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Gerry Weinberg & Associates, Inc. | Southfield, Michigan

This is a collection of twelve simple steps all salespeople should live by.

1. Being genuinely interested in your prospect’s personal and professional opinions will do as much
      (perhaps more) to develop rapport as identifying his personality style or discovering if he is a
      football, baseball, or hockey fan.

2. It’s just as important to disqualify a selling opportunity as it is to qualify it.

3. What the prospect wants and what the prospect actually needs are rarely the same.

4. The prospect’s problem is never what he thinks it is.

5. It’s more important for the prospect to discover that he has a best-fit problem for your solution than
     it is to demonstrate that you have a best-fit solution for his problem.

6. When the prospect says, “Money’s no problem,” it’s guaranteed to become one.


7. A prospect with a budget and a strong reluctance to spend it is no different than a prospect with no
      budget at all.

8. The objective of each encounter with a prospect is to either pave the way to the next step in the
      selling process—and eventually a buying decision—or to end the process.

9. When a prospect states that he can’t make a decision, he just did.

10. The financial investment to obtain your product or service is often less significant than the other
      “investments” the prospect must make to implement it.

11. Identifying how and by when a prospect will make a buying decision is just as important as
       discovering who is involved in the process.

12. If you wait for your customers to voluntarily provide you with referrals as a reward for the
       exceptional service you have delivered, you’ll be waiting a long time.

© Sandler Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.

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