If your sales script is no longer working, don’t toss it in the trash. Breathe new life into your script: be sure it includes the right components and avoids the wrong ones.
Sales scripts have been a mainstay for as long as people have been hocking goods on street corners and from wooden carts. Why do they still work today? Because human nature never changes.
Essentially, a sales script helps guide the presentation so it hits the right pain points for the audience. The script ensures that you target the message. It keeps the presentation simple and to the point, so you maximize your time with a prospect.
The first thing a sales script should include is an action item. This item can either gather intelligence on a prospect or it can lead to a face-to-face meeting with the prospect.
For example, if you’re talking to a prospect about payment processors, you might approach it this way:
“John, I know you’re using XYZ payment processor. I also know that we can beat your processor’s capability and cost. What I’d like to do is get together next Tuesday and talk about it.”
Essentially, the action here is forward moving, soliciting an appointment, and hitting the prospect’s pain points with regard to features and cost.
Lately, there’s been a trend in sales script how-to’s that focuses on asking the prospect about their business. This question doesn’t convey a genuine interest, and it merely serves to turn the prospect off. In truth, most prospects see right through this strategy.
A better strategy involves conveying to the prospects that you have their best interests at heart.
As you’re developing a sales script for your team, or tweaking your own, it’s best to avoid certain practices that inevitably kill the sale. Here are just a few:
Even with the best sales script, there may come a time when your salespeople hit a dry spell or the script just isn’t getting the results it used to. Here are a few strategies for breathing new life into the script:
If your sales script is no longer working, don’t toss it in the trash. Breathe new life into your script: be sure it includes the right components and avoids the wrong ones.
Robert Hartline
Robert Hartline is a Telecom entrepreneur with 19 years of wireless industry experience in…
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