can make other people&#8217;s life miserable in your company. Make sure when they look happy, they are not on drugs or drunk.</p>
<p><B>#2 HIRE SMART &#038; GO-GETTER PEOPLE!</B><br />
 Smart &#038; go-getter people can find a way to solve problems even if they don&#8217;t even know the answer. If they are only smart, but they are not a go-getter, sometimes, when they get stuck with a problem, the smart people won&#8217;t even try to solve the problem, but if they are both smart and go-getter, they will try hard to find a solution for every problem you give them to solve.</p>
<p><B>#3 HIRE PEOPLE WHO CAN CONTROL THEIR MOUTH!</B></p>
<p>There are so many potty mouth people out there and it seems like swearing and cursing habit is becoming an acceptable behavior. Swearing and cursing habit is not an acceptable behavior! Can you imagine having your office or business being run by bunch of potty mouth people and they run around your office or business? Your customers will judge your business by the quality of your employees&#8217; vocabulary. It makes costumers and other employees feel uncomfortable to have someone who keep swearing and cursing in your office and business. What comes out of their mouth really tells you how smart they are and their level of their intelligent.</p>
<p><B>#4 HIRE PEOPLE WHO ARE MATURE!</B></p>
<p>If you hire kid mentality people or people who are not mature, they tend not to do their job unless you watch them while they are doing their job and tell them that you will punish them if they don&#8217;t do their job. It&#8217;s like telling a 3 year old child to clean up after his/her toys, &#8220;Mommy or daddy will spank you if you don&#8217;t clean up your toys.&#8221; If your case, you will tell them &#8220;I will fire you if you don&#8217;t do your job!&#8221;</p>
<p>People who are mature also know how to control their temper and volcanoes! You really don&#8217;t want to have bad temper people running around your business or office. You don&#8217;t even want impatient and bad temper people to deal with your customers either, they will scare your customers away!</p>
<p>People who are mature have the gift of discretion; they don&#8217;t go around gossiping and backstabbing other people by talking bad about other people in the office and business. They will create distrust in the people within your company and organization. They must know how to control their tongue!</p>
<p><B>#5 HIRE PEOPLE WITH GOOD LISTENING AND COMMUNICATION SKILL!</B></p>
<p>Have you ever been frustrated by someone because he/she is not doing the job you tell him/her to do? You tell this and they do totally the opposite of what you told them to do!<br />
 The worst part is, you tell them something today and three weeks later the job is not done and they will start making excuses on why the job is not done. It will drive you crazy!</p>
<p>I learn over the years that sometimes it&#8217;s best to have your employees write down the things you want them to do, so they know exactly what you want them to do on the paper, so there will be no more misunderstanding or miscommunication. It is all written down.</p>
<p>I personally make the habit of writing 6 things that I want to accomplish every day. I learn to prioritize the 6 things that I&#8217;d like to do daily. You can teach your people how to do this, write down 6 things that they want to work on that day on a piece of paper, go through the list and make sure the 6 things are done that day.</p>
<p>Make sure your employees understand what you want them to do! Never ever assume that your employees understand and exactly know what you want them to do, it is best to make them repeat the instructions you give them couple times and write them down!</p>
<p>People will good communication and listening skills will automatically write your instructions you give them down and they will listen to your instruction will with full attention! They will even ask you if they are not clear with the instruction. When they ask you, please don&#8217;t do the drill sergeants style management like &#8220;DIDN&#8217;T YOU GET IT THE FIRST TIME?&#8221; If you&#8217;re like a drill sergeant manager who loves to scare your employees by threatening and intimidating them, I can assure you that your business and company will go down the drain in no time.</p>
<p>Make sure the people you hire to do a specific job are qualified with the skills and the experience that is needed to do get the job done!</p>
<p>I hope these tips will help you to grow a better and bigger business. We wish you the best and remember what Dale Carnegie says &#8220;People have signs on their forehead that says treat me as I am important.&#8221;</p>
<div style="float: right; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; border-width: 1px 1px 1px 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: white; background-color: white"><img height="90" width="63" src="http://ezinearticles.com/members/mem_pics/Entjik-Jeffrie_7910.jpg" border="0" alt="Entjik Jeffrie - EzineArticles Expert Author"></div>
<p>&#169; Copyright 2005 , Author: Entjik Jeffrie, All Rights Reserved.</p>
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		<title>Forget the Eagle, Peacock, Owl or Dove &#8230; are you a Canary?</title>
		<link>http://www.rarejournal.com/forget-the-eagle-peacock-owl-or-dove-are-you-a-canary/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rarejournal.com/forget-the-eagle-peacock-owl-or-dove-are-you-a-canary/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2008 16:21:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Better Sales]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[You may be familiar with the Eagle, Peacock, Dove and Owl from the program that identifies your behavioral social style. This isn&#8217;t about any of those birds. It&#8217;s about being a Canary &#8211; or not! 
