Tag Archives: sales

3 Numbers All Entrepreneurs Must Know

NOT THE CORNER OFFICE

In the early days of a startup, it can be tough to find good data to help with decision-making. Put a priority on these three numbers, and you’ll be fine.

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To make good decisions, you need good data. That’s a given, right? But in a start-up, what data should you be looking at?

In the early days of a startup, sometimes there isn’t much to measure. A comparison of this year’s sales compared to last year’s isn’t all that helpful if you’ve only been around for eight months. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t start collecting data right away.

So where can you find relevant information?  As an investor, I would offer three metrics that will give you some insight into your current operations and help you do some short-term forecasting. For most small companies, this will be a good step toward focusing attention on the information that will lead to informed decisions.

1. Pipeline coverage

The sales pipeline is a listing of all your sales prospects. Typically, you’d include the projected sales amount and estimate the probability of success for each account. You’d update the information regularly.

Sales pipeline coverage is a fraction. The total amount in your pipeline is the numerator, and the sales goal is the denominator. So sales pipeline coverage measures everything in the sales pipeline against the sales goal. As the business matures, you’ll get better at estimating closure rates, and you’ll be able to tie closure rates to milestones. If you’ve only had one meeting with a particular customer, you might assign that deal a 20% chance of closing. Once the customer has agreed to pricing, you might bump that up to 50%.

In practice, you want your pipeline coverage to be over 2.5x. That should virtually assure you make your target, as long as you’ve got a reasonably competent sales effort and have done a good job qualifying your customers.

2. Sales per employee

This metric is simple enough, and it’s good for businesses of all sizes. Just take the gross sales number and divide it by the number of employees. Since small businesses typically scale too fast ahead of their prospects – the optimism of entrepreneurs is both their blessing and their curse – sales per employee is a critical measure within growing companies. Warning: Once you start focusing on this number, you’ll quickly see the intrinsic appeal of hiring salespeople over other personnel.

3. Customer payback period

The very best metric for evaluating your business, customer acquisition cost, takes a while to assess. Ultimately, everything your business does will either make sense or not depending on how much it costs you to acquire a customer. If you can acquire customers cheaply or profitably, you will do well.

At first, customer acquisition cost is just a rough guess. But once you have that in hand, you can start thinking about the customer payback period. If the cost to acquire a customer is known, the logical question is how many months it will take to recover that cost.

The value of this metric lies in its ability to help you figure out how much money you need to grow and how profitable your company is likely to be. Put another way, how many customers can you afford to acquire with your existing capital or operating profits?  How much growth can you support? Growth is more capital-intensive than failure. The length of your customer payback period gives you a window into your growth potential.

The beauty of these three metrics is that they apply universally. CEOs can use them to better understand what’s working and what needs to be changed in order to meet short and long-term goals. For a company seeking outside funding, knowledge and management of these metrics is critical to allowing investors to understand your business and potential.

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What Motivates Your Customers?

No two customers are the same. To a small-business owner, that truism means paying close attention to what motivates people to buy. Customers approach buying with their own agenda, says George W. Dudley, chairman of the Behavioral Sciences Research Press, a Dallas, Texas-based research and development firm focused on sales productivity. For example, they could be shopping for specific product features, hoping to build a long-term relationship with the seller, or seeking a strong commitment to reliable service.

That means you should tailor your sales technique based on the primary reason your customer wants to buy. “We have our preferred selling style and it’s one we have built up with layers over time,” says Jeff Tanner, professor of sales and marketing at the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University. “I don’t always see entrepreneurs trying to understand the need from the buyer’s perspective.”

Here are six ways to close a sale by focusing on what motivates your potential customers to buy.

1. If the buyer is detail-oriented, then showcase the features of your product. Sometimes a customer just wants the facts and might be turned off if you ask lots of questions about his needs rather than give him information, Dudley says. These buyers will be well informed, having researched your offerings and those of your competitors. So pay attention to cues. If the customer’s office walls are covered with data charts or he asks for quantifiable results, chances are he’s most interested in the details of your product or service rather than the relationship he’ll have with you.

