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Big Things on the Way!

Friday, February 19th, 2010

I have not blogged here in some months, but it’s been a very busy time for 7 Triggers, and we are getting ready to share some very exciting developments. New products, new web sites, new partners, and new opportunities are just around the corner for business professionals seeking to gain commitments, forge agreements, and close sales faster and more often.

Please be sure to register for this site in order to receive a one-time email announcement (coming soon!) on how to get a free e-book and sign up for the YesMaker early adopter program.

Steal Your Customer’s Glasses

Friday, October 10th, 2008

IMG_1466

"A prudent question is one half of wisdom." – Francis Bacon

How much easier would selling be if you could really see things through your customer’s eyes? Here’s how the pros do exactly that. It’s a process called Value Profiling and like many effective techniques, it is not complicated (most salespeople just don’t know it or don’t do it).

SKILL TARGET: Find out what your prospect wants, and emphasize those features and benefits which meet their criteria.

It sounds simple, but the steps in the process are critical:

PRIORITY ONE: Develop in advance the questions you intend to ask.

PRIORITY TWO: Include the following:

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Who’s Got the Toughest Sale

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

dsc_5151.jpgEvery business, every entrepreneur benefits from better persuasion skills. Currently, one group needs these skills even more than the rest. Those in real estate sales face troubling times in a troubled industry. Yet some, including the woman who sold us our house, are doing great. Why? Because they learned and apply super emotion based persuasion skills. Today “Mr. Internet,” Michael Russer wrote an article for his Real Estate site covering an article I wrote for Agent and Broker Magazine.

Michael does a super job explaining application of the 7 triggers to real estate sales, and brings along the simplicity of our own trigger applications asking: “Why did you listen to that particular cd? Or hit the snