Featured Sales Blogs
Featured Sales Blogs
MAIN MENU
Dicover the Hidden Path to Sales Success
Written By : Dave Kahle,
Total Views :648
As sales people, we almost exclusively focus on those things that exist outside of ourselves – the prospects, the customers, the politics, the products, the price, etc. We focus on the externals. And as long as we do that, we will be forever stymied in our desire to become exceptional performers.
Mastering Sales Success
In my twenty plus years of educating sales people, I have encountered tens of thousands of sales people. The vast majority of them want to do better. They want the benefits of greater success:
Increased income, greater respect from their peers and managers, and increased self-confidence.
Yet, the vast majority of them remain at a level best described as “ordinary.” They never make the transition to being a true master of their craft. In spite of their desire to excel, few do.
The reason, for the overwhelming majority of sales people, is that they take the wrong path to sales success. Only a few discover the hidden path to sales success.
Sales Training Session
Let me illustrate. I have had these kinds of conversations in almost every training session that I have done:
A sales person is concerned about an issue in one of his accounts. It could be that he can’t unseat the competition, or that he’s at risk of losing the business, or that he can’t gain an audience with the right people, or that he’s constantly asked to reduce his price, etc. The list is without limit. There are as many variations on the theme as there are sales people.
But, while the specifics vary, they almost always revolve around the same themes.
There is a problem in an account. Someone won’t do what the sales person wants them to do. The question, in one form or another, is always, “How do I get them to do what I want them to do?” The focus is always on the account, the other people, the things outside of the sales person that he/she wants to influence.
I don’t think I have ever had a sales person ask me in these encounters, “How can I change myself in such a way as to impact this situation?” And therein lies the problem.
As sales people, we almost exclusively focus on those things that exist outside of ourselves – the prospects, the customers, the politics, the products, the price, etc. We focus on the externals. And as long as we do that, we will be forever stymied in our desire to become exceptional performers.
We will never reach our potential until we begin to focus inside – on changing and improving ourselves. The hidden path to sales success is the “path less traveled,” the path that traverses the bumpy geography of self-growth and self-improvement – the inward path.
When we focus on self-growth and self-improvement, those changes that we make in ourselves naturally ooze out of us and impact the people and the world around us. To improve your results, improve yourself.
Here’s an example. A sales person recently shared this scenario. He has been trying to penetrate an account in which he had some business, but was a minor player. One or two other competitors dominated the account. He had difficulty even getting an opportunity to present his solutions. He saw his problem as external – the politics, processes and personalities in this account.
I talked with him about his ability to nurture professional business relationships, to uncover hidden concerns and obstacles via effective questioning, to empathize with the key decision makers. In other words, my conversation was about his competencies (internal) instead of the account’s specifics (externals). If he could improve himself to the point where he was more competent at these sales fundamentals, he would be more effective in that account, and the problems he expressed would gradually decrease.
He saw the problem as existing outside of himself (external). I saw the solution coming as a result of improving himself (internal).
Problem and Solution
As I reflect on the thousands of these kinds of conversations that I have had with sales people and sales leaders, I have concluded that the conversations almost always follow that pattern. They present an external problem, and I reply with an internal solution.
The obvious question pops to the surface. Kahle, is it you? Am I so far outside of the mainstream of reality that I am misleading the people I’m supposed to be helping?
Honestly, I don’t think so. The concept of reaching your fullest potential, of making your greatest mark on this world, by focusing internally instead of externally is a position that all of the world’s greatest thinkers, from King Solomon thousands of years ago, to Mahatma Gandhi in more modern times, have espoused. That concept lies at the heart of the world’s greatest religions, a key part of the world view of Jesus Christ and Buddha.
I’ll often share this quote from James Allen in my seminars:
“Men are often interested in improving their circumstance, but are unwilling to improve themselves, they therefore remain bound.”
Clearly, unequivocally, the path to achievement and fulfillment is an internal, not an external one.
What is true for our lives is true for our professions, and is true for our jobs as sales people.
Yet so few sales people understand that. I’ve often shared this observation:
In any randomly selected group of twenty sales people, only one has spent $25 of his own money on his own improvement in the last 12 months. Not coincidently, the same ratio is used to define the superstars of the profession. Five percent (one of twenty) of the sales force produce approximately 50% of the sales.
In a world of externally-focused colleagues and competitors, it is the one in twenty sales person who chooses the hidden path to excellence. These are the people who understand this principal, and who consistently and willfully act on it. They are the ones who buy the books, go to the seminars, listen to the audios, and watch the videos – all in a relentless quest to improve themselves, understanding that the only lasting path to excellence is the hidden path of internally focused self improvement. And these are the people who inevitably rise to the top of the profession.
Leading Industries Invest in Salespeople
The same can be said of organizations. Very few sales organizations understand that. They expect their sales people to learn on the job, and look at investing in their development and improvement as a discretionary cost, rather than a fundamental strategic initiative.
Study the leading companies in any industry and you’ll find that those who lead the industry are always those who most consistently invest in developing the skills and competencies of their people.
Let the rest of the world charge into the world intent on wreaking their will on people and circumstances, oblivious to the real path to success. The savvy professionals – both companies as well as individuals – focus on changing themselves. It’s the hidden path to sales success.
Long-term sales success for any organization is driven by individual and team performance.
Navigating the Sales Trail 105 | Instant Download Ready to Go Training Kit
Articles by this Author:
- Solutions for the Most Common Mistakes of Sales Professionals
- Four Fundamentals for Effectively Penetrating Key Accounts
- How Often Should Sales Managers Visit Customers?
- Creating Positive B2B Relationships in a Difficult Economy
- How to Methodically Invest in Your Professional Development
- The Rare Building Blocks of Exceptional Salespeople
- How to Respond to a Rude Customer
- How to Entice Prospects to Call Back
- Maintain Positive Relationships with Alternative Steps for Closing the Sale
- The Components of a Well Planned Sales Call
- Morality Coincides with Wise Business
- Listening Skills that Provide the Competitive Edge for Successful Selling
- Conquer These Time-Wasted Habits and Start Selling!
- Selling Commodities: Are You Different from the Competitors?
- A System to Nurture Your Prospects and Create Success Stories
- Personal Goals vs Company Goals: What do you do when they don't match?
- Do You Focus on the Highest Potential Customer?
- The 3 Most Commonly Made Sales Presentation Mistakes
- When Is The Right Time for Sales Training?
- The Top Five Practices of Super Star Sales People: Can WE Learn From THEM?
- What's The Most Important Skill To Be Successful In This New Economy?
- Avoid The Popcorn Effect And Create A Powerful Sales Marketing System
- What Is A Professional Sales Person?
- You Do Need A Game Plan for Success! Develop A Selling System
- Lackluster Sales: The Reason Behind Mediocrity
- If You Are Going to Present Effectively, You Must Prepare Thoroughly
- Are You Wasting Your Customers' Time? Add Value to Every Sales Call
- What is the Ultimate Indicator of Sales Success
- Finessing the Customer: Handling Objections
- Gaining an Advantage by Collecting Information about your Competitors
- Shaping the Salesperson's Character
- Popcorn Marketing
- Is Telemarketing Feasible For My Business?
- The Ultimate Survival Skill
- Can CSR's Become Proactive?
- Don't Fire All the Salespeople Just Yet!
- Myths of Sales Management
- What is a Professional Sales Manager?
- The Three Most Common Mistakes Sales Managers Make
- The Sales Blitz!
- FIP Principle
- Are There Best Practices for Salespeople?
- Why Good Salespeople Often Turn into Mediocre Sales Managers
- Is An Uneducated Sales Force Draining Your Profits?
- Just Listen!
- 5 Closing Questions You Must Be Asking
- Seven Voice Mail Scripts You Must Have!
- How to Submit an Article on Sales Gravy
- What Not To Do On a Cold Call eMail
- Don't Bring a Knife to a Gun Fight
- Confirming Sales Appointments: Are You Asking For The Cancellation?
- 8 Essential Tips on How to Make A Perfect Follow Up Call
- 5 Secrets to Effective Email
- I Just Called to See How Things are Going
- Attack Yourself
- The 5 Best Openings
- Use the News: How to Create New Opportunities Fast
- 5 Ways To Keep Your Prospect Talking
- List of Blockbuster Movies for TEAM Building
- Forget Closing The Deal | Get The Appointment!
New Members
Hot Sales Jobs
Job Title
Location
Vp Of Marketing Co
Charleston
Software Sales Exe
Woburn
Director, Large Sy
Mooresvill
Furniture Product
Kearney
Product Manager
Poway
Outside Sales Repr
Baytown
Outside Sales Repr
Irvine
Outside Sales Repr
Portervill