Related: How to Kick-Start Your Sales Skills

2. If the buyer doesn’t know what he needs, then be an advisor first. Some customers don’t know exactly what they’re looking for. That’s what Carrie Chitsey learned not long after she started 3seventy, an Austin Texas-based mobile customer-relationship management company in 2008. Initially, Chitsey concentrated on selling the technology her company offered, but eight months into running the business, she realized her customers often didn’t know what they needed. Such potential buyers require more guidance, particularly with technologies and other products they’re not well versed in, Dudley says. Now, instead of focusing on a particular product, Chitsey’s company advises customers and develops service platforms for them. “We were purely selling technology, and we changed it to more of a needs analysis,” Chitsey says.

3. If the buyer is fixated on the relationship, then make a personal connection early. Some customers care about more than the current sale. What matters most is the long-term connection you establish. That’s great for future business, but it means you’ll need strong interpersonal skills and plenty of time to get to know one another before closing the sale. “They will be looking for ways that you show you care,” Dudley says. To demonstrate your willingness to devote time to a customer, you need to meet face-to-face and get to know them beyond simply their business needs. What are their interests? What’s their work-life balance like? Be curious and attentive.

Related: How to Make a Personal Connection with Customers

4. If the buyer looks for prestige, then tout your A-list clients. Your reputation with other clients can make or break some deals. When Jeff Pedowitz, president and CEO of The Pedowitz Group, an Atlanta Ga.-based marketing agency, began offering his services to larger companies, he realized how important his standing with well-known, reputable clients would be in generating new business. Mentioning previous clients like Google and Intel could help him close deals. “If I’m talking to the CMO of Dell, he is going to want to know we’ve worked with other global technology companies,” Pedowitz says. “If we’ve only worked with mom-and-pops, my ability to get that account would be greatly diminished.” Testimonials and referrals from A-list clients are also valuable.

Related: Chris Brogan on Cultivating Visibility

Matrix Medical Billing Founder and CEO, Christian Burris
Photo courtesy of Matrix Marketing Team

5. If the buyer focuses on guarantees, then emphasize stellar service. For some clients, it’s all about the speed and quality of service. If potential customers ask about service or warranties upfront, chances are they’re very interested in what will happen after the sale. That’s when policies ensuring fast turnaround times become especially important. When Christian Burris founded Matrix Medical Billing in Mesa, Ariz., in 2007, he focused on the cost savings his service could provide. But six months later, he noticed customers often cared most about fast turnaround time. “As I continued to work with different clients, I found what was important was their ability to get a hold of us,” he says. As a result, Burris developed a policy that ensured customers would receive a response within two hours of making a request.

6. If the buyer gets antsy, then go for the close. Watch your customers’ signals to see if they want fast action. If you notice impatience when you ask questions, it may be time to cut to the chase. Closing a sale quickly is especially appealing to buyers of certain types of products and services. When dealing with financial services or insurance, for example, some customers may be interested in finishing the transaction quickly, Dudley says. Taking too long to complete the sale, he adds, might send the signal that you’re not confident and are wasting their time.

Related Video: Grant Cardone on Closing the Sale

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Stop Selling!

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Everywhere we turn these days, online and off, we’re being sold. It’s a din of sales messages.

For business owners, everywhere you look there’s another course or Webinar or blog you should read that aims to teach you how to sell better. But after watching a preview copy of this week’s upcoming Shark Tank episode, I wonder if entrepreneurs might do better to learn one overlooked skill: When to stop selling and close the deal.

On this Friday’s episode, one of the entrepreneurs blows a chance to have Shark Mark Cuban invest in his business. (You’ll have to tune in to see what type of business it is…I’m sworn to secrecy.) After hearing his pitch, Cuban offers the business owner $90,000 in return for a hefty equity stake in the enterprise.

