Attention High Achievers – Part 2

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In the second of a two-part series on some tips for high achievers, Bill Caskey takes a look at why you should start building your online platform and how it all ties down into your personal branding. He talks about digitizing your connections and making digital content for people to sample you, get their trust, and ultimately do business with you. Finally, he dives deep into accountability and emphasizes why it’s needed.

Listen to the podcast here:

Attention High Achievers – Part 2

We are on a journey here to part two of our two-part series on how to be a higher achiever. That’s not the title of it, I don’t have a title of it, but I do know this. I get a lot of email and sometimes even calls from people who are high achievers, already good at what you do, but you want to do more. You want to be better, but you don’t want to burn yourself out doing it. Grinding is not the way to go from $200,000 a year to $900,000 a year. There are not enough grinding hours in the day to do that. We’ve been taking a look, if you have not read to last episode, read this one and then go back and read to that one. They’re not necessarily sequential, but I’ve got seven tips here. We talked about some of the traps that a high achiever faces in last episode. I’m not going to go over those again, but I will quickly recap the first four of my seven tips.

Number one is get clear on vision. Where are you going? What do you want life to look like? Not that it’s bad now, what do you want it to look like in your ideal future? Number two, what’s your required mentality in order to get to those things? If we don’t change the mind, we can’t change the market. Change your mind first and figure out what those things are. Number three is limiting beliefs. Where are you limiting yourself? You might even call this limiting self-beliefs because these are beliefs about you. This has nothing to do with the outside world.

This is only what you believe about you, about your future, about your potential, about your role on the planet, about your purpose, which brings me to number four, purpose. Why do you do this? What’s behind it all? Not just why are you here traipsing around the earth, that might be part of your purpose, but why do you do what you do in your business? Is there a real purpose or is it to make money? Hopefully, it’s more than that. I think most high achievers have a purpose beyond money. Money can be a by-product and a submission, but I don’t think it can be your sole purpose.

Those are the four things that we talked about last episode. I also mentioned that I am considering putting together based on the feedback that I got from the last session and over the last few months, putting together a high achievers small group coaching session series. These would be for people who are in the $200,000-ish range and want to grow more. If you’ll go to BillCaskey.com, at the very top, there’s a thin banner. You’ve got to have to look for it. Get on my wait list. There’s no commitment there. I’m not going to be charging your credit card or anything, but I want to know who’s interested and who’s not. If you’re interested in something like that, get on the wait list. As I start to craft this thing, I will let you know and keep you updated. Let’s get back and talk about 5, 6 and 7.

BCP 7 | High Achievers

High Achievers: If you’re a high achiever that wants to get to the next level, you’ve got to digitize your connection points.

 

Number five, the high achiever needs to think digitally by building his or her platform. I dumped this into the same area as personal branding, but a lot of the way you got from where you were several years ago to where you are now, was from grinding. It was from physically showing up at networking events, making calls, doing deals and getting referrals. I think all those things still work although I know with COVID the networking thing probably hasn’t so well, but it could be online. I’m interested in you building your brand online, building a platform. A platform could be LinkedIn. I’m not just talking about getting on LinkedIn and linking to a whole bunch of people until you have 5,000 connections. What are you going to do with that?

I’m talking about creating digital content online so people can sample you. People can say, “I’ve been watching Phil’s videos. It’s time for me to buy a building in downtown Chicago. I like Phil’s videos. I’m going to call him and see if maybe he’ll work with me.” The idea here is that high achievers want to get to the next level. They’ve got to digitize their connection points. Building your platform and your brand is all part of that. I’m not necessarily talking about blogging or vlogging. I’m saying, “If you’re not consistently producing content, and I like video and I like audio, written is fine, that’s helpful to your market.” That’s critical. It can’t just be all about you, how great you are, how great your company is. We know because we’ve asked you. You say it’s great. This content needs to be, “How am I going to help my customer? How am I going to help them walk through the processes?”

Number six, as we talked about with vision, you’ve got to have a clear understanding of where you’re going. Number six is building the plan. I call it the plan suite. The plan suite are 3 or 4 different plans. There’s the longer term 3 to 5, if some of you want to go ten, you can. I know some people have 25-year goals. I feel like that’s a little too far out there especially for a guy my age, but 3 to 5 is a good starting point. Let’s say, “What do I want to be, do, have, earn? What is my lifestyle? What do I want it to look like in five years?” That’s a good space. That’s the end goal, 3 to 5 years.

We’ve got the one-year plan. We’re shortening it up and saying, “The next year, what do I want to accomplish? What skills do I need to have? What are my mindsets? What are some of my limiting beliefs I need to break through? How am I going to build my platform?” Virtually anything that we talk about in these seven could appear on a one-year plan. I have all of my small group coaching clients, if we do this high achiever program, we’ll do it there, create a one-year plan. You would be shocked about how many people come to me six months into the year and say, “I’m done for the year. Everything that I had on my plane has come true.”

It’s not any kind of magic. It’s when you write something down and you refer to it often and as you’re building your monthly plan, you’re referencing those one-year milestones, goal-setting and goal-achievement is not that difficult. When we don’t write it down and we don’t have a plan and we don’t have an action-oriented way to implement those things, then it becomes a difficult. The third element of the plan, we’ve got the five-year, we’ve got the one-year, we got some a 30 or 90 day. Some people like the 90-day thing. I’m more of a 30-day guy. That would be the next one. You’re using your one-year plan to reference when you’re planning your 30-day plan.

If we don't change the mind, we can't change the market. Share on X

If your one-year plan is, “I need to improve my video skills,” and it’s August and you haven’t done it yet, then get to work. That should be part of your monthly plan is, “I want to reach out to someone and have them coach me on video skills.” The other plan is probably the short-term, one day, one week. I like the weekly plan, but at some point, you need to know what you’re going to be doing every day. I like to do that Friday for the next week. That’s up to you. Those are the four plans in the plan suite. Number seven, the last one and I can’t overestimate the importance of this and that is an accountability factor. I call it a factor because it doesn’t have to necessarily be a group, it doesn’t necessarily have to be a person, but you’ve got to find some way to be accountable to someone outside of yourself for the behaviors required to get to your level of success that you want to.

I don’t like it to be a spouse or a family member. Preferably I like to have a coach, someone from the outside who doesn’t base on whether I win or lose. There’s too much garbage and drama that goes along with that. That’s why I don’t like spouses to be your accountability partner because they’re in the game with you. A coach has to be sitting on the sidelines, looking at the game. That’s why I like coach and small groups. We have a group called The 2X Group, which is a sales B2B sales group. That is exactly that. We hold each other accountable in a nice, gentle way. We don’t spend a ton of time each session on it, but we do spend a little bit of time.

When I commit to another human being and look them in the eye and say, “By the time we meet next, I will have this lead generation program written.” I have an extra added level of incentive and commitment to do it. How many times have you written the paper the day before it’s due when you were in school? It’s accountability. It’s due. I put it off until the last minute and that’s not good, but at least I got it in. It’s the same thing with any accountability group, factor or coach. Have somebody around you who holds you accountable. They don’t babysit you. They don’t call you at 6:00 AM to make sure you’ve rolled out of bed or lifting weights already. They don’t make sure you’re not eating donuts all day. That’s not what an accountability partner does. Accountability partner meets you on a frequent basis, weekly, biweekly and you check in with each other.

Those are my seven things. If you liked these and if you feel like, “I’m doing well, but there’s another gear, but I don’t want to work harder. That’s clear. I don’t want to go from 50 hours a week to 90 hours a week to make an extra $200,000.” You should not. If you might be interested in what I’m putting together, I’m working out some of the details now. I don’t know exactly what it looks like or what costs, but I’m looking for 10 to 15 people who might want to join me on this journey of high achievers.

We’ll talk more about the money later. If you’re interested, go to BillCaskey.com. On the top upper part there’s a little thin banner there. Click on that, it’ll take you to a page. We’ll also be sending you out something too. I’m working on this document called The Required Mindsets of the High Achiever. It’s not done yet. It will probably be another couple of weeks, but I will send that to anybody who puts their name on the waitlist as a gift. I enjoyed having you. I’m glad that you read every week.

