Posts

The Marketing Person Dilemma: How to Hire the Right Person for Your Company

In this episode, Bill delves into the challenge of hiring the right marketing person for your company. He shares his insights on why most marketing people are not worth much to the company, and what to look for when hiring a marketing person who can actually generate results.

Bill stresses the importance of the marketing funnel and the customer journey, and how the right marketing person can help walk potential customers through the process of understanding your company’s value proposition.

Whether you’re a salesperson or a business owner, Bill offers valuable tips and strategies for making the right marketing hire for your company.

Can this “One Thing” radically improve your closing percentage? Go here to find out: https://resources.billcaskey.com/the-one-thing

Also, if you’d like to schedule a call with me to discuss how I can help you or your team reach your true potential even faster, go to http://scheduleacallwithcaskey.com

Subscribe to The Bill Caskey Podcast to get this delivered to your phone weekly!

 

Mastering the First Call

We can all agree that the first call is extremely important in the sales process.

The first call is where you set the stage to be the guide on your customer’s journey. If you fail to do that, you’re doomed from the start.

In this episode, Bill gives you a sure-fire method on how you can master the first call and never worry about blowing it again.

 

Can this “One Thing” radically improve your closing percentage? Go here to find out: https://resources.billcaskey.com/the-one-thing

Also, if you’d like to schedule a call with me to discuss how I can help you or your team reach your true potential even faster, go to http://scheduleacallwithcaskey.com

Subscribe to The Bill Caskey Podcast to get this delivered to your phone weekly!

 

How to Get Prospects to Sell You


No matter what anyone says, I don’t believe salespeople go into business so they can act desperate.

It’s true, if you think about it – most people in sales are there to do the right thing. Earn a living, provide for their family, secure their future. It’s not like they wake up thinking, “How will I intimidate someone into buying from me today?”

Now, I get it. We want to start selling, lickety-split. It’d be nice to start closing sales on Day One. Especially if you’re not out to hurt anyone. It’s time that can mess with our heads. The clock is ticking, and good time management is usually part of winning in sales. Think end of the month deadlines, life cycle of leads, and so forth.

I hate to be the one to tell you, but sales operates like marketing and follow-up. Many people need to hear things a good eight to twelve times before magic happens. If you let anxiety or impatience get the better of you, good intentions won’t matter. You need to send a sincere, patient message to your audience. Over and over.

Being in a hurry to sell sabotages your approach. Prospects want a calm, confident professional. Instead, they get a desperate, pushy salesperson. This is because the majority of communication is nonverbal. The sooner you understand that, the sooner you can adjust to send the right signals.


Heart for Sale

Our intentions and motives come from deep within. They’re based on what we believe. That’s common sense, right?

But as we know our intentions affect our actions. You’d think most people would connect them together. But common sense … isn’t all that common.

What’s interesting is salespeople notice this easily when they’re buying from another professional. But as soon as they get back in the seller’s chair… they forget all about it.

What difference would it make if you showed up differently? How would it look? You’d walk into a meeting where the only outcome that matters is serving the other person. Educating them. Solving their problems. Taking their side, instead of trying to push through their defenses.

It would send out vibes that the prospect could sense. They’d know just from the tone of your voice and the gleam in your eye. This changes everything.

Intention - Bill Caskey


The Lows and the Highs

There are people who only care about meeting a quota so they can earn commission. Do you think prospects can smell that? Of course. These are what I call “low-intent salespeople.”

They sell only for themselves. They don’t really care about the prospect. It’s a surprise if they even ask questions about the problem. They’re usually in a rush to get signatures.

High-intent salespeople, meanwhile, are in it for everyone. Of course, they want to succeed, but not at the expense of serving the customer.

High-intent salespeople also maintain healthy concern for their company. They regard sales calls as “interviews” to see if accepting the client solves problems for their firm.

High-intent salespeople also maintain healthy concern for their company. They regard sales calls as “interviews” to see if accepting the client solves problems for their firm. Share on X

The Best Intent = The Best Result

In most sales training, “results” usually means “more money for us.” Let’s flip the switch a little on this, to include process, focus and role reversal.


1. Process

The first thing high-intent selling changes is the overall experience of buying. It begins with marketing. On social media, blogs or anywhere else, are you generous with what you know? Can prospects take a few steps in the right direction, before you need money?

What about your funnel? Do you switch from soft marketing to a hard sell, or do you make time to give comfort to your prospect? Your first call should include a second dose of free knowledge they can use. The conversation should allow them to “brush up against you” and get a feel for you as someone they trust.

To close with high-intent, you need to be even more careful. Every call can have a blind corner or “misread signal” for the seller. How do you handle objections? Can you play with resistance, without being offensive? Can you reflect back to the prospect gently, applying pressure when it’s called for?

The salesperson who masters these subtleties of persuasion is a true champion. These are the ones clients later write to say, “Thank you for giving me the push I needed.”