Investors don’t get much more influential. But instead of jumping on the deal, the entrepreneur doesn’t respond. Instead, he goes back to selling the other Sharks, no doubt hoping to get another offer that doesn’t involve giving up so much ownership.

But there are no other takers. And I bet you can guess what happens with Cuban.

While most business owners aren’t playing this level of high-stakes poker, I see blown sales every day.

If your website doesn’t have an easy way for customers to contact you, you’re failing to close sales. They may love what they see, but frustration sets in when they can’t find your phone number and poof, they’re gone.

How often have you stood at a checkout counter practically waving your wallet in the air, but you can’t get the checker to notice you? Sometimes when that happens, people walk out. No sale.

I once had a salesman come to my home because I was considering using their bathtub-installation products. He said he had a 30-minute presentation to make. I told him I had 15 minutes, and I wanted him to get it done in that long. He couldn’t do it, and made me late for an appointment. No sale.

It pays to know when you’ve got a customer ready to buy, and to make the deal right then. Toss your proven system for selling and your 10-point feature plan you need to highlight, if you see that customer already gets it.

Sell a little longer, and you might end up with nothing. Let other prospects wait while you write up that contract, because this one is already in the bag.

Original post from entrepreneur.com

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12 Rules for Startups – with Mark Cuban

Anyone who has started a business has his or her own rules and guidelines, so I thought I would add to the memo with my own. My “rules” below aren’t just for those founding the companies, but for those who are considering going to work for them, as well.

1. Don’t start a company unless it’s an obsession and something you love.

2. If you have an exit strategy, it’s not an obsession.

3. Hire people who you think will love working there.

4. Sales Cure All. Know how your company will make money and how you will actually make sales.

5. Know your core competencies and focus on being great at them. Pay up for people in your core competencies. Get the best. Outside the core competencies,hire people that fit your culture but aren’t as expensive to pay.

Related: Mark Cuban on Why You Should Never Listen to Your Customers 

6. An espresso machine? Are you kidding me? Coffee is for closers. Sodas are free. Lunch is a chance to get out of the office and talk. There are 24 hours in a day, and if people like their jobs, they will find ways to use as much of it as possible to do their jobs.

7. No offices. Open offices keep everyone in tune with what is going on and keep the energy up. If an employee is about privacy, show him or her how to use the lock on the bathroom. There is nothing private in a startup. This is also a good way to keep from hiring executives who cannot operate successfully in a startup. My biggest fear was always hiring someone who wanted to build an empire. If the person demands to fly first class or to bring over a personal secretary, run away. If an exec won’t go on sales calls, run away. They are empire builders and will pollute your company.

8. As far as technology, go with what you know. That is always the most inexpensive way. If you know Apple, use it. If you know Vista, ask yourself why, then use it. It’s a startup so there are just a few employees. Let people use what they know.

Related: Three Steps for Getting Started in Mobile Commerce

9. Keep the organization flat. If you have managers reporting to managers in a startup, you will fail. Once you get beyond startup, if you have managers reporting to managers, you will create politics.

10. Never buy swag. A sure sign of failure for a startup is when someone sends me logo-embroidered polo shirts. If your people are at shows and in public, it’s okay to buy for your own employees, but if you really think people are going to wear your branded polo when they’re out and about, you are mistaken and have no idea how to spend your money.

11. Never hire a PR firm. A public relations firm will call or email people in the publications you already read, on the shows you already watch and at the websites you already surf. Those people publish their emails. Whenever you consume any information related to your field, get the email of the person publishing it and send them a message introducing yourself and the company. Their job is to find new stuff. They will welcome hearing from the founder instead of some PR flack. Once you establish communication with that person, make yourself available to answer their questions about the industry and be a source for them. If you are smart, they will use you.

Related: Is Any Publicity Good Publicity?