Attention High Achievers – Part 1

BCP 6 | High Achievers

 

High achievers usually have a slightly different view of what’s possible in the world. In this episode, Bill Caskey talks about the constant need of high achievers to re-envision themselves as they grow and operate on a different plane. Learn the traps that most high achievers fall into that you may be trapped in as well and the things high achievers need access to. Tune in and learn why you may need to rethink your own goals and possibilities.

Listen to the podcast here:

Attention High Achievers – Part 1

We are going to speak about high-achievers. Those are the people who you might be one and you might not be one. There’s no shame if you aren’t, but this is going to be speaking to those people who are in the $200,000-ish range and above, either an entrepreneur, a business owner, a VP of sales or a sales professional, and primarily someone who has upside potential in that income. We’re speaking to the elitist achievers. If you’re not in that income range, that’s cool. You can still read. I will never ever know, but the topic deals with that group. I might even make this a 2 or 3-part series because I have so much to get to.

Here’s where this topic came from. I have quite a few people in one of my small group coaching programs. We call it The 2X Group, who is in that income range. They’re at higher levels of income. What I have found is that those people have a slightly different view of what’s possible in the world. They have accumulated some assets, have some money to invest in themselves and their business. I was watching a guy named Benjamin Hardy, who’s written several books on Psychology and personality. He said that we have to keep re-envisioning ourselves every few years because we learn things, have experience, get wisdom, and get financial wherewithal. If we say, “I set my vision ten years ago and we haven’t changed it, then the person we are now is capable of so much more or so much different.” By more, I’m not talking about working harder either. I’m talking about reaping the rewards from that knowledge and wisdom.

BCP 6 | High Achievers

High Achievers: You have to keep re-envisioning yourself every few years because you learn things, have experience, get wisdom, and get financial wherewithal.

 

I have found that the highest achievers in the top 2% or 3% range of income earners have different needs of different things they want to work on. If you look at Maslow’s Hierarchy, they’re not looking at shelter as a big foundational need for them. They’ve got that checked off. They’re not looking for belonging. They have that checked off. They’ve got good families, got good works situations, got good clients that they are also friends with. As we get higher in Maslow’s Hierarchy, self-actualization, self-esteem, what’s possible and visioning, all those things they do need help with. That’s the purpose of this episode. It’s to introduce you to some of these things.

You are saying, “Where is this going? I feel like this is going somewhere.” It might be, I don’t know. I am giving some thought to spinning up a group of 8 to 10 high-achievers. I don’t know yet if there’s interest. There might be but I don’t know. Here’s what I would ask you to do. Read this blog in my website, BillCaskey.com. At the top of that, there was an orange bar, click on that, and there will be a waitlist for you. If it opens up how much it is, when it is, how it is, what’s going to be covered, but get on the waitlist. I’ll send you a couple of valuable emails to some other things follow-up to this. You have to earn $200,000-ish a year to get into this program.

If you’re a $30,000 person, it’s not for you. There are several traps that high-achievers fall into. I don’t think this is just high-achievers, but it’s everyone. There’s the ambition trap where it’s never enough. I’ve got an appetite for more. I’ve got to work harder. I’m doing well, but there’s much more I could be doing. That’s that trap. At some point, you lose sight of what’s important because you’re always striving for the next hill to go take. Two is the imposter trap. It is the feeling of fraud. It’s those deep inadequacies. I have a little bit of this or a lot of it. I’m not sure, but I know I struggle with this. It shows up for me is I will come up with an idea of a product similar to look at high-achiever product.

If you get the mindset stuff right, everything else trickles up from there. Share on X

It used to be that I would talk myself out of it as quickly as I talked myself into it. That’s the imposter trap, “Do you know what I could do with this and that? We could do this. We could do a show, LinkedIn video and have a website.” At some point you say, “It’s not me. That’s not for me.” That’s the imposter trap. In imposter syndrome, you’re saying, “This is a great idea,” but then you’re talking yourself out of it. The third trap is the comparison trap. I’ve always heard the term contrast, but don’t compare. It’s hard not to compare ourselves to others. It’s not just others, but it’s what we envisioned for ourselves. “By this time in my life, I thought I would be X, and I’m not.”

That’s a trap you get into. Finally, there’s that perfection trap, which is a perfect as my line in the sand, and anything less than that is not good enough. It is a constant reminder when I’m putting something out there, and there’s a mistake made in the copy or, “Why didn’t I think of that? I should’ve.” That’s that perfection trap. Those are traps we can’t follow into, but we do. Here’s what I find is going on inside the mind of the high-achievers. Number one, they want to continue to grow their numbers, but they don’t want to burn themselves out.

The idea of going from $200,000 to $700,000 if I have to work 40 more hours a week, “It’s not going to happen. I don’t want to do it.” You shouldn’t do it. There are ways to get you to that $700,000 mark without burning yourself out. Another thing that I hear from high-achievers is, “I don’t feel like I’m leveraging my talents and skills. I don’t feel like I’m doing enough of the things I’m good at, what I would call the zone of genius or the high pay activity.” Zone of genius was a term by Gay Hendricks in a book called The Big Leap.

He talks about, “You have things and I have things that we’re naturally good at,” but we only spent an hour or two a week on those things. It was like, “Why are we spending twenty hours a week doing things we’re not good at or don’t get paid for, and then that sacrifice is a time in our zone of genius?” A lot of people feel like, “Am I leveraging my God-given talents and man-acquired talents along the way?” Here’s another concern, “I feel like I’m proud of what I’ve done. I’m earning a good income and have a good stable job. I know some people don’t. I’m thankful, blessed and grateful for that, but is this all there is to it? I keep doing the same thing. It’s like Groundhog’s day. It’s the same thing day in, day out. I’m trying to infuse myself with adventure and for other things but sometimes, I feel as if this is all there is.” I know we’ve heard that saying a long time.

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High Achievers: Building your brand is not always about making more money. It might be how are you going to give back.

 

I feel like high-achievers have that because they operate on a different plane and a different perspective. “I don’t feel like I’ve built my personal brand well enough.” This goes for almost all high-achievers. There’s a certain amount of reluctance to build a brand. Once you get to a place where you deserve to build a brand, it’s almost like it has the opposite effect. We’re reluctant to do it because we say, “Why would I build a brand? I’m doing fine. I’m reaching out to people going to networking events. Everything is going well. I’m pulling in my $250,000 a year. Why would I want to go down another path?”

My reaction to that is, “Why wouldn’t you? Why wouldn’t you want to tell your stories? Tell the stories of prospects and clients, tell your stories of how you’ve helped people, tell stories of how people have come to you in bad shape, and through your wisdom and talent have helped them transform their lives or improve their business results or outcomes. Why would you keep that from the general public? Would you keep that from your audience?”

It’s going to take the opposite approach. Building your brand is not always about making more money. Usually, it is. It’s about how are you going to give back? How are you going to take the experience you have and send it back out to the world and the market? This is not an exhaustive list, but I hear this idea of accountability. Whenever I start a small group coaching program, as we do, I always ask, “What’s one thing you want to get out of this group? It’s bizarre in a way. Almost always it’s the highest achievers who say, “Accountability.”

It comes from the high-achievers knowledge that that’s exactly what’s going to get him or her to the next level. It’s accountability. Yet we’re reluctant to ask for it from our managers when a guy like me comes along and does a small group mastermind program. That’s where people want to go, especially the high-achievers. Accountability is huge. I’ve got a couple of clients in The 2X Group that I offer extra accountability sessions. It’s transformed their business because every week we chat only 10 or 15 minutes, and it helps them. When they’re thinking about putting something off, they know they can’t because they know I’m going to ask them about it. They do it and doing it works.

Here are a handful of things. I’ve got about 9 or 10 things that I think the high-achievers need to get access to. I’m going to share with you a handful and then we’ll come back next episode and talk more. I have this in a pie chart. One section might be 25% of the pie chart. One might be less depending upon the importance of each one, but this one is important. I’m not sure what percent to give it. What is your vision? What is your ideal outcome for 1, 2, 5 years down the road? Do you have constructed a vision of where you want your life to be? Your financial life, business life or relationship life. We’ve got lots of different lives. Where are you going? High-achievers need this. They must have this. They must start thinking about it differently than just assets or financial because there’s more to life than that. That’s one part of life, but there’s more to it.

