BY ALAN ZIMMERMAN
Life in sales isn”™t fair. You know that. Some salespeople have more than their share of difficulties, and some salespeople get more breaks than they deserve.
What fascinates me is how salespeople respond to their difficulties. Some of them use their difficulties as an excuse for their lack of achievement, while others use their difficulties as the motivation for their success.
I remember one set of identical twins that were raised by an alcoholic father. At age 14, the twins were sent to separate foster homes, not to be reunited for some 30 years.
When they were brought together at age 44, they were interviewed on a TV talk show. One of the twins had become an alcoholic like his father, while the other one had become a teetotaler. When the TV host asked them why they turned out the way they did, they both gave the same answer. Each of them said, “What do you expect? How could I turn out any differently considering the father I had?”
Simply put, it wasn”™t so much their difficulty that made the difference in their lives. It was their response to the difficulty that made them a winner or a loser.
The same is true in your career. Your attitude determines your altitude. Good sales attitudes tend to bring good sales results, and bad sales attitudes tend to bring bad sales results. In fact, your attitude will defeat you faster than any problem you”™ll ever have or any competition you”™ll ever encounter.
So how do you develop a killer sales attitude? An attitude that will get you back up when you get knocked down by objections, price comparisons, unethical tactics and a host of other things? You need to do four things.
1. Stop catastrophizing.
The more you fret about your lack of sales, about not meeting your sales quota or whatever you fret about, the less energy you”™ll have to work your way out of the slump. You”™ll even lose your ability to think clearly and strategically.
So catch yourself thinking or uttering negative self-judgments. They”™ll destroy your confidence, and left unchecked, they”™ll destroy your sales career. So catch yourself when you begin to think such things as “I”™ll never get ahead,” “I wasn”™t cut out for this kind of job,” “I”™m no good at prospecting” or “I don”™t know how to close a sale.” They will never serve you well.
And then stop yourself from the continued use of the negative self-judgments. Tell yourself, “cancel, cancel” when a negative thought comes to mind. Or talk yourself back, firmly and repetitively, saying, “Now stop it. Just stop it.” By doing so, you take control of your mind rather than letting it control you. You”™ve taken the first step in building a killer sales attitude.
2. Stay calm.
When you think of Thomas Edison, you think of such words as inventor, genius and entrepreneur. You probably don”™t think of him as a salesman. But indeed he was. If he couldn”™t sell his ideas, he never would have gotten any money from the banks to finance his projects. And if he couldn”™t sell his inventions to the public, he would have soon been out of business.
One of the secrets to his sales success was the killer attitude of calmness. When his 10-year project to build a storage battery was destroyed in a fire, he didn”™t panic. He yelled to his son, “Go get your mother. Tell her to hurry up and bring her friends. They”™ll never see a fire like this again.”
The next morning, Edison called all of his employees together and made an incredible statement. He said, “We”™re rebuilding.” He told one man to lease all the machine shops in the area. He told another one to get a wrecking crane. Then, as an afterthought, he asked, “Oh, by the way, anybody here know where we can get some money?”
Edison stayed calm. I”™m sure he had some feelings of disappointment and discouragement. That seems fairly normal. But he didn”™t let his feelings take over. He did what needed to be done. He stayed calm.
What about you? When you encounter some sales problems, do you panic? Do you talk incessantly about how bad things are? Or do you stay calm?
You”™ve got to stay calm, because your mind cannot function at its peak when it”™s all agitated. Your mind can”™t think of new and better ways of selling if it”™s tied up in knots. So stay calm.
Of course that may sound easier said than done. But there”™s a trick to it. Attitudes and feelings always follow behavior. So if you act calm, even if you don”™t feel calm, you will eventually be calm, with a stronger and more positive attitude.
3. Keep practicing your sales skills.
Competence and confidence go hand in hand. If you”™re really good at what you do, you”™re bound to feel more confident. So simply put, if you keep practicing your sales skills, you”™re going to be more competent and you”™re going to get a killer sales attitude.
Unfortunately, there are two times when a salesperson stops practicing the basics in sales ”” when things are going poorly and when things are going well.
When things are going poorly in sales, when a salesperson gets knocked down and feels like quitting, chances are he has stopped practicing the basics in sales. He”™s taken some shortcuts that are hurting him.
Just as commonly, a salesperson might reach a new high in her career, and she does the same stupid thing. She thinks she”™s so good that she can stop practicing the basics in sales. And then she hits bottom, gets a negative attitude and wonders what happened.
You”™ve got to keep practicing to maintain a killer sales attitude and move toward higher levels of success. Long ago professional basketball star Bob Pettit proved that. Even though he became one of the highest-scoring players in the sport, it wasn”™t that way in the beginning.
As a freshman in high school, Pettit was weak, frail and uncoordinated. All he had going for himself was the determination to practice until he became a quality athlete.
Pettit began with a wire coat hanger that he bent into the shape of a basketball hoop. Hour after hour, day after day, he threw tennis balls through his makeshift basket. Eventually his father got him a real basketball and hoop.
Pettit would throw baskets after school every day, go to dinner, and then go back to practice. It wasn”™t long before he became the star of his church team, then his high school team, college team and finally a professional team.
It”™s the same for you and me. There are few shortcuts on the road to sales success. We all have to practice first and then keep on practicing. It”™s no wonder that the most talented sports figures, singers, dancers, movie stars, speakers and salespeople have coaches to refine their craft.
So let”™s get personal for a moment. What are you doing on a regular basis to keep on practicing and refining your sales skills? If the answer is “not much,” then don”™t expect too much in the way of sales results.
4. Hang in there.
It”™s natural to feel disappointed and discouraged when things aren”™t going well in sales. It”™s natural to get a bit negative during those times. But it”™s not helpful, because if you lose your positive attitude, you will lose everything ”” including the chance to turn things around.
You”™ve got to keep on keeping on. You can”™t quit just because it”™s too hard to keep going. And you shouldn”™t quit just because you don”™t feel like keeping on.
Be careful of putting too much stock in your feelings. Feelings are a useful piece of data in any decision you make, but they should not have the final say in doing what you know you should be doing. Your feelings get a voice, but they don”™t get a veto.
That”™s how Muhammad Ali became great. He even said, “I hated every minute of the training, but I said, ”˜Don”™t quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion.”™”
Concluding thought
The most successful salespeople keep on working when they feel like walking. They keep on building when they feel like bailing. They refuse to let their feelings take over. They just keep on doing what needs to be done when the tough times come.
Take a look at the Olympics. You can”™t help but notice one outstanding characteristic of the gold medalists. Very few of them were “natural-born” athletes. But almost all of them had a killer attitude.
If and when you ever feel like walking away from your sales career, just remember you don”™t have to. You can turn it around with these four keys to a killer sales attitude.
Alan Zimmerman is an author and speaker whose work focuses on communication, motivation, leadership and teamwork in business. To learn more about his work, visit DrZimmerman.com.