| People
who talk themselves out of anything usually do a vast majority of the
talking and too little of the listening. Another truth is people who use
their mental skills instead of their verbal skills do most of the
listening and very little talking. The first step toward improving your
listening skills is simply to begin doing it. Keep a mental stopwatch
for yourself and your prospect. How much time are you each logging? Once
you are listening instead of talking, you will be ready to enhance your
listening skills. Listening is a skill that can be learned and
continually improved, but most of us have never been trained to listen.
For example, which do we do most during the day, read or listen? Most of
us generally listen more than we read, yet how many listening lessons
did we get in school? It is not surprising that most people need help in
becoming skillful listeners. The many evaluations we have conducted in
our consulting work consistently show salespeople with miserable scores
in the areas of listening skills. Sales
managers need to be especially mindful of the listening skill levels of
your youngest salespeople who have grown up in today's fast-paced world
of rock videos and Music Television (MTV). Their ears may have been
deluged with more words in their young lives than many sales managers
have ever even heard! As a matter of mental survival under a barrage of
hyped-up verbiage, many young people have nearly turned off their
listening skills. They have certainly had little motivation to
develop them. Here
are ten great pointers that can help sharpen listening skills in any situation:
Remember,
your objective is to listen your prospect into buying.
You do not need
to remind yourself of what you think, you must find out what your
prospect thinks. There is not one sales principle that requires you to
"get your two cents worth in." Perhaps
a little listening would also help as we look around the Triad at
everyone who is desperately trying "to be heard." Anti Fed-Ex
groups, Pro Fed-Ex groups, Anti and Pro Randleman Dam groups, pro-school
and anti-school redistricting groups...the list goes on. How about your
customers. Aren't they just trying to be heard, too? Think about
it...and start asking the right questions. |







