THE SECRET TO SALES? STOP SELLING

Forget the hard sell—it doesn’t work. Try these low-key selling tips, and your products and services will nearly sell themselves.

Writer/Author/Publisher/Speaker, Garden Guides Press
MAY 23, 2013Small-business owners successful at sales know the best way to sell something is not to sell it. “Selling is not, ‘Here’s a great product with all of these wonderful features, so buy it,'” says Leslie Buckley, who has spent her career selling for a variety of small businesses, most recently TruDenta.

“Selling is much different from representing,” Buckley says. “It’s more like being a doctor or therapist. You listen to potential customers about what they want or need, and then you introduce your product as the answer. You want people to think buying your services was their idea.”

When selling your business, telling people how good you are usually falls on deaf ears, says Cheryl Osborn, president of Casco Contractors, Inc.,  a design-build general contractor for building owners, property managers and tenants. “Rather than direct selling, you need to prove your value to potential clients,” Osborn says.

Ask Questions and Listen

Instead of listing the many ways your product or service is just what the client needs, simply listen, says Buckley, who sells to dentists. “I’ll ask the dentists to tell me about their practices and how business has been, which gives me a great deal of useful information, including what motivates them as buyers,” she says. “Knowing their motivation directs my sales tactics. For instance, the tech savvy dentist will want to hear about the technology of the product, while the person interested in money will appreciate hearing about how much other dentists have earned.”

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It’s important that the client sets the stage and does all the talking at first, Osborn agrees. “Telling customers what they need is offensive, like an ‘eye-rolling’ creepy sales pitch. Sometimes it may take you asking five or six well-constructed questions to get feedback, but if you’re patient, the potential client will divulge useful information.”

Problem Solve

No client wants to engage with you unless you can help in some way, Osborn says. “By listening to your customers and getting to know what troubles them, you are able to customize a solution that involves your product. Rather than selling, your job is problem solving, which is a win-win for everyone.”

Educate and Differentiate

Selling also works when you educate customers about how your product or service can help differentiate them from their competitors, Buckley says.

“It’s all about telling them they can be special and different if only they try your product or service,” she says. One particular product she’s selling, which helps dentists to treat pain without drugs, has a 95 percent clinical success rate. “Such information educates potential clients about the value of the product. Share as much information as possible without being overwhelming, so clients can make their own decisions.”

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Osborn, on the other hand, tends to lean heavier on stories than statistics. “I’ve found that if I give potential clients a bunch of stats about my company, they get bored and feel like I’m hard selling,” she says. “Tell anecdotes about other people who faced similar challenges and found solutions. Such stories reveal how you can help them.”

Demonstrate Passion

If you truly believe in the product or service you’re selling, that enthusiasm will impress potential clients.

“I’m really passionate about the product I’m selling and excited about how it can help people by relieving their pain,” Buckley says. “People see how much I believe in the dental system, and that encourages them to ask for the specifics. Let your confidence and commitment to your product shine through, and you can’t help but attract sales.”

If you take these low-key sales tactics to heart, you’ll may discover that your products and services nearly sell themselves.

Read more about small business sales.

A freelancer since 1985, Julie Bawden-Davis has written for many publications, including Entrepreneur, Better Homes & Gardens and Family Circle.

Photo: iStockphoto

Julie Bawden-Davis

Julie Bawden-Davis is a bestselling journalist, blogger, speaker and novelist. Widely published, she has written 25 books and more than 4,000 articles for a wide variety of national and international publications. For many years, Julie was a columnist with the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle and Parade.com. In nonfiction, Julie specializes in home and garden, small business, personal finance, food, health and fitness, inspirational profiles and memoirs. She is founder and publisher of HealthyHouseplants.com and the YouTube channel Healthy Houseplants. Julie is also a prolific novelist who has penned two fiction series.