5 Sales Techniques for Small Businesses lyrics

by

Jon Bellion


Every small business’ lifeblood is sales, regardless of the product or service it provides. Contractors need customers. Retailers need customers. Architects, landscapers, glaziers, salons, sports bars, graphic designers, and antique shops all rely on local, regional, and even national consumers to stay in business. With so much competition, small businesses must take advantage of every opportunity to increase sales and expand their customer bases. With an expanding customer base come more retained customers. Retained or repeat customers often are the difference between existence and extinction. Because there’s no magic bullet, small businesses must take a multi-pronged approach to sales:
Cold Calling - No one likes this technique, but it gets results. If it didn’t work, no business would ever use it. Though cold calling is typically associated with insurance salesmen and stock brokers, contractors use it as well. Reaching out to the general public one phone call at a time might seem like a waste of effort, but one happy paying customer builds a bridge to more happy paying customers. During a cold call, a business can grab a person’s attention, and inexpensive promotional items can lead to big results.
Enticements and Promotions - Customers love getting good deals. The success of two-for-one deals, buy-one-get-one programs, free promotional items, or just saving a significant percent makes customers feel they really are getting more for less. In fact, the cliché “the more you buy, the more you save” is rooted in this phenomenon. Simply promising customers a token gift for just visiting an establishment results in more sales.
Internal Analysis - Few business owners care for going over monthly reports. Even fewer will actually assess those monthly figures meaningfully. However, this little-used technique has huge sales potential. Business owners who keep in the know about the intricacies of their operations will realize more net sales than those who don’t make the commitment. Identifying trends takes out a lot of guesswork out of the sales equation.
Talk Up Your Sales - Sales is as much of an art as a science. It’s using a combination of experience, gut instinct, business analytics, and industry knowledge to make a sale. Three things are paramount to getting more customers to commit: attitude, due diligence, and demeanour. The first is acting as though business is thriving. Customers won’t tolerate begging. The second is knowing your customers’ business well enough to speak the jargon. The third is not using negative language during any portion of the sales presentation.
Incorporating Technology - Tablet computers aren’t just for reading digital books and playing games on the go. Using social media to reach more customers is one way to break down geographic barriers. Technology can be a small business’ best sales weapon if used correctly, and is increasingly necessary for any business to stay afloat as more and more consumers and clients do their shopping and conduct their business online.
By using a multifaceted approach, small businesses can grow and prosper for years to come, and you can use data storytelling to visualise the results of your efforts and hone them from there. Even big companies can’t afford to overlook multiple methods of bolstering sales, especially when it comes to learning how to use new communication technologies to connect with more customers. Small businesses have little to lose and everything to gain by using all avenues available to support their sales.
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