The second thing is, what are the required mindsets that you’re going to need to adopt or embrace if you’re going to level your business up? What kinds of mindsets do you need? How do you look at the world? How do you look at your value? How do you look at your customers? How do you look at your roles in the customer’s life? Those are all mindset issues. If you get the mindset stuff right, everything else falls from there. It trickles down from there. It trickles up. If you get your mind right, everything else follows. Mindset is an important part of this. We’ve got vision and mindset.

Number three, it’s important to pay attention to limiting beliefs. We hear a lot about limiting beliefs. We don’t hear much about how to unlimit them. The first step is you have to get clear on what you believe about yourself, and that’s not easy. Sometimes you need another human being there to help shine the light on what your current beliefs are. One way to look at your current beliefs is what are your results? It’s almost impossible for you to believe something different than your results are getting you. If you’re a $200,000 a year person, and you say, “I’m a $500,000 a year person masquerading as a $200,000.” You’re not. Your beliefs are you are a $200,000 a year person. If you thought you were $500,000 a year person, you’d be earning $500,000. That’s not always the case but generally, your beliefs are congruent with your results. If you want to go from $200,000 to $500,000, you’ve got to check out those beliefs that might limit you from getting there.

Your beliefs are congruent with your results. Share on X

Here’s the fourth thing, and then I’ll pause and we’ll do the others later. Why are you here? Why are you on this planet? What’s your purpose? What are you here to do? Alignment of purpose is critical because it’s the fire that will be released and the energy will be released once you decide what it is and land on what it is. My purpose in life that I’ve come up with here over the last couple of years is to use my experiences, my talent to share with the world, so people can expand what’s possible for them. My purpose is not to have everybody be a top-level achiever. My purpose is to take what I’m learning and share it in a way that people can consume it like we’re doing on this show. It’s one good example so that people can expand what’s possible for them.

Everything that I do needs to be focused on that purpose whether it’s a fee-based program or a free video on LinkedIn. I always believe that is focused and aligned with my purpose. What is your purpose? This is not the special purpose like Steve Martin had in The Jerk but it’s why are you here? Are you incorporating and aligning what you do in your business to why you’re here? You’re not here to earn money. It might be an output of the purpose, but that’s not the purpose. If you can get clear on this, it will unleash energy in your world.

We’re going to go through this a little bit deeper next episode. If you like the overall topic and might consider being a part of a group if we do decide to assemble one, go to BillCaskey.com, the orange bar at the top will say something like High-Achiever. Click on it, put your name and email address. There also might be a question there too that I ask you about what you might want to include if you decided ever to do something like this. I have no pricing other than I know I’ve got a handful of people who want to do this. I’m opening it up to my readers to get on the waitlist. Hopefully, that helps. I love you, guys. I appreciate you. If you want to leave a review on iTunes, I would love that. Thank you. Bye.

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Jay Maymi Gives You a Lesson In Battling the Inner Enemies

BCP 5 | Battling Inner Enemies

 

There are times that the one blocking your path to progress and success is no other than yourself, and the only way to get through is battling your inner enemies head on. Jay Maymi joins Bill Caskey in this episode to impart a lesson on doing so and doing it effectively. Jay discusses the importance of having the proper mindset in order not to become a product and a victim of your environment. Understanding that everyone is made the same, he iterates the defining factors that separate you from others. Jay also shares the strategies and techniques he’s developed to give you that edge against your inner enemies.

Listen to the podcast here:

Jay Maymi Gives You a Lesson In Battling the Inner Enemies

I am glad to be with you now. I think you’re going to enjoy my special guest. His name is Jay Maymi. He’s written many books on selling. He reached out to me here. He hosts a radio show in Northern Texas on a Dallas radio station and talks about business. He’s an entrepreneur and talks a lot. He’s written a book about the mindset of selling. We love that topic. He goes a little bit in a different direction, a little bit deeper in some areas than we have. I thought you’d like to know some of his perspectives. Here’s my interview with Jay Maymi.

Jay Maymi is our guest now. I call him Mr. Eclectic. He does a lot of things like entrepreneur, actor, author and radio host. Who knows what else he will tell us he does? Jay speaks to us from North Texas. He is the host of that radio show on 570 AM KLIF in Dallas. Jay, welcome to the show.

I appreciate you having me.

You reached out to me here so I thought, “Here’s a guy who’s done a lot of things in his life and has written several books.” Your story is fascinating. Can you give us a rundown on who the heck Jay Maymi is?

Whether you realize it or not, we're formed with the same organics. What separates us is usually our environment. Share on X

Jay Maymi is a body double. I do have a twin whose name is Joe Maymi. We are adopted twins from a Hispanic household. My parents came here from Puerto Rico in the 1960s. They settled in Spanish Harlem, a place called El Barrio in New York, which is where I’m originally from. My parents had decided to adopt after my mother not being able to bear children after three attempts. The story goes. They went down to the agency. This was back in the ’60s. You could just show up and say, “I want somebody,” and they’ll give you somebody.

They got a BOGO deal, a Buy One, Get One. They went home. Needless to say, it’s economically challenging enough to raise one child, let alone two, in those days. My mom had to stay home and stop working at the factory. My father had to pick up a fourth part-time job in order to make ends meet. It was economically very challenging for us. I grew up in meager means, just enough to put food on the table and clothes on our bag. I didn’t have all the fancy stuff that kids had.

It was a rough neighborhood where you could easily find ways to get into trouble if you wanted to make money the wrong way. Me and my brother decided if we wanted to have a new pair of sneakers and all the cool things that kids had, we had to go out and figure out a way to make money on our own doing the right way. We started up a ‘picking up bottles and cans’ business for a nickel when we were thirteen years old. That started in me an entrepreneurial development where now it’s flourished and continues to flourish in many expressions.

You came up in not the best of worlds in terms of economics. A lot of us who grew up in the ’60s and ’70s had decent housing and enough to put food on the table. As you said, “My parents never dressed me in anything but hand-me-downs and rags.” There was something glorious about that because when we look around and say, “I guess if it’s going to be, it’s going to be up to me to do something.” Tell us a little bit about the attitude that that upbringing might have given you.

The reality is that you can either become a victim of your environment, your environment will shape you and your destiny, or you could certainly decide, “This is not who I am. I will not become a product of the environment. I’m going to bend the will of the universe.” I decided to do the latter. For me, I look back on my life now, I think about those challenging times as a blessing. That developed in me a character of determination, hard work, grinding and recognizing that everything that I’ve been able to accumulate is a blessing. I’m very appreciative of it. I take nothing for granted. My story, so far, is still developing. I still have a lot more to go and things to do, but now it becomes a testimony. The greatest thing someone could walk away with when they exit this existence and dimension is to be able to have someone say, “That guy left us a positive role modeling of how to thrive even in difficult situations.”

We’re going to shift to sales now since I know you’ve written several books about sales, sales psychology and some devotional books. I’d like to get into a little bit of that because most of my audience are either VPs of sales, presidents, sales managers, sales professionals, anybody who acquires customers or builds and grows accounts are in my audience. When we started talking about the psychology, I was struck by it because I don’t think enough people are talking about it. We talk about the psychology of the buyer a lot. We don’t talk much about the psychology of the seller. If you could give us a few minutes on how you hopped on that topic and then we’ll dive a little deeper into some of the strategies?

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Battling Inner Enemies: You can either become a victim of your environment or decide that you will not become a product of it and that you’re going to bend the will of the universe.

 

It’s interesting, I have written a handful of books on psychology of selling, subliminal sales techniques, prospecting, closing, and a number of different areas in sales that I think a lot of novice sales professionals struggle with. At a certain point, as I was speaking with a number of different individuals, even in my own organization, which I’ve trained and hired financial representatives, I realized, “After a while, you can provide enough training, techniques, tactical stuff and product training as much as someone could utilize, but why is it that that person who was probably over-trained still struggles, doesn’t excel, their performance never reaches any peak, and they’re trafficking at that novice level? You have those who don’t need much, but they soar.”

There’s got to be more than training and motivation. I realized, “What’s happening behind the scenes?” I started to dig back into my academic degrees of Psychology, Behavioral Sciences and Social Work. I said, “There is something that has to be going on behind the scenes.” I didn’t have to go very far than my own life. I said, “Let me see what’s going on in my head. Why do I struggle? Why do I have starts and stops at times?” I realized that I was dealing with a lot of head trash and inner struggles, what I call invisible enemies, that I had to deal with. I had to face them in order to realize, “These stumbling blocks are going to stop me from moving forward, regardless of how much more training I have personally.”

I wrote this book called Battling Invisible Enemies: Facing Your Inner Struggles Head On for myself. I had to talk to myself about, “What’s going on here, Jay? What’s the deal? Why do you get up in the morning and you’re in the battle already, you haven’t step one foot on the floor yet, and you’re swinging?” It took some time and I wrote this book. As I wrapped it up, I gave a copy to my brother who was a sales manager in New York for a big real estate company. He said, “Jay, you nailed it. Don’t keep this to yourself. Let’s get it out to some folks.” Of course, my wife helped me publish my material. We got it out there. Every person who’s read it whether in sales or not, they could have a job that requires a better performance of them. They’ve all said, “This has met us exactly where we were at. We’re struggling with these invisible enemies.” It’s become my bestseller by far because it’s dealing where people are. In ’21 after a year of ’20, a book like this is needed more now than ever.

The most ambitious people have the greatest battles. Share on X

I’ve devoted a lot of episodes and my posts online to the mental health of sales and sales management functions. A lot of companies still did well in 2020. They’re looking decent in 2021, but to me, there’s an underwriting churn that’s happening because of all the stuff that’s happened. A little uncertainty and the ground beneath their feet has been shaken a little bit. I would anticipate your book being even a bigger seller in 2021. You didn’t say you were reluctant to publish it, but you had some thoughts about, “Is this going to be accepted? Is this what the world wants?” Of course it is, but tell me about some of that resistance.

I understand entertainment. I’ve been in the entertainment world. If you are going to be asked to speak in front of a group, especially in a peak performance setting, top-sales professionals in a format where there’s a lot of inspiration and motivation, the last thing they want the speaker to talk about is the guy who is struggling with depression, discouragement, doubt, anxiety, and stress. These aren’t sexy topics. No one walks out of there fired up. This is one of those books where the person who will read it probably won’t let anyone know that they’re reading it. You are not going to find a guy in the office reading this before morning before he makes his calls. It’s one of this under-the-radar, on-the-ground books.

It’s like what we used to do with Playboy magazine. We would hide it somewhere. That’s what your readers would do.

We know it’s there. We’ll go back to get it, but don’t let anyone see us reading it.

We laugh but I know high achievers, $500,000 and $1 million people who still struggle with this stuff. It has very little to do with financial success. E.E. Cummings said, “Be kind to people because you never know what battle they’re fighting inside.” I’ve seen people who are million-dollar earners fight huge battles inside. Sometimes it’s impostor syndrome, out of their comfort zone, or they don’t feel deserving. We all have battles.

There’s no question about it, we’re humans. One of the things that I talk a lot about in my talks and my videos when I get a chance to get on stage, I’m a very real person. I don’t speak in Pollyanna. I’m not highfalutin in a way that I have to be so impressive that you lose your sense of humanity. I tell folks, “Whether you realize it or not, we’re formed with the same organics and chemicals. We breathe the same air. We have the same bone structure. We have the same infrastructure. We have the same brain in terms of a left hemisphere and right hemisphere. We’re the same.”

What separates us is usually our environment, but not even that much because if you looked at my environment, you would say, “That guy has got a future that is probably going to end up somewhere behind bars or in the corner office with a green outfit and the broom.” It’s not about your environment. It’s about what you make and the experiences that those decisions bring forth. A lot of bad decisions and experiences is going to foster what I call the downward spiral. I wrote about that in the book, “The downward spiral is where you get caught into the spiral of worry. It leads to stress, anxiety and fear. Now, you’re on your way down to doubt, disbelief, discouragement, and depression.” It can happen to anybody in a split moment.

It’s a cycle that can take you down quickly unless you are practicing some serious self-reflection or self-awareness mindfulness or whatever you want to call it. We are so busy and reluctant to spend any time with ourselves. As you said, you had a lot of one-on-one talks with yourself when you were going through some of this, and this is what came from it. Something came from it that’s going to help a lot of people.

The most ambitious people have the greatest battles. The folks who are at $2 million, $3 million or $5 million a year of production or income, higher or greater, got there because they’re highly ambitious and highly-driven people. It’s almost like a double-edged sword. The higher your ambition and the more you’re driven, the chances are the greater the battle because you’re always striving for that next best version of yourself. Internally, even though you’ve done well, you still struggle with, “Am I good enough to get there?” It’s because you’re ambitious and driven. The person who has nothing going on are not motivated. They’re living what I call a quiet life of desperation or a quiet life of settling. They aren’t going to battle much with enemies or struggles because they’ve got nothing that’s driving them. There are some more driven ones with a greater battle there.

Let’s get into a little bit of psychoanalyzing a salesperson or chief executive no matter what. Give me a couple of things that you think people struggle with in the context of what we talked about. It could be something specific or general. What do you see people struggle with? Let’s talk about some solutions.

BCP 5 | Battling Inner Enemies

Battling Inner Enemies: If you’re going to speak in a peak performance setting where there’s a lot of inspiration and motivation, the last thing they want to hear is the guy struggling with depression or discouragement.

 

Let me give you a very real example. My brother, I mentioned him earlier, is a successful real estate manager for a decent-sized firm in New York. He had his sales meetings on Thursday mornings. Often enough, he’ll call me the day before and he says, “Do you got anything I could share? Do you got a joke? Do you got something that I could open up my meeting with or a tip?” I always give him something, whatever I’ve got. At his first meeting of the year, he asked me for ideas and what he could introduce. The conversation evolved into him questioning and doubting whether or not his sales force sees the value that he brings them week-to-week. He questioned whether the value is perceived by his sales force or if he, himself, seen as a valuable person. It was either, “Is the content valuable? Or is he valuable to them?”

That’s a very real reflection that a lot of sales leaders face and feel. They don’t want to admit it, but I think there’s a lot of that.

You’re correct. I was at a meeting, and the gentleman of that company, very successful in financial services, was echoing the same thing. He’s got a sizable sales force. I said to my brother, “One of the things to recognize is that not everybody is going to appreciate you or your efforts. That’s the world that we live in. That’s the world of sales management. It’s the way that it is, but they have to respect, if nothing else, your time. Do they understand the time that you put into preparing? Do they value it? Do they respect it? What kind of return do you think you can get from them if they did? If they valued, understood and respected the time that you put in, forget about the content and you, the time and the effort. If you have them or you can help them, understand that whether or not it’s the content they find valuable or they find you valuable, at least respect the time. That helped him feel better. He was at a place where he started to feel doubtful and that helped him get through a little bit about the stumbling block.

That’s good because self-doubt creeps in. Self-doubt and fear can come visit your mind but don’t let them take up residency. Sometimes they do and we don’t even know it. We start to doubt everything we do, whether it’s a podcast, sales call or building our business plan, “Is this enough? It sounds like a lot. I don’t know if I can do that.” Self-doubt enslaves us sometimes and we don’t even know it.

It’s disempowering. By the way, if you carry self-doubt on your face, other people will see it. I used to tell one of my young directors of our company, “Do you believe in what you’re saying?” He said, “Absolutely.” I said, “Will you tell your face?” It was like, “I don’t believe what you’re saying.”

We all think we’re clever enough to hide it but we don’t. Give me another struggle. You talked about the context of a sales manager but the thing about the mental and emotional sides of achievement that you find people struggle with. I want to ask you a question about potential and how we help people get to their potential. What’s another one?

Let me give you something that’s close to your answer. I think you’ll see why I say that. I put out a video called The Struggle. This is what the entrepreneurs, professionals, sales pros and even directors struggle with. I did a tongue-in-cheek and said, “The struggle of EDD.” Most people in that video, when I put the acronym EDD, they figured out, “That’s erectile dysfunction.” When I opened up the video I said, “It’s not what you think. I’m not talking about that struggle. That’s not the struggle.” I said, “EDD is Entrepreneurial Delusion Disorder.” Every salesperson, sales manager struggles, and entrepreneur struggles with. It’s where you deceive yourself to thinking that you’re doing all you can. You get into this place that you are convincing no one else but yourself. You’re doing all you can. You’re performing at your best. You’re giving it all you’ve got. You’re fully committed. You’re fully in. There’s nothing else you need to learn. You’re good. All is well. That’s delusional.

