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    Start the Year Off Right: New Sales Ideas to Try This Quarter

    Maura Schreier-Fleming
    SalesWomen In Business

    Did you make any New Year’s resolutions this year? If you didn’t, why not consider a few new approaches in your selling instead of making resolutions? Here are a few sales ideas to consider so you can start the year off right.

    Sales idea #1: Take more credit for your work (especially if you’re female)

    A study published in the British Medical Journal found that "clinical articles involving a male first or last author were more likely to present research findings positively in titles and abstracts compared with articles in which both the first and last author were women." As a result, the studies authored by men received about 10% more citations than the studies authored by women.

    Did you know that citations are used for hiring and promotion decisions? Women scientists are not promoting themselves as well as men and suffer as a result.

    I would imagine that business and sales are no different than the medical arena with men also making more sweeping claims about their work and women doing so less often.

    However, there’s one very obvious area I notice a discrepancy between men and women taking credit: when they receive compliments. I've observed that women tend to minimize the compliments they get. They will say, “It's nothing” or “No problem.”

    Ladies: You work just as hard as men do. Please acknowledge compliments with a “Thanks for noticing” or “It was my pleasure.” By graciously accepting the compliment you strengthen the compliment by acknowledging you did something special. Refuting a compliment hurts you because you are disputing what the speaker says. Don’t do that!

    Sales idea #2: Be less negative

    I believe it’s much easier to criticize than it is to be complimentary. After all, isn’t it easier to spot what’s going wrong instead of seeing all that is going right? Part of what you’re selling is your attitude. Who would prefer to buy from a complaining, negative know-it-all? While that’s an extreme description, think about how you are perceived by others. Are you known for your positive attitude? Or are you known for your Debbie Downer persona?

    This year, why not hold your tongue instead of complaining? Remember that criticism is a complaint whether you perceive it that way or not. Catch yourself when all you have to contribute is something negative. And even if you start offering a negative critique, it’s not too late to pull back. You can stop yourself with “Oh, never mind.”

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    I’m not saying to ignore all faults. What I am saying is you need to think about an attitude adjustment if all your comments are about small, insignificant items that only you have noticed that need improvement.

    Sales idea #3: Help your customers understand why

    I’ll never forget a sales call I made with a newly hired salesperson. The customer was engaged in the sales conversation, and I thought the salesperson was doing a good job answering questions. But there were a few questions the customer asked that made me curious about why he was asking them. At this point, my colleague should have asked, in a non-threatening way, why the customer was asking those specific questions, but he didn't. However, that wasn't his biggest error.

    So what was his biggest error? It was his response to the customer's questions: “You don’t need to know that.” I nearly gasped. Nothing angers intelligent people more than when their valid questions are dismissed. The insulting reply that the salesperson made also made him miss an opportunity to help his customer understand the importance of an item.

    I find that customers are more likely to buy and accept your recommendations when they understand how you make sales recommendations and why you make them. The “you don’t need to know that” answer shuts down all dialogue and understanding. It also stops the sales process, as it stopped it for that sales colleague of mine.

    You could take any one of these ideas and make a new year’s resolution. You don’t have to. I’m suggesting that you simply think about any or all of these ideas. You might even pick one idea and try one small step this year to implement it. Who knows? You just might see a change in your sales results. Isn’t that what resolutions are all about anyway?

    RELATED: 5 Things You Can Do Today to Sell More

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    Profile: Maura Schreier-Fleming

    Maura Schreier-Fleming is president of Best@Selling, a sales training and sales consulting company. She works with business and sales professionals to increase sales and earn larger profits. She is the author of Real-World Selling for Out-of-this-World Results and Monday Morning Sales Tips. Maura focuses on sales strategies and tactics that lead to better sales results. Maura is a sales expert for WomenSalesPros. She is part of their group of top sales experts who inspire, educate, and develop salespeople and sales teams.She speaks internationally on influence, selling skills, and strategic selling at trade association and sales meetings, demonstrating how her principles can be applied to get results. She successfully worked for over 20 years in the male-dominated oil industry with two major corporations, beginning at Mobil Oil and ending at Chevron Corp. She was Mobil Oil’s first female lubrication engineer in the U.S. and was one of Chevron’s top five salespeople in the U.S. having sold over $9 million annually. Maura writes several columns to share her sales philosophies. She's been quoted in the New York Times, Selling Power, and Entrepreneur.

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