12. Make the job fun for employees. Keep a pulse on the stress levels and accomplishments of your people and reward them. My first company, MicroSolutions, when we had a record sales month, or someone did something special, I would walk around handing out $100 bills to salespeople. At Broadcast.com and MicroSolutions, we had a company shot. The Kamikaze. We would take people to a bar every now and then and buy one or ten for everyone. At MicroSolutions, more often than not we had vendors cover the tab. Vendors always love a good party.

This article is an edited excerpt from How to Win at the Sport of Business: If I Can Do It, You Can Do It (Diversion Books, 2011) by Mark Cuban.

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How to Deal with Sales Rejection

Some Will. Some Won't. So What!

Custom graphic by J2 Marketing

Fear of rejection is common among small business owners, especially those who are just learning how to sell themselves and their product or service. Consider these seven rules for coping with rejection in your business.

1. Know your sales ratio. Rejection is inevitable when you’re selling, but you may not get as discouraged if you know how much to expect. Trelitha Bryant, a vice president at Behavioral Sciences Research Press, a Dallas-based firm that focuses on how fear affects selling, calls it your “sales ratio” and estimates that on average it takes about 30 calls to get an appointment with a prospective client.

2. Set long-term goals. A personal goal also can help you reframe your thinking to cope better with sales rejections. Goals that go beyond your business objectives help “you stay focused and persevere through those challenges.”

3. Don’t take it personally. Many small business owners, especially solopreneurs, take rejection personally. They figure there’s no one to blame but themselves. “When you work for yourself, you have no excuses,” says Mike Taubleb, founder of Promenade Speakers Bureau, a lecture agency in Brooklyn. “It’s all up to you.”

4. Get into a routine. Developing a routine is another way to stay motivated. Making phone calls at the same time everyday can help overcome fear of rejection. Every morning at 9, spend half an hour calling prospective clients; then get back on the line at 10:30.

5. Build relationships. Don’t reject prospects after they reject you. “If you’ve been rejected, it doesn’t necessarily mean this person will never be your client. Keep the conversation going.”

6. Talk to other entrepreneurs. It’s easy to feel as if you’re the only small-business owner facing so much rejection. That’s why it’s critical to reach out to other entrepreneurs to know you’re not alone. “The more we get rejected, the more we tend to isolate and go into our hermit holes. That’s when you need to pick up the phone. When you reach out and talk to other entrepreneurs, it normalizes what you are going through.”

7. Acknowledge your accomplishments.  Make sure to keep track of daily achievements. Each night before bed, write down the top three or four things you did that day in your journal. It helps you sleep better. “I’ve almost never skipped a day. That helps me recognize progress.”

Summary of Seven Rules for Coping with Sales Rejection by Jane Porter

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HOW TO: Start Marketing on Facebook

It’s no secret: U.S. consumers continue to spend increasing amounts of time on Facebook. Consequently, marketers — lured by Facebook’s suite of highly targeted marketing products and the site’s smooth ability to spread information across networks of friends — are investing increasing amounts of capital in the platform.

Facebook‘s proposition is especially attractive to small business owners, and not just because it enables them to hone in on potential customers through highly targeted, paid advertisements. Facebook also allows them to grow their business in a way that is familiar to many of them — through word-of-mouth marketing.

“Ask [small business owners] how they get customers, and they’ll tell you that someone walks in, has a great experience, walks out and tells a couple of their friends,” says Emily White, senior director of local at Facebook. “Now, that word-of-mouth marketing model is happening online, and Facebook is enabling to happen that at scale. Now [small business owners] aren’t just reaching a few customers’ friends, but all of their friends, mimicking these long-term behaviors in a way that small businesses can actually control,” she explains.

With these ideas in mind, we’ve compiled this six-step guide for getting started on Facebook.


1. Set Up Your Facebook Page


Setting up a public Page for your small business is as simple as visiting facebook.com/pages/create.php, selecting a category that describes your business and filling out a few basic details, such as the name of your business and, if applicable, its address.

