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Successful Small Business Sales Techniques

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If you own a small business, sooner or later you have to make sales. Some entrepreneurs view the prospect of a sales call with the same fear and loathing as having to face an IRS audit. Even if you have salespeople on your team, some customers—especially big customers and clients—need to see the owner before they’ll sign on the dotted line. So you’re going to have to get out there—or on the Zoom call—and make the pitch.

Take heart: Sales is a craft, not an art. It can be learned. Here are a few keys to successful sales:

Your sales pitch: By listening to customers, you find the issues important to them. At some point, you need to make the pitch—actually ask a “prospect” to buy. Of course, you don’t push right in. A sales pitch goes something like the following:

First, you’ve got the pitch itself: the description of your product or service and its benefits and competitive advantage. You can probably do that.

Next, you wait. You listen for the customer’s concerns and objections. If they don’t say anything, you ask something like, “Does that make sense to you?”

Third, you reply to their concerns directly. And you ask them something like, “Did I answer your questions?”

Finally, you screw up your courage and say, “I’d really like your business. I think we’re a very good fit for your needs. Can we make that happen?”

Of course, then you’ve got negotiation on price and terms and the like, but you’ve agreed to do business together.

Take heart. Making sales gets easier—not easy, but easier—the more you do it. And you have to do it if you want to grow your business.


Copyright Rhonda Abrams, 2021

This article originally ran in USA Today on April 21, 2021

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