One of the things that I always talk to people about is, “Let’s address this EDD and see if you’re struggling with it because the symptoms if I’m looking at them, you’ve got EDD. Your numbers don’t reflect how confident you are about your performance. You don’t show up to any training. That means you think you know it all. You’re not willing to learn more so that means you’ve got an issue with pride. Those are all symptoms of EDD.” There’s a whole talk I gave on that, which was funny. It addresses what I think hurts more organizations, which is having too much people run around with EDD. It certainly hurts the individual themselves unless it’s pointed out, just like any disease.

The higher your ambition, the more you're driven and, chances are, the greater the battle. Share on X

We all get defensive. As a trainer and somebody goes into companies, business-to-business sales teams and works with them, the first question I always ask is, “What’s not working? Where can it be better? What’s working maybe 50% but not working all the way?” Sometimes it’s a struggle for people to come up with it because we live inside our own soul all day long. We don’t see ourselves the way others see us. All we know are the positive things and there’s always room for growth. There’s always something you could be doing even slightly better. I’m not talking about working an extra four hours a day. I’m talking about slight variations in language, technique, and strategy. I love that EDD. We all have it. Jay, how can people get your book and follow you online? If you have a social media presence, tell us how we can follow you.

A number of ways. You could visit my website, which is TheJayMaymi.com. You could also look at my show website, TheJayMaymiTalkShow.com. I’m on YouTube, google The Jay Maymi. You can find my training YouTube channel, which is Survive to Thrive. I have tons of videos on there on prospecting and mindset. I also have my Facebook page at The Jay Maymi.

If people go to TheJayMaymi.com, they can find all the other channels from there, correct?

All my goodies would be on there.

Jay, it’s been a pleasure to get to know you. I hope this will be valuable for you. We’re going to get it out here. I think this topic is extremely relevant all the time, but especially right now. I appreciate you spending time talking to us.

I appreciate you inviting me. I hope it helps someone.

Thanks, Jay.

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About Jay Maymi

Jay

There is an advantage to growing up in a humble setting with meager means. The reality of your circumstances can either pummel you into mediocrity or extract from you a burning desire to excel and rise above. My story is one of the latter. For the last three decades my hunger to rise above has yielded an impressive array of accomplishments. From multiple successful businesses to bodybuilding championships, radio, TV, stage, and print work to authoring 5 books; from an entire Sales and Personal Development series to speaking in front of many diverse audiences on different topics; all have uniquely qualified me to offer valuable knowledge, instruction, inspiration, and impact to those seeking to develop a higher and greater expression of themselves. Whether you are visiting my site for personal development, sales training, performance mentoring, or simply to be inspired, I welcome you and am thankful you have decided to take a look.

The Lies We Are Told – Part 2‬

8BCPbanner

 

In this follow-up episode, Bill Caskey jumps right back into how experts mislead us as he talks about the lies the experts tell us. He focuses on challenging beliefs and the importance of taking a second look at the teachings in your life that you thought to be true. Get to know five other ways that experts are misleading you. Learn what trainers and coaches usually focus on that are contrary to the critical components needed for your success. Tune in so you can stay away from the lies the experts are telling you.

Listen to the podcast here:

The Lies We Are Told – Part 2‬

I’m glad you are here. We’re going to do part two of our lies, myths and misgivings. Things that you’ve been taught and instructed to do by sales trainers and coaches over the years that no longer work or there’s a better way. If you didn’t read part one, no problem. Go ahead and read this, then you can go back. I gave you five. Number one, if you would ask better questions, the customer is going to be more likely to buy. That’s a lie. Number two, work harder, mind and grind longer. Work your tail off and you’ll succeed. I’m not saying that work ethic is not good but that’s not a recipe for success. Number three, it’s all about the numbers. Make more calls and sales. Number four, don’t worry about your personal brand. Who do you think you are? The company has a brand. That’s good enough. Number five, don’t worry about scaling your business. Let me, as your leader or manager, and that’s what the sales trainer would say is, “Don’t worry about scaling. You go out and hammer outcalls one at a time, you’ll be successful.”

From reading this blog, there are better ways to solve problems. I want to give you five more and some solutions around these. If you like any of those five and you didn’t read the prior show, go back and read to it. I give you some solutions there. We’re continuing from the past episode. I got a lot of these from LinkedIn and I want to acknowledge all of the people on LinkedIn who shared their ideas with me. I’ve got 35 to 40 comments and had good conversations with some of you. I’m going to mention a couple of you here.

The trainer and coach don’t pay much attention to your mindset. They’re all about production and behavior. We used to talk a lot about behavior. What are your sales behavior and activities? Not a word was mentioned about, how do you feel about that? What’s your mindset going into that behavior? The mindset on the way into the behavior will determine the behavior and the effectiveness of it. I find that most trainers stay away from mindset or they’ll give you some lousy thing like, “Be more confident and abundant.” I talk about abundance but I would never say to someone, “Be more abundant. You need to ratchet up your abundance thinking.” That isn’t helpful.

The mindset on the way into the behavior will determine the behavior. Share on X

The question is, “How do I do that?” Mindset is a critical component. If you’ve ever witnessed yourself, and it’s hard to witness yourself sometimes, in a slump or everything you touch turns to what things aren’t working in the market. It’s probably got something to do with your mindset, your emotions, and your perspective of the world has changed. When you’re on a high and everything you touch turns to gold, you’re like Goldfinger in the old James Bond series, then you want to make calls and go out because you’re attractive. That’s all about mindset. It’s not about behavior. Behavior is influenced by mindset, but you got to take special care of your mind. What are you putting into it? How are you feeding it? What do you do with it during the day? Do you let it run willy-nilly across the stream of consciousness? Are you delivering to your mind things that are going to help it stay on track? Mindset is huge.

Number seven, I want to know what your numbers are. Don’t worry about the plan. Usually, sales managers and trainers sometimes will say this. I’ve heard it from trainers I’ve been involved with them over the years where I’ve collaborated with them. It becomes get clear on your goal and the rest of it will take care of itself. I do think there’s truth to the clearer and more vivid. You can imagine what your goal looks like when it’s complete. That does energize you but there still has to be a plan. Unfortunately, most sales professionals have been taught how to project-manage. That’s exactly what goal setting is. It’s developing a number out there and an ideal outcome.

Let’s say you want to generate 300,000 hours of personal income next year. You did 150,000 last year. You want to 2X. We’ve got a program for that. It’s called The2XGroup.com. To get from 150,000 to 300,000, it’s going to require some thinking through it and some fleshing out of things. I find that most coaches don’t help you do that. They’re more interested in what you want to accomplish, which is important. I’m not discounting the importance of that, but there is a how-to, “I’m here now. I want to get there tomorrow. What is the middle or bridge look like?” Project management is a critical skill. I’ve said this for the last couple of years, project management is a critical skill for sales professionals in the B2B space. Every goal, customer, initiative or project is a project.

BCP 8 | Lies We Are Told

Lies We Are Told: Position yourself appropriately in the marketplace by creating content that’s valuable for your customer base or your prospect base.

 

Number eight, you don’t need to be spending time creating content. You need to get out and sell. Coaches do not understand the importance of creating content on your media platform for the world to sample. By the world, I don’t mean the world, I mean the world of your prospects, your niche, your audience, whatever you want to call the people who would get value out of reading, consuming, watching, listening, whatever that content is. I don’t think coaches and trainers spend nearly enough time teaching you the theory of content marketing. Content marketing came along a few years ago and it was hot for a couple of years.

It has lost its luster and it’s coming back mainly because I believe you, as a business-to-business sales professional, need to position yourself appropriately in the marketplace. That’s why you wear the clothes, drive the car, and ask the questions. Everything is about positioning and I’m not talking about faking it. I’m not talking about the Instagram influencer faking its positioning. I’m talking about positioning yourself. The way you position yourself is you create content that’s valuable for your customer-base or your prospect-base. That might mean writing an article a week on LinkedIn at a minimum. It could be shooting a video once a week for LinkedIn. I’ve got a couple of clients who shoot them 2 or 3 times a week.