Facebook will then send you to a template of your Page, which you can spruce up with a profile photo, further details such as hours (see Info tab on left-hand sidebar). You can also identify additional Page administrations (see Info > Manage Admins), add more multimedia and events (Info > Apps) and adjust the settings to control how users can contribute to your Page (Info > Manage Permissions).

It’s also a good time to post your first status update welcoming fans to your Page. You can share your updates with everyone, or target by location or language — a great option if you run a business in multiple locations.


2. Invite Your Friends


After your Page is set up, you’ll want to invite your friends to “like” your Page. Once you’ve amassed 25 fans, you’ll be able to set up a vanity URL, e.g. facebook.com/mashable.

Go to the Username page, select the Page name from the dropdown menu and then write in the name you’d like to use. Keep in mind that you can’t change the URL for a Page once you confirm.


3. Customize Your Page


There a number of apps to help you customize your page beyond the standard layout, which can be found in the Applications Directory.

There, you’ll find apps that will let you create polls, add more content to your Info tab, offer coupons, showcase your YouTube videos and more.


4. Convert Your Existing Customers Into Likes


Once you’re feeling confident about the look of your Page, your next step, Buddy Media CEO Michael Lazerow suggests, is to leverage all of your owned media assets — your mailing list, e-mail newsletter and signature, store window, website, business cards, etc. — to grow your fan base. Let them know you’re there, and provide an immediate incentive for them to connect, such as a discount or giveaway.

“This will increase your conversions significantly,” Lazerow says. “Since your Page is a ghost town at this point, you need to give people an incentive to connect at the onset. The best way to do that is to give them a ‘thank you.’”


5. Engage


As you build up your fan base, you’ll want to provide a stream of interesting content that will entertain and engage your fans.

Anna Strahs, the owner of a gluten-free bakery in Richmond, VA, attributes half of her business to Facebook. She says she keeps fans coming back for more by posting pictures of the items she’s baked that day.

“When we post pictures of specific items, we immediately get orders for those items,” she says — and it’s no wonder, because they look delicious. Strahs says she will also post little quizzes in exchange for free baked goods, which winners can pick up at one of two farmers market locations two days each week.

Her advice? Post often and make the posts count. She emphasizes that beautiful images with contextual captions go a long way. “The whole point is to get people to comment and interact with your Page so it shows up in others’ newsfeeds,” she explains.

It’s also important to keep content fresh, update in an authentic voice and to evolve your Facebook strategy over time.

Remember to keep track of analytics on your Insights page to see what kinds of posts performance best in terms of engagement. And seek feedback directly from your fans. Are you posting too little or too often? What kinds of things would they like to see?

Content from Mashable.com

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Sales 101

Many companies have worked hard to develop exceptional products that could
meet real needs, and improve the lives of people. However, there is no such
truth as, “if we build it, they will come.” Marketing, and yes, SALES, are
necessary components of a successful business, no matter how great the
product or service appears to be. Sadly, too many companies with great
products do a less-than-great job of selling their product. Some companies
have “sales people,” who have exceptional product knowledge, but little
actual sales skill. They need to address the fundamentals of sales. Here’s
the list of questions the sales team must answer before a successful sales
campaign may be launched:
1. What is our target market?
2. What is the sales cycle – i.e., from initial contact to completed sale,
what are the steps, and how long should it take?
3. What prospecting disciplines must be taught to develop new customers?
4. What does effective sales activity look like?
5. What does a powerful sales presentation look like?
6. What kind of close is appropriate for our product or service? Is it a
single encounter, or a series of encounters?
7. What kind of follow up is required after the sale – customer relationship
management?
Perhaps the most important truth that must be embraced in order to
successfully sell a product line or service, is this: You are never actually
selling a product or a service! You are always selling an idea, a concept,
the solution to a problem. The customer never buys your product or service.
He only buys the solution to his problem, an improvement to his well-being.
Companies with successful sales teams, do not set out to sell their product.
They set out to solve other people’s problems, and in so doing, improve
their lives.

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