05 Personal Selling and Sales Promotion Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in 05 Personal Selling and Sales Promotion Deck (18)
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1
Q

Types of sales jobs (6)

A
  • order taker (person who checks out my groceries, can also be order getter in some cases)
  • technical specialist
  • missionary salesperson (not selling product or service but information)
  • new business salesperson (changing entire network)
  • order getter (get someone to become a customer or switch to my product)
  • team selling
2
Q

Approaches to selling (2)

A

1) Transactional selling: approach that focuses on making an immediate sole with little concern for developing a long-term relationship with the customer
2) relationship selling: process by which a salesperson secures, develops and maintains long-term, profitable customer relationships

3
Q

The sales process (8)

A

1) Prospecting & Qualifying
2) Pre-Approach (1+2=Prep)
3) Approach
4) Need assessment
5) Presentation/the Pitch (1 minute, capure attention)
6) Meeting objections
7) Closing
8) Follow up and service (relationship building e.g. car buy)

4
Q

Prospecting definition

A

Prospecting is the process by which salespeople identify and develop a list of possible customers via directories and commercial databases, search engines, customer referrals, trade shows and cold calling.

5
Q

Qualifying definiton

A

Process of identifying good prospects and screening out poor ones(age, mental instability). Good prospects are identified by job, appearance, fashion. Once the prospects are identified, the salesperson must then qualify leads.

6
Q

MAD Buyer

A

M - Money to spend
A - Authority to buy
D - Desire to buy

7
Q

Pre-approach definiton

A

At this stage, the salesperson learns as much as possible about a prospective customer before making a sales call.

8
Q

Approach definition

A

Salesperson meets the buyer and gets the relationship off to a good start (first impressions very important!).

9
Q

Need assessment definition

A

At this stage, the salesperson mus discover, clarify and understand the buyer’s needs via the following steps:

1) Questioning to identify the need
2) Need identification (have i found a solution to your problem?
3) Pre-commitment (“if yes, would you buy today?”)

10
Q

Presentation definition

A

Now the salesperson tells the product “story” to the buyer using the need-satisfaction approach. Presentation is usually referred to as a discussion of those product and/or service features that the customer has indicated as important to them.

  • built around a forceful product demonstration
  • prepared presentation vs. adaptive selling
11
Q

Tips for effective presentation (4)

A

1) Keep it short and simple (KISS).
2) Talk the prospects language (technical language not advised).
3) Stress the application or function of the product/service to the prospects situation (thats why they were interested in the first place)
4) Seek credibility at every turn.

12
Q

Handling Objections definition

Types of objections

A

Here the salesperson seeks out, clarifies and overcomes customer objections to buying. These should be welcomed as opportunities, because they indicate that the prospect has some interest in the proposition. Objections are not obstacles but opportunities

  • price or value objections
  • product/service objections
  • procrastinating objections
  • hidden objections: salespersons attitude
13
Q

Closing definition

A

Finally, the salesperson asks the customer for an order. Closing the deal has to be anti-climactic and yes/no questions should be avoided to avoid rejection.

14
Q

(3) Common Sales closes

A

1) assumptive close: would you like to pick up tomorrow? should be deliver wednesday? now what size do you want?
2) special offer close: if you buy this product today, we’ll double the length of the warranty
3) summary close: you have agreed that our product is the best on the market, correct? then i suggest that you place your first order today so we can have it to you by the end of the week - summarizing why

15
Q

Follow-up definition

A

This stage occurs after the sale and ensures customer satisfaction and repeat business. The sale is definetly not over when they get the order (relationship selling vs. transactional selling) and the customer has to be fully satisfied, thus building trust. Also important to note is that existing customers are cheaper to maintain than to acquire new ones.

16
Q

Sales Promotion

A

Short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product/service -> is about buying now rather than later (coupons, expiration dates, volume discounts)

17
Q

Sales promotion targets (4)

A

1) Final Buyers (consumer promotions)
2) Retailers and wholesalers (trade promotions)
3) Business customers (business promotions)
4) Members of the sales force (sales force promotions)

18
Q

Sales promotion types (4)

A

1) consumer promotions: urge short-term customer buying or boost customer brand involvement
2) trade promotions: market shares, incentives for new models: get retailers to carry new items and more inventory, buy ahead, or promote the company’s products and give them more shelf space
3) business promotions: generate business leads, stimulate purchases, reward customers, and motivate salespeople
4) sales force promotions: get more sales force support for current or new products and motivate salespeople to sign up for new accounts