Every time they post one, they title it. They get to test the market to see what the market wants. Don’t let people talk you into, “Your job is to sell.” Here’s what happens if you create content. You create an article, you title it with something that’s relevant to your prospects, take one of the top problems your prospect has. Let’s say you’re in the commercial real estate business. A potential prospect might be asking him or herself, “Should I buy a building, lease a building or lease space?” I don’t know whatever that is. That’s a decision. Why don’t you write an article called, Should I buy a building or should I lease space? A question every business owner should be asking or something like that. When people come across that article, they’re in the same town you are, they start to read your profile, and they say, “That’s a good question. I’m going to have John come in here and talk to us.” You get the call. You had no idea this person was looking. You can’t buy a list of people necessarily. Maybe in the real estate business you can, who are looking. Somebody has found you because you have delivered content. That’s valuable to them.

90% of buyers want to feel safe in their business and in your presence. Share on X

Number nine, we don’t spend enough time addressing the psychology of the buyer. There was a trend in the ‘80s and ‘90s talking about buyer psychology. It seems like we went very quickly to seller psychology. We love the psychology topic, but we went quickly to what’s the psychology of the seller. Brian Tracy even wrote an audio recording set called The Psychology of Selling. We got very interested in that. I liked that. You need to be studying both the psychology of the buyer and the psychology of yourself. We talk a lot about it in this show. Your own mindset, ethos, your soul, and how your energy can rise and fall based on how you think about things. Don’t forget about the buyer. Here’s one thing that you need to know about buyer psychology. This goes for any buyer. Not every buyer might but 90% of the buyers want to feel safe in their business and your presence. When you show up and you are eager, enthusiastic, you’re pitching and you’re closing from the time you walk in the room, that does not make people feel safe.

I know some of you sellers who have become so good at that. It has become so much a part of you. You say, “How can I unhook myself from that?” You’re going to have to because I’ll bet you, you’ve lost sales where you have been too eager and you didn’t condition the environment for the prospect to feel safe. You can still be yourself and do that. We call it the up-front agreement or the setting of the tone up-front. You’ve got to make sure that when you walk into the room, whether the room is virtual or physical, you create an environment for safety. Safe environments sell. It allows the prospect to tell you more about what their issues are or it allows you to move forward with freedom where you’re not constantly thinking, “When is he going to object? How am I going to close? When should I throw the money section out?” You’re not doing that because you’ve created this environment where two people are having a human conversation. I believe that’s important for buyer psychology. You’ve got to pay attention to it.

Number ten, people will shy you away from personal marketing. I know we talk about branding we have but I’m talking about personal marketing. What is your personal marketing plan? I haven’t seen any trainers talk about this. They talk about making cold calls, outreach and going to networking events. There’s more to marketing than that. That’s more sales stuff. I want marketing. I want to know are you doing a webinar? Have you written a white paper or some kind of a free report or a lead magnet as it’s called in the internet marketing world? Something that is enticing enough for a prospect that they would give you their name and email address to download it because they know that there’s something on the other side that would be valuable for them.

That’s the essence of marketing now. It’s giving something away, getting their email address, and then sharing other tidbits, tips, tactics and strategies along the way through email. You have a lot more power when you have an email address than you do when you have a social media connection. I’m not against social media connections, but email is still the killer app. It probably will be for a while and maybe text, but at least email. What are you doing in your personal marketing to capture email addresses from people who have an interest in what it is you do, you say, you produce, and how you bring value to people? If cold calls are your only outreach, then you’re making a huge mistake. You’re undervaluing yourself. You can do better than that.

Read up a little bit on lead magnets. Try to figure out, “What kind of marketing steps can I take?” Maybe you want to have a YouTube channel or record a Q&A every Friday of some of the things that you heard in your market over the week and post them up on LinkedIn, YouTube or the video sites. That’s marketing for you. We’ve got to think about marketing in terms of educating our prospects so that they come back and reach out to us. I’ve talked about the lead Parthenon before and we can talk about it in subsequent episodes. The idea with that is you have a Parthenon, you’ve got 5 to 7 pillars of leads coming in. Some of those may be outbound where you’re making a call going to an event. Some of those we want to be inbound.

I would say, if you don’t have any inbound leads, then you need to start focusing on that because that’s what’s going to help you scale your business. I also casually slipped in The 2X Group. If you have any interest at all and be a part of a small group coaching program, the fees are nominal and the value is extreme. We meet twice a month. If you’re interested in that, you can go to The2XGroup.com, jump on a call with me, and tell me a little bit about what you want to accomplish. We’ll see if it could be a fit for you. See you next time. Bye.

Important Links:

Are the Experts Misleading You?

Have you ever questioned the things that are being taught by the experts you follow? I think you should.

It’s easy to think, “well, they’re the experts, so they know best.” However this isn’t always the case and you can be easily mislead by having this belief.

On this episode I give you 5 areas you should challenge in your own beliefs and the things that you are being told.

If you’d like to have a discussion about your team, text CASKEY to 69922 and you can get right on my calendar!

 

Also mentioned in this podcast:

 

Are The Experts Misleading You‪?‬‬

BCP 4 | Mislead By Experts

 

Are the experts misleading you‪? In this episode, Bill Caskey thinks you should be questioning the experts you listen to as he talks about challenging beliefs and how experts can easily mislead you. Thinking that experts know best can sometimes be detrimental to you instead of advantageous. Bill shares five areas in which you need to take a deeper look at and challenge your own beliefs and the expert’s beliefs. Tune in and take charge of your own beliefs and be wary of experts.

Listen to the podcast here:

Are The Experts Misleading You‪?‬‬

I am happy to be with you. Happy New Year. I’m glad to be back with you. Hopefully, 2021 is starting off well. I know that everybody’s talking about 2020 and 2021 and what it’s going to look like. I’ll leave that for the experts. I don’t have any predictions. Predictions that I’ve made in the past have not come true so I got away from the prediction game. One thing that I did notice in 2020 is that we had a lot of experts on the scene. You can call them scientists and experts. Primarily, it was around the COVID and the pandemic. It seemed like you’d hear an expert say one thing and then a month later, they’d say something different or far enough off that you’d say, “Did you know that a month ago when you had other advice? How have you changed your advice so much?” We have become a little leery of experts. That’s understandable. I even said something on Twitter that I’m leery of experts. I had a couple of people holler back at me and say, “Aren’t you an expert? Should we be leery of you?” I should have answered, “You should listen to what my advice is because I give a lot of advice and a lot of tips on this show, but you’ve got to use it and make it work in your world. If it doesn’t, don’t use it. If you don’t believe it’ll work and you know it won’t work, then don’t use it.”

BCP 4 | Mislead By Experts

Mislead By Experts: Better questions help, but the questions need to be primarily around their current circumstance.

 

I always suggest trying things, give it a go, or give it a shot. If something that I say resonates with you and you say, “That makes a lot of sense.” Put it to use and try it. Double down on it if it works. Throw it out if it doesn’t. One thing I’ve realized is that some of the experts in the sales training and coaching business have misled us. I don’t think they’ve lied to us. I mentioned on LinkedIn that there are some lies that are out there, but a lot of what has transpired over the last several years is that coaches and trainers have their set regimen. They have their curriculum and they’ve made no changes in it. These large coaching companies can’t go and change curriculum all at once so they live with what they’ve been using. I’ve got five areas that our trainers and coaches have misled us. I’ve got fourteen, but I’m not going to go through all these. I’ll go through five and then I’ll hear what my audience wants. If they want more, we can do another episode on five more. The reason I think this is important is if you can look at what you’ve been taught to believe and reconfigure it a little bit based on the current model, the current circumstances, the current environment, then challenging beliefs is okay. It’s healthy.

I find a lot of people, when I go in and start coaching a group or coaching individuals, they’ve been taught something when they were young and it’s carried over years and years. When you’re first out of college or school, you take a sales position and you have a strong mentor, coach, or manager. They will say something and it’ll stick with you because you’re fashionable and still forming your opinions. Yet often, we wake up when we’re 50 years old and we say, “How did that ever get into our brain? Where did that come from?” I am a big proponent of checking out your beliefs. Your beliefs and your actions are almost always congruent. If you check out your beliefs, which we’re going to do here a little bit, you might find some ways to improve them.

If it resonates with you, try it. Double down on it if it works; throw it out if it doesn't. Share on X

Here is my list. I’m going to go through five and I’m going to give you the alternative here too. Think about these as if someone has told you this, suggested this, you’ve read it, you’ve heard it, or if you watched it. Number one, if you would ask better questions, the customer will be more likely to buy from you. I love questions. I love finding out what the issues are that a potential client has, understanding those issues, and then crafting a solution to help them solve those issues. There are beautiful things that happen when you ask questions. Number one, never interrogate. I see this a lot. I get it used on me a lot when I’m the prospect. It’s somebody on the phone or face-to-face will be pummeling me with questions. All in the spirit of getting to know more about me and what my dilemmas are.

You’ve got to be careful when you ask questions. You’ve got to deserve the permission to ask the questions. The alternative to that so that you don’t interrogate people is upfront in the process. Simply make the statement to the prospect of the question. “Is it okay if I ask you some questions about your current circumstance, what you’re facing, and what you’re trying to accomplish so that I can better understand whether we can help you or not?” That’s how you get permission. It lowers the resistance for the prospect because now they know why you’re asking the question, as opposed to shining the light in their eyes and getting interrogated. It’s not a good system. Better questions help but the questions need to be primarily around their current circumstance, not around what your budget and when you want to have this implemented. Those are questions you can ask down the road but primarily upfront, you want to get permission to ask questions. Create a safe environment so the questions you ask will be answered truthfully.

You’ve heard the saying that prospects lie. They do, but 90% of the time, they lie because of us because we forced them to lie by not providing a safe environment, not asking the right questions, or asking questions that are too assumptive at the beginning of the sales process. That’s something our trainers and coaches have told us. Ask more questions, ask better questions but there’s a little bit more to it than that. Do that upfront thing where you ask for permission. Number two, if you would work harder, longer, and grind more, good things will happen for you. The old grind it out mode of selling and achievement. Here’s where the old trainers and coaches are a little bit right and where they’re wrong. Number one, they’re right because working hard is not a bad thing. I would rather see you work hard in the market than sit around, eat dark chocolates all day and wait for something to happen because you know that’s not going to be the case.

Hard work is not a problem, but I’m not sure grinding and longer work is the answer. This is where strategy comes in. Here’s an example. I can make 100 cold calls trying to get somebody on the phone, trying to get them enthused, and inspired about training or developing their people or I can create a web page that is designed specifically for the person who is not sure whether they want to purchase training or work with their people and it walks them through some of the elements of that. Should I even invest in my people? How do I know my people are right for investment? How do I know my people are coachable? What kind of metrics would we use if we invest in a training solution? How do we know it pays off? There are lots of questions that people have at the beginning that will be good strategic ways for you to determine whether a person is a prospect or not. Rather than make 100 calls, I would rather you send out 100 emails linking your potential prospect to a page where they can work for themselves. They can decide for themselves if they’re a prospect for you.

I heard a stat from Gallup that was done in November of 2020 survey. It said that 33% of buyers prefer a sales-free process and 44% of Millennial buyers prefer a salesperson-free process. What does that tell you about someone who feels a cold call from you who’s not expecting your call and not even thinking about the problems they have in your area? They’re not going to be open. Whether you believe those numbers or not, I do. Gallup is pretty solid with their research. The question is, how you make the initial part of the process salesperson-free and give them enough information, educate them, and teach them why a lot of people are not prospects for you. That’s okay too. Beyond bias and be brutally honest. On that page, you have a place for them to calendar a call, schedule a call with you, or you follow up. Grinding out a bunch of cold calls, you’re only going to get 5% to 10% of people to talk to you. Those people are probably not thinking about you when they pick up the phone and answer.

I don’t like grinding. It’s better to take a strategic approach and say, “Let’s map the buyer journey. The buyer upfront is not looking for a sales call. What they’re looking for are information and education. How should I be thinking about the product or service you sell?” Number three, I hear this a lot from people like VPs of Sales and CEOs. It’s all about the numbers. Are they making the calls? Are they getting their results? What’s our revenue? How many new customers did we get? I know I have a love-hate relationship with CRMs but in the world of data and all the CRMs that are out there, you’re logging everything into your CRM and somebody can look and say, “Johnny, you only made ten new calls this week. No wonder you don’t have enough stuff going on.” There’s more to it than just the numbers. We’ll say, “What’s behind the numbers?” If I’m not making enough calls, not producing enough LinkedIn videos, or if I’m not doing the behavior that I have decided as a sales professional, I have decided it’s going to take to generate the results I want, then there’s something else stopping me. That’s where people need to look.

BCP 4 | Mislead By Experts

Mislead By Experts: If you’re not offering them any value in the sales process, what makes them think you’re going to offer any value once they buy?

 

Why don’t you like cold calls? Rejection? You’ve got to flip the script. Instead of trying to get them to see you or invite you on a Zoom call, you change the script to, “I’ve got something that would be beneficial for you. Would you like to see it?” When they say yes, you send them a link or you send them a document. That way, it’s not you calling and trying to get something. It’s you calling and giving them something. It’s a whole lot easier to make a cold outreach call. I’m not lobbying for those cold calls to me are one element of prospecting. Unfortunately, most sales organizations still live and die by the cold call and cold outreach. I don’t buy that. There are better ways to do it but if that’s what you are doing and you don’t like doing them then find a way to love and like it. One way to do it is to invite people to a process and something of value for them. If you’re not offering them any value in the sales process, what makes them think you’re going to offer any value once they buy?

I’m a big believer in educating your prospect and making them a more sophisticated buyer. Sometimes, I miss that. I jumped right to, “What are you trying to accomplish? What is the pain costing you?” I don’t educate the buyer. They go off to two other places who might educate them and I’m out. It’s a double loser. They don’t get me. I don’t get them. Is it all about the numbers? The numbers matter, but I want you to look behind the numbers. What is it that’s stopping me from executing the numbers? Number four, don’t worry about your personal brand and who do you think you are. Nobody’s going to say that to you, but they’re thinking that. When you go into your manager or if you’re a VP of sales and you say to your people on the executive team, “We’re going to undertake an initiative this month or this quarter. We’re going to start building the brand of the sales professionals that are on our team.” This applies primarily in the B2B space, not the B2C space as much, but it could. What kind of reaction are you going to get from people? “That’s a great idea. Let’s put them on video. Let’s work on the LinkedIn page. Let’s work on the profile. Let’s have each of them do a podcast.” No, they’re not going to say that. They’re going to say, “Our brand is fine. Our marketing department works on our brand all the time.”

The reality is, in B2B sales, your brand matters. If you have a LinkedIn page, you have a brand. It may not be intentional and sound but you’ve got one so why not take the time to improve that? I’m not talking about being an Instagram influencer or being all over the internet. I’m talking about LinkedIn primarily here, but you need to create your own brand. When someone looks you up online because you have set an appointment and they see nothing of value from you, all they see is a Contact Me page and there’s no video on it, there’s no special advice, suggestions, or education, how important are you to them? I’ve told the story about the purchasing manager for a Fortune 1000 company. He says, “I get a lot of requests for meetings from salespeople. I go to their LinkedIn page. If they don’t offer me any help or I can’t see anything of value they bring, I decline the offer. I’m not going to see people who haven’t taken the time to create something on their LinkedIn page that says, ‘Here’s what we do or here’s how to buy.’” Your personal brand and B2B sales matter. It’s going to matter even more in the next couple of years. Not less but more.

These trainers who are out there saying, “No, I got a cold call. Don’t produce content. That’s not your job. Stay in your lane.” Stay in your lane was the worst piece of advice I ever heard. You’ve got to build your personal brand. Ignore what the coaches and trainers say. It’s remarkable to me how many trainers and sales coaches still don’t believe in personal branding. It’s unbelievable and yet, I can point to twenty different case studies of people who have done it and what’s happened to their income. Here is number five, don’t worry about scaling your business. You let me scale our business by hiring a bunch of more people like you. You need to get out and make calls. Worst advice in the world. That advice might’ve worked several years ago when we didn’t have media platforms that you could create content for and catch the eye of prospects. When it was only a one-to-one game, it was a physical game, and how many people are you reaching out to connecting with and seeing on a weekly basis. I understand that, but if a sales coach and business trainer are telling you don’t worry about scaling your business, that’s poor advice. I want you to scale your leads and the processes.