From the early 1900&#8217;s to the mid 1980&#8217;s, coal miners around the world used canaries deep in the mines to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You may be familiar with the Eagle, Peacock, Dove and Owl from the program that identifies your behavioral social style. This isn&#8217;t about any of those birds. It&#8217;s about being a Canary &#8211; or not! </p>
<p>From the early 1900&#8217;s to the mid 1980&#8217;s, coal miners around the world used canaries deep in the mines to alert them to dangerous levels of carbon monoxide gas. If the birds stopped singing, it was time to get out of the mine &#8230; fast. </p>
<p>After many years of dedicated service, these incredibly effective canaries became obsolete. Technology replaced the singing saviours. Could the canary have done anything differently to keep its job? The short answer is no. </p>
<p>What about you? As a sales professional is there a chance you could become a canary and be replaced? It is still a stretch to suggest technology will replace the face-to-face selling environment. That said reflect on how far e-commerce has advanced in the past five years! What will the next five years bring?</p>
<p>I am a strong believer there will always be a place for proficient, well-qualified sales people. Any vibrant economy needs to have face-to-face selling for a variety of reasons, be they cultural preferences, complexity of information, or simply the consumer&#8217;s desire for a relationship based experience. I emphasised proficient and well qualified for a reason. As I speak with many sales reps today, I find it alarming that many do little to maintain, upgrade and advance their selling skills. Don&#8217;t go the way of the dodo bird &#8211; yes, there really was a dodo bird that became extinct but that&#8217;s a different story. </p>
<p>As a professional in any career stream, one needs to stay current with new advances in their field, be they process related, technical in nature or staying abreast of the competition. </p>
<p>Would you want to deal with a physician who obtained their medical degree twenty years ago and has not kept current with medical advancements? I think not. </p>
<p>I run in to some sales reps that say &#8220;been there, done that, took the course, got the t-shirt.&#8221; They feel they have done all they need to. Often these same people wonder why they haven&#8217;t reached their full potential or are slipping gradually down the leader board. </p>
<p>I have worked with realtors who have been in the business 10, 15, 20 years and can&#8217;t understand why they are not as successful as when they first got in the business. Some say competition has increased, demographic changes make negotiating commissions more difficult, what ever. When I ask they what they have done in recent years to hone their skills I often get a blank look. When I ask them what they did to be successful when they entered the business, they talk about the marketing, the networking, the door knocking, and following a specific sales routine. When asked if they still do all of this, they admit they no longer do all these activities. Hmmm.</p>
<p>If you consider yourself a sales professional, you have an obligation to invest in yourself. There are many excellent offerings in the market place to keep you on top of your game. If you don&#8217;t want to go out and spend the bucks, take that program you went through five years ago and read it again. I&#8217;m positive you&#8217;ll be reminded of some golden nuggets you had forgotten. Grab a partner and practice some of the exercises you did years before, you&#8217;ll probably have fun at the same time. </p>
<p>It is no secret that professional athletes between games still go to events called practices. No mater how proficient one thinks they are there is still the old adage &#8220;practice makes perfect.&#8221; They employ coaches to instruct on technical and psychological elements of the game. Who is your coach? Is it your sales manager, if so when was the last time you got together for a meaningful coaching session. Maybe you need to be direct and specific in which area your sales game needs help. I was always delighted when someone asked for help. It told me they wanted to do better. Fact is we had something in common, as their coach, I wanted them to do better as well. </p>
<p>In summary, stay current. Do it yourself, or work with others to stay on top of your game. </p>
<p>The canary could do little to ensure its continued utilization deep in the mines. You as a professional sales person can and should do what&#8217;s necessary to avoid becoming redundant.</p>
<p class="articletext">
<p class="articletext">
Clayton Shold shares his experience at SalesDialogue Systems Inc. a company committed to assisting sales professionals better understand how their internal conversations affects sales success. Learn more at <a href="http://www.salesdialogue.com" rel="nofollow">www.salesdialogue.com</a> </p>
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