Customers Expect More Than Just a Sales Rep
You may think you're a sales rep, but that's not what your customers want you to be. They expect more. A lot more. In fact, customers want you to be all of the following:- A Long-Term Ally. Customers expect you to be on their side, when it comes to fighting their own bureaucracy, and fighting the bureaucracy in your own firm. They want you to be there for them, keep communications open, and watch their backs when the going gets tough.
- A Business Consultant. Customers expect you to be focused, accurate, and knowledgeable about your products and your customers' needs and business objectives. They expect you to stay current with THEIR markets and business objectives and create great solutions to match.
- A Strategic Orchestrator. Customers expect you to create connections between and within the selling and buying organizations to expedite a sale, encourage the exchange of information, and make it easy for the customer to deal with your company.
- A Consistent Cultivator. Customers expect you to plan and manage the totality of the account relationship. On a daily basis, they expect you to make sure that nothing ever ever ever ever ever falls through the cracks.
- A Focused Optimist. Customers also expect you to create a positive atmosphere that makes buying from you a pleasant experience. On a daily basis, they expect you to be remain motivated, upbeat, and able meet your commitments, no matter what.
BTW, the list above comes from the sales training firm AchieveGlobal. Very smart bunch of people. Their CEO Sharon Daniels is one of the smartest people in the sales training business, IMHO. I've interviewed her several times.
RELATED POSTS:
Popular on MoneyWatch
- Reverse cell phone lookup service is free and simple
- Amy's Baking Company could face legal 'nightmare'
- 4 Things Not to Buy at Costco
- Top 10 professional life coaching myths
- 12 great college graduation gift ideas
- When it comes to vacations, the U.S. stinks 117 Comments
- Amy's Baking Company: Post-meltdown PR campaign
- TGI Fridays nailed for doctoring booze