Your beliefs and your actions are almost always congruent. Share on X

What if you had five people who set appointments with you every week because of something they saw online, something that you reached out, and they could book an appointment with you right online to have a discussion? What would that be like? Forget about the week thing. You had people who were seeking you out and reaching out to you. Would that allow you to scale your business more? Of course. What if most of those people or 80% of those people had been through a process of some kind so that when they got with you, they were serious about solving a problem? They may not buy, but if somebody is serious about a problem, they’ve consumed your videos, they’ve watched your content online, they feel comfortable with you, they’ve seen you so that you’re not as scary as maybe you are if you’re just another salesperson that they’re reaching out to, how well positioned would you be if that’s the case? If your phone is ringing or your calendar is dinging because you have new appointments, how well-positioned are you going to be? You are going to be great. You don’t have to be all that good, but you don’t have to be a wiz or a master if people are calling you, saying, “Here’s my problem.”

Those are the five pieces that trainers and coaches missed. I’m going to give people the benefit of the doubt that a lot of the world has changed around these people but I am convinced that if you were to check these five things out and you’re doing these or you’re thinking this way, it’s because somebody has imprinted that in your mind from a long time ago or you’re scared but I don’t buy that. If you’re interested in talking more about some of these, you can reach me at BillCaskey.com. We’ve got peer groups and mastermind groups starting where we teach these things. If you’re interested in that, go to BillCaskey.com. There are plenty of ways to get in touch with us there. Hopefully, this helps. Connect with me through LinkedIn if you like. We’ve got some interviews scheduled here in the next few episodes that you’re going to like. We’ll talk to you soon.

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Can Your “Why” Really Inspire You To Greatness?

Finding your why is an advice that you most likely have seen or heard being thrown around a lot of times when it comes to businesses. The thing is, not everyone tells you how to do it. This time, Bill Caskey gets specific and lists down five questions that you should be asking yourself in order to find your “why.” With each question, he provides practical and concise reasons why it’s necessary to be able to give an answer which will ultimately lead you to discover your “why.” He also talks about what your primary motivator should be when starting your business and why declaring your uniqueness is such an important step.

Listen to the podcast here:

Finding Your Why

We’re going to talk about something that you’ve heard about quite often over the last few years. The idea of “what is your why?” Simon Sinek did a TED Talk years ago. It’s got 30 some million looks and views. He talked about how important it is for companies but individuals too to understand why you do what you do. Why are you in business? Not just what do you do but why do you do it. I want to talk about that on this episode.

I did a blog on my why’s, “Why do I do what I do?” I thought it would be helpful for you not just to know my why’s of being in business, but also give you a little bit of permission to think a little bit deeper rather than making money. That’s why I do what I do, or to provide for my children and family.

Those are all noble things, but to me, it’s got to be the work. The work has to be the primary motivator. The secondary motivators are what you get from work like rewards, benefits, money, fame, fortune, etc.

BCP 1 | Finding Your Why

Finding Your Why: The work has to be your primary motivator. The secondary motivators are what you get from the work.

 

In this episode, I wanted to come back and give you a little mini-framework and a handful of things that might be able to help you. It’s a good time to do this to get back to the basics, “Why do you do what you do? “If you can communicate that effectively through the content that you produce or even the stories you tell when you’re face-to-face or on a virtual call with potential clients, it’s an important element of declaring your uniqueness in this world.

We all have very different why’s. It’s not like they’re going to entertain three vendors and you all three are going to have exactly the same why’s because these are very personal.

After I did that episode, I had several emails from people who said, “Good for you. I understand your why, but how do I come up with mine?” I’ve got five things here – five questions I would like to ask you.

If you want to take a little time in between each, pause, reflect on it, see if you can document, and write down some things that come to mind as I ask the question. That would be very helpful.

  1. “What is the pain in the market that your solution fixes or that you fix that brings out the emotion in you?”It’s not just the pain that they have. It’s ‘what problem do you solve’ that brings out your emotion and feeling where you almost become ignited by the solution that a person would get from you, implement in their business, call you back a year later and say, “Carolyn, you’re not going to believe what this solution has done for us?” What kind of emotion comes to you when you get that call or when you assess that? That’s number one. Not just the pain. This is not a messaging formula. This is, what is it that you fix that ignites you?
Every great cause has an enemy. Share on X

2.   “Who is the common enemy?

Is it a person that’s the common enemy or is it a thing?” Usually, in this case, it will be a thing like status quo or average results. What are you and your customer up against? It could be something the customer has in their mind about a possibility of solving the problem or there’s no better thing out there. It could be a belief set.

You’ve got to have some enemy so that you can face up to the enemy with the prospect. In our business, it’s the acceptance of average. It’s the acceptance of, “This is who I am. This is what I do. There’s no way I can get better results.” It’s that toleration of the average that is our biggest enemy.

I have to line up with my potential client or client and face up to every day. Every great cause has an enemy either a person, group of people, or thing that works against them. You’ve got to find out, “What is the enemy you’re helping them battle?”

3. “What is your personal promise to them that if they follow your advice and solution, they will achieve?”

What can you promise them?” This is not just a promise that comes out of nowhere. This could be a promise that comes as a result of you being inquisitive as to their problems, pains, where they want to go, their goals or dreams, which we always get and want you to ask.

Once you know that, where are you taking them? What’s the path of success? What’s the roadmap to help them get from where they are to where they want to be with your help along the way? What’s the personal promise to them if they follow you? You’ve got to have that. That’s part of your why, “I promise that if you do what I say, do it in the way and the order I say it, this is what will happen.”

4. I want you to describe your ideal client in detail.

What are their dilemmas? What are their untenable circumstances? What can they not live with or continue to live with? What do they face whether they know it or not?

I always suggest to my clients to write it out. Write a little mini-story, maybe 3 or 4 paragraphs. You surely know a lot about their lives, what they face, what they’re up against, what kinds of problems and challenges they have. Write it down. Be descriptive.

It’s almost like this is a teaser for a movie. When you see a teaser at the theater, the teaser either grabs you, and you say, “I have to see this.” Most of them don’t grab me. Most of them are clips from the actual movie.

They don’t carve a theme very well. As you describe your ideal client in detail, it will become very clear who you want to work with. That is your ideal client, who faces these dilemmas and problems, wants to get out of them and get to a clear future.

BCP 1 | Finding Your Why

Finding Your Why: What attracted you to the business you’re in now is very different from what attracted you to the business years ago.

 

5.  You and your preferences, “What kind of client are you unwilling to accept?”

Not all clients are created equal, even if they meet your demographic or psychographic requirements. What are some deal killers that would cause you to leave the process or run away from a prospective client? What will you not accept as you work with somebody?

The clearer you can be about what those yellow or red flags are, the clearer you are about why you’re there, who you want to work with, who you’re willing to accept, and who you’re not willing to accept. As you answer these questions, your why becomes a lot clearer to you.

If you’re in the consulting business and you help companies grow their business from $10 million to $50 million, that becomes a little bit easier of a why. If you’re in the telecom business and you help people solve big problems so that they can serve their customers better, then your why might require a little digging, but it’s still there.

Think about why you do what you do.

What attracted you to the business in the first place? What has kept you in the business in the long run?” What attracted you to the business you’re in is very different than what has happened to you as you’ve been in the business for 5, 7, or 10 years. That’s okay. The why’s can change in our lives as we get older and more mature, although people around me would doubt that. As we get older, more seasoned, and clearer then our ‘why’s’ can change. Take 15 to 20 minutes. Write those five questions down.

As we get older and more seasoned, our whys change. Share on X

I hope that helps. You can go to BillCaskey.com if you want to know more.

 

 

Establishing Authority in Your Market

If you want to be influential in your network, you must establish authority.

On this episode, I’ll give you some ways you can position yourself as a relevant influencer in your market. The first step is to answer the questions that are on your buyer’s minds. 

Also, enrollment is now open for both The 2X Group and The 2X Academy.

The 2X Group (Small Group Coaching): http://the2xgroup.com/

The 2X Academy (Online Virtual Training): http://the2xacademy.com

Also mentioned in this podcast:

 

Are You Feeling Adrift in Your Life?

On this episode of the podcast, Bill gets personal into his own struggle with being adrift in life. 

He also gives you some ways you can either help someone you know who might be dealing with this issue or maybe even yourself.

Also, enrollment is now open for both The 2X Group and The 2X Academy.

The 2X Group (Small Group Coaching): http://the2xgroup.com/

The 2X Academy (Online Virtual Training): http://the2xacademy.com

Also mentioned in this podcast: