Joshua Chua shares a story that
taught him how to multiply his sales results. He shares this with his students
to demonstrate how a shift in mindset and attitude can make a significant
difference. –Andrea Michaels
The Story:
Three sales professionals applied to work for
a huge company. As they were all evenly qualified, the interviewer decided to
set a sales challenge and the person who sold the most would be awarded the
job.
The challenge was to sell combs to monks of
any temple up in the mountains. "You have three days, and the person who
sells the most will get the job" said the interviewer.
After three days, the three applicants
returned, and reported their results.
Candidate 1 said "I managed to sell one
comb. The monks scolded me, saying I was openly mocking them. Disappointed, I
gave up and left. But on my way back, I saw a junior monk with an itchy scalp;
he was constantly scratching his head. I told him the comb would help him with
his scratching, and he bought one comb"
Candidate 2 said "That's good, but I did
better. I sold 10 combs." Excited, the interviewer asked "How did you
do it?" Candidate 2 replied "I observed that the visitors had very
messy hair due to the strong winds they faced while walking to the temple. I
convinced the monk to give out combs to the visitors so they could tidy
themselves up and show greater respect during their worship."
Candidate 3 stepped up "Not so fast, I
sold more than both of them." "How many did you sell" asked the
interviewer.
"A thousand combs"
"Wow! How did you do it?" the
interviewer exclaimed.
"I went to one of the biggest temples
there and thanked the Senior Master for serving the people and providing a
sacred place of worship for them. He was very gracious and said he would like
to thank and appreciate his visitors for their support and devotion. I
suggested that the best way would be to offer his visitors a memento and the
blessing of Buddha. I showed him the wooden combs which I had engraved words of
blessings and told him people would use the combs daily and would serve as a
constant reminder to do good deeds. He liked the idea and proceeded to order a
thousand combs"
"You got lucky," one of the
other candidates said bitterly.
"Not really," the interviewer
countered. "He had a plan, which was why he had the comb engraved prior to
his visit. Even if that temple did not want it, another one surely would."
"There is more," the third
candidate smiled. "I went back to the temple yesterday to check on the
Master. He said many visitors told their friends and family about the comb with
the Buddha's blessing. Now even more people are visiting every day. Everyone is
asking for the comb and giving generous donations too! The temple is more
popular than ever, and the Master says he will run out of the combs in a
month... and will need to order more!"
Learning Points:
The three different candidates show us the
different levels of sales performance:
Candidate 1 displayed the most basic level,
which is to meet the prospect's personal needs. The monk with the itchy scalp
had a personal need; it was specific to him only.
Candidate 2 shows the next level -
anticipating and creating new needs for the prospect. Perhaps the monk doesn't
have an obvious need for the comb, but how can it still be beneficial to him?
When you can educate the prospect on new possibilities and benefits for his
business, you are already outperforming your competitors.
Candidate 3 demonstrates the best level of
all; an ongoing relationship resulting in repeat sales and referrals. Everyone
was a winner, the monk, the devotees, the third candidate and the interviewer.
Help your prospects benefit their prospects, to create maximum value. View prospects not as individuals, but also their contacts and network beyond them.
See each customer as a lifetime client instead of one-time sales.
Our beliefs and thoughts shape our actions
and ultimately, our results. When faced with a challenge, how do you respond?
And how big do you think?
How can you create new needs for your
prospects and benefit their customers?
Joshua Chua helps sales professionals and
businesses double their sales within 30 days. He can be reached via jc@vaulsden.com or to learn more about his company, visit www.vaulsden.com.
Andrea Michaels is the founder/president of Extraordinary Events, a multi-award-winning, international event agency based in Los Angeles. To learn more about EE, please visit www.extraordinaryevents.com. You may reach Andrea via amichaels@extraordinaryevents.com.
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