How to Build Relationships Through Transactional Sales
by Paul DiModica
10 Transactional Sales Steps To Grow Your Sales
Prospect Relationship Building Process
Here are four steps to build a prospect relationship:
- Step 1 -- Meet with the prospect for the first time during the pre-sale cycle and communicate your business value.
- Step 2 -- The prospect listens, believes your value, and buys the first time.
- Step 3 -- In post-sale, the prospect reviews the value of what you sold them to determine if what they bought is what you promised in pre-sale.
- Step 4 -- If the prospect decides they did receive what they were told they would get in pre-sale, then they buy a second time and this is when the relationship starts.
Hanging onto prospects because they make themselves available to you through email, visits to their office, phone conversations or just giving you verbal commitments is a waste of time.
Time management is the key to your selling success. Don't spend time with professional lookers; instead, sell qualified buyers who prove they are qualified. Use transactional selling by forcing prospects to take action steps with you during the sales process to prove to you they are qualified. Don't believe that prospects are going to buy just because they are accessible.
Always use transactional selling techniques, not relationship selling methods on your first sale. Your goal should be to turn your first sale (transactional) into a second sale (relationship).

10 Transactional Sales Steps
To Grow Your Sales
- Ask the prospect to come to your office.
- Ask the prospect to introduce you to their boss.
- Ask the prospect if you can send your contract to their legal department for review.
- Ask the prospect to sign your non-disclosure document.
- Ask the prospect to sign a letter of intent (LOI).
- Ask the prospect to tell you their budget.
- Ask the prospect to accompany you to an existing customer site.
- Ask the prospect to call your references (and confirm that they do it).
- Ask the prospect to make a small purchase or trial investment to see if they will buy the main investment you are targeting and to prove that they can get a purchase order out of their company.
- Ask the prospect to see your competitor's proposals -- so you can "compare."
"Business is a combination of war and sport."
Andre Maurois
Paul R. DiModica
CEO,
Value Forward Group
(770) 632-7647
www.valueforward.com
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| Paul DiModica founder and CEO of Value Forward Group and the senior
practice consultant in our firm. In addition to delivering content-rich speeches on marketing, strategy
and sales best practices, Paul is the editor of the world’s
largest sales, marketing, strategy and financial management newsletter called High Tech Success read by over 160,000 weekly subscribers in over 110 countries.
Paul has been featured or interviewed by the New York
Times, Investors Daily, Fox News, Selling Power Magazine,
Sales and Marketing Magazine, CIO Magazine, CFO Magazine, Entrepreneur
Magazine, Training Magazine, Marketing Magazine, The Manager's Intelligence Report,
Agent's Sales Journal, Time Compression Technologies Magazine,
Minorities and Women Magazine, Broker Agent News, Pennsylvania
Business Central Magazine, and
many others. For more information, visit http://www.valueforward.com |
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