

|
Selling to Big Companies (Paperback) (Paperback)
by Jill Konrath
Category:
Business, Sales, Market |
Market price: ¥ 168.00
MSL price:
¥ 158.00
[ Shop incentives ]
|
Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
|
MSL Pointer Review:
A "must read" for anyone in sales attempting to get a "foot in the door" with large companies! |
If you want us to help you with the right titles you're looking for, or to make reading recommendations based on your needs, please contact our consultants. |
 Detail |
 Author |
 Description |
 Excerpt |
 Reviews |
|
|
Author: Jill Konrath
Publisher: Kaplan Business
Pub. in: December, 2005
ISBN: 1419515624
Pages: 256
Measurements: 8.9 x 5.9 x 0.7 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA00898
Other information: Language: English ISBN-13: 978-1419515620
|
Rate this product:
|
- MSL Picks -
This succinct, concise, pointed, clearly written guide will help anyone who aims to sell to big companies. Author Jill Konrath is practical, focused and no-nonsense. She includes few of the personal yarns that freckle most such manuals, but enough to let readers know that she writes from experience. Much of what she says is common sense and should be general knowledge. For example, it is hard to imagine that any salesperson would waste time on self-promotion when customers really need and want solutions to their own problems. Yet many sales guides - including this one - emphasize the need to ask questions and offer solutions, so the emphasis must be necessary. The author provides a straightforward how-to manual, with step-by-step guides. She is not afraid to tackle the most elementary matters, such as how to write a letter or how to script a call. We find that this book deserves a place on the shelf of any sales manager or salesperson who is targeting big companies.
Target readers:
Salesperson, marketers.
|
Jill Konrath is an expert in complex sales strategies. Her web site www.sellingtobigcompanies.com is a popular resource for sellers seeking contracts in the corporate market. She publishes one of the industry’s top sales blogs, as well as a newsletter with thousands of subscribers around the world. An in-demand speaker and workshop presenter, Jill is frequently quoted in news media nationwide.
|
Struggling to Get Your Foot in the Door of Big Companies?
Setting up meetings with corporate decision makers has never been harder. It's almost impossible to get them to pick up the phone. They never return your calls. And if you do happen to catch them, they blow you off right away.
It's time to stop making endless cold calls or waiting for the phone to ring. In today's crazy marketplace, new sales strategies are needed to penetrate these big accounts.
Discover how to:
• Target accounts where you have the highest likelihood of success.
• Find the names of prospects who can use your offering.
• Create breakthough value propositions that capture their attention.
• Develop an effective, multi-faceted account-entry campaign.
• Overcome obstacles and objections that derail your sale efforts.
• Position yourself as an invaluable resource, not a product pusher.
• Have powerful initial sales meetings that build unstoppable momentum.
• Differentiate yourself from other sellers.
Use these sure-fire strategies to crack into big accounts, shrink your sales cycle and close more business. Check out the Account Entry Toolkit for ideas on how to apply this process to your own unique business.
|
View all 7 comments |
Josiane Feigon (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-19 00:00>
This book is timely and relevant for today's competitive and always changing sales environment. With large corporate mergers and acquisitions, it's difficult to know how to effectively sell into these large organizations.
Jill's approach is tactical, clear and focused. I'm recommending it to all my sales teams and managers.
Great work!
|
Robert Morris (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-19 00:00>
Frankly, I began to read this book with some skepticism because I had already read dozens (hundreds?) of books about sales - including Anthony Parinello's Selling to VITO and Getting to VITO - and doubted that there would be much (if anything) left for Jill Konrath to discuss. I soon realized that I was wrong. True, Konrath offers few head-snapping revelations but her extensive personal experience (especially with rejection and failure) is rigorously examined, her advice is eminently practical, and the material is rock-solid, enhanced by the direct and conversational rapport she immediately establishes and then sustains with her reader. So many books about sales resemble a series of formal presentations at a conference or lectures by a business school professor. Not so with Konrath who understands that competition (with one's self as well as with others) is "the name of the game" in the business world, and, success there can be achieved only in the "trenches" of thorough preparation and styrategic (but prudent) persistence.
Appropriately, in Part One, she first explains what is required of those who attempt to sell to "big(ger)" companies. There are many challenges to avoid or overcome, several the result of misconceptions which Konrath summarily repudiates. This is a uniquely valuable section of the book because it makes crystal clear what experienced salespersons must "un-learn" about what they have assumed to be true thus far, and by doing so, Konrath makes it crystal clear to others what simply doesn't work...and why. Those in the latter group will probably find it easier to apply her advice which is at all times practical...and immediately actionable.
In Part Two, Konrath explains how to "build a foundation" for what eventually should become a cohesive, comprehensive, and cost-effective system for effective preparation, cultivation, and solicitation. What she is talking about really is a high-stakes "game" played against formidable opponents according to rules which can sometimes change suddenly. Some of the most important material in this Part focuses on the imperative need for a strong value proposition. There's good news and there's bad news. First the bad news: Most value propositions are weak. Now the good news: Most value propositions are weak. Her explanation of how to formulate and then leverage a strong value proposition, all by itself, is well worth ten (or 100) times the cost of the book.
With all necessary preparations thoroughly explained and illustrated (i.e. what's true and what isn't, what works and what doesn't), Konrath shifts her attention to "launching the campaign" in Part Three. Once again, there is a step-by-step process involved: Identify key decision-makers, Stop waiting for them to call back, Create enticing voice mail messages, Leverage e-mail strategies to get in, etc.
What about barriers and how to overcome them? Konrath explains "how to become irresistible to decision-makers" by overcoming obstacles and eliminating objections in Part Four. In Chapter 18, for example, she explains how not to treat a gate keeper who can then become an ally, a "gate opener."
How to accelerate the sales process? This question raises immensely complicated issues because decision-makers have too much to do, not enough time, and are under great pressure to add value to their company by eliminating waste, lowering operating costs, increasing productivity, solving various problems, filling various needs, etc. Although decision-makers are indeed hurried and harried, they will strongly resent being "pushed" by overly aggressive salespeople. What to do to "advance the sale"...and what not to do? Konrath addresses those and other important issues in Part Five.
I especially appreciate Konrath's use of various reader-friendly devices, such as a "Key Points" section with which she concludes each of the 22 chapters. These devices will facilitate, indeed accelerate a periodic review of her core concepts as well as her admonitions and commendations. (Often, her advice as to what not to do is more valuable than is her advice as to what to do.) I also appreciate the nine "tools" which she provides in Appendix A. It would be a fool's errand to read any one book -- including this none -- and then immediately (and mindlessly) adopt and apply all of its author's ideas. Think in terms of having a tool box into which you place those tools which you have carefully selected from a variety of different sources. I certainly recommend Konrath's "tools" (including the nine in Appendix A) but also Neil Rackham's concerning SPIN Selling questions and what Jacques Werth has learned about perfecting closing skills and then using them to pre-qualify prospects. The point is, learn all you can about all of the salesmanship "tools" which are now available but use only those which are most appropriate to your needs, and, only those which work best together in combination.
Earlier, I did not damn with faint praise when suggesting that there are few (if any) head-snapping revelations in this book, nor does does Konrath claim that she offers any. Some readers (probably experienced salespeople) may be surprised to learn that some of their cherished ideas about selling are either wrong or no longer sound. What gives Konrath credibility and what makes her material so valuable is the fact that, as she frankly admits, she once had all manner of misconceptions about selling and, because of them, probably made every wrong decision and every mistake possible. She acknowledges the difficulty of re-thinking what to do and how to do it. She has also learned a great deal from those enrolled in her sales training programs. (The best teachers always learn at least as much as their students whereas the worst teachers never seem to learn anything, nor do their students.) In this book, Konrath shares what she thinks is most important and urges her reader to remember what is most important. She concludes with this advice:
"Finally, realize that you are the biggest differentiator of all. Become an expert. Know your customer's business, processes, and marketplace trends as well as they do. Deepen your knowledge of your product line, capabilities, and total solution capacity. Constantly be thinking about how you can help your customers improve their operations and reach their goals. Competitors can create copycat products and services overnight, but no one can replicate you and your brain. Your ability to provide a continuous stream of fresh ideas, insights, and information to corporate buyers will make you irresistible, invaluable, and ultimately, indispensable."
|
Joanne S. Black (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-19 00:00>
Jill Konrath reminds all of us that selling is everything about the client and nothing about us. Whether you are new to sales or a veteran, this book is a must-read. Jill immediately gets us into the shoes of our harried customers and teaches us how to talk to them. She provides specific questions for us to answer and gives us tips and templates for making a call. I've been selling and managing sales teams my entire career, wrote my book on selling-No More Cold CallingTM: The Breakthrough System That Will Leave Your Competition in the Dust-and I took tips away from this book that I've used immediately. This is an engaging and important read! |
Thom Singer (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-19 00:00>
Jill Konrath knows the problems that sales people are having in today's competitive market. As I read the first few chapters it was as if she was writing the book specifically for me. Anyone who is in sales must read this book, then hire her to speak to your whole team. This book is destined to be amongst the all time classic sales books. |
View all 7 comments |
|
|
|
|