If you’ve got your sights set on becoming the best salesperson in your company, take a few pointers from people who are already doing it. Create a consistent schedule and stick to it. Then, be adaptable, watch for unplanned opportunities, and always carry your business card.
There’s an easy way to identify a successful salesperson: Shadow them for a day and learn about their routine. Because what sets the most successful salespeople apart is the consistency of their daily routine.
Often, making just a few adjustments in daily habits can mean the difference between doing alright and doing ridiculously awesome.
If you were to take a close look at a day (or week) in the life of a successful salesperson, here’s what you’d see:
7:45 a.m. Arrive at the office, grab a cup of joe, and get to work.
8:00 a.m. Make cold calls, contact prospects, and book appointments for the week.
12:00 p.m. Take a break for lunch.
1:00 p.m. Go out on sales calls, or conduct follow-up activities, such as emailing, generating proposals, thinking about strategies for sales meetings, gathering materials, and so forth.
Next Monday, repeat the same schedule.
These three days are not just filled with random sales appointments. Successful salespeople have a strategy to their calls. They’re not going to make a call on the west side of town on Tuesday at 9 a.m., and the hit the road to high tail it to the east side of town by 10:30 a.m. A good salesperson will geographically group sales appointments together so as to not waste time driving about town.
Time spent in the car getting from one appointment to another is wasted time, and savvy salespeople figure out how to plan their sales calls to maximize their availability. If that means scheduling meetings into the evening hours for a packed-out Tuesday, that’s what a salesperson will do to be successful. Then, on Wednesday, he will group sales calls together in another geographic area of town.
8:00 a.m. Hit the road again to meet with prospects scheduled for the morning hours.
1:00 p.m. After lunch, head back to the office and start gathering up loose ends and notes from the week’s worth of face-to-face meetings.
A good salesperson knows that in Friday afternoon meetings, nothing gets done. People are already ready for the weekend, and aren’t in “meeting” mode. So instead, he spends energy putting thoughts together, taking notes of important events from the week, and so forth.
Aside from consistency in scheduling, three factors characterize a successful salesperson:
If you’ve got your sights set on becoming the best salesperson in your company, take a few pointers from people who are already doing it. Create a consistent schedule and stick to it. Then, be adaptable, watch for unplanned opportunities, and always carry your business card.
Robert Hartline
Robert Hartline is a Telecom entrepreneur with 19 years of wireless industry experience in…
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