 

2. Focus

If you’ve never watched a skilled journalist, you might want to pay attention to how they work. Celebrities give interviews to Barbara Walters, Howard Stern and Oprah Winfrey because they know they’ll be led into deep conversations – with millions of people watching.

Unlike salespeople, journalists don’t want money from guests. They want something far more important to the prospect … their story! Their background, pains, sorrows, hopes and aspirations. Don’t you think your prospects have stories? What if you’re competing for a piece of business their current vendor is neglecting? In your sales strategy, learn to think like a journalist.

A Word About Detachment

I recommend detachment as part of high-intent selling. But some people hear that and think it means, “Be passive.” Nope. Not at all.

The best definition for detachment is never being more interested in making the sale than the customer is in solving their problems. You are mindful of their pain, but you insist on remaining helpful rather than coercive.

It’s hard to frighten a salesperson who displays calmness, whether or not they actually make a sale. With high-intent selling, you remove pride from the equation and become preoccupied with serving the needs of the person in front of you..

Benevolent detachment sends a message to people: You are totally unafraid of them saying “No.” And that is exceedingly rare among salespeople.

 

3. Role Reversal

High-intent sellers usually end up being “sold” by their prospects. They radiate confidence and plenty of curiosity. They could be mistaken for “The Most Interesting Man (or Woman) in the World.” People insist on doing business, just because they find you interesting.

Some global companies “brand” with their audiences well. High-intent selling is a form of branding, graphic design and flashy logos or not. What people get from it is a feeling. If your prospects feel the difference, they need less persuading than normal.

Take it from me, you want to know what this feels like. The kind of sales conversations you’ll have will make it all worthwhile.

I don’t know if you’re intrigued with this. If you are, I invite you to my website to learn more about The 2X Group. It’s a mastermind we’ve created for sales professionals to help them do exactly what I’ve laid out in this article.

Click here to learn more about The 2X Group. 

 

 

What Are Your Non-Negotiables?

What are the things that you must do? The rules you live by, your no option behaviors? Do you have any?

On this Leader Edition of The Bill Caskey Podcast, Bill gives you 5 rules you should be reinforcing with your sales team. If you implement these behaviors, then your team will grow every month.

If you want my help in assembling a coaching solution for your team, go to https://billcaskey.com/mainwp/growmyteam to schedule a call.

Also mentioned in this podcast:

Do you have a “No Competition” Strategy?

Corporate Leaders, you spend lots of money on marketing and business development, but are you working on the REAL PROBLEM?

How to equip your sales force to position your solution as a “category of one” with their prospects? I find most sales teams are awful at this.

On this week’s leadership edition episode, I’ll give you some things to work on with your sales team to create a No Competition Strategy. 

Also mentioned in this podcast:

Your Team and Your Prospect’s Experience

This might be the reason you’re losing deals you shouldn’t be losing. 

On this Leadership Edition of The Bill Caskey Podcast, Bill discusses the importance of both your team and your prospect’s experience during the sales process.

He also gives you some ways your team can improve this experience and close more business.

Also mentioned in this podcast:

How To Get An 80% Close Rate

In this episode, I share 7 strategies I have found work to radically bump up your close rate. This is THE #1 metric you should be focused on.

P.S. When You’re Ready, Here Are 3 Ways I Can Help…

1. Discover how you can “change the game” of professional selling. Get more out of your market by reading this free Ebook (w/video training). www.billcaskey.com/gamechanger

2. Are you a sales leader who wants to hang around equally ambitious souls? Then check out my webinar called “Rise of The World Class Sales Leader.” It’s free. https://resources.billcaskey.com/risewebinar

3. Transform your results by being part of my sales mastermind, The 2X Group. Groups forming soon, so apply now. https://www.the2xgroup.com/

Also mentioned in this podcast:

 

Shifting Your Mind From Limited To Unlimited

On this week’s Bill Caskey Podcast, I am on the road. But that won’t stop from getting this podcast to you!

This topic from a recent call I had with my 2X Mastermind Group and one of the members was talking about how his territory was too large for him to get to everyone and he needed help.

I gave him some advice that I think really shocked him and that was he needed to shift his mind and action from his limited physical self to an unlimited DIGITAL self. He needed to start producing content online for his clients and prospects.

Maybe it’s time for you to do the same! I’ll give you some ways to get started right away.

Also mentioned in this podcast:

 

Maximizing Your Customer Experience – From a Pro

Have you ever thought about how you make your customers feel?

On this week’s Podcast, I had the privilege of sitting down with Brian Good, a client who’s doing exceptional work as a Senior Manager for Strategic Accounts for a telecommunications company.

From his 20 years of successful selling, he shares his lessons learned about developing a personal brand (Hint: it’s not just about your photos), time blocking for maximum efficiency, and why continued personal development is key.

You won’t want to miss what tips he has to give you. So, grab your headphones (and a #2 pencil) and join me on my interview with Brian Good!

Also mentioned in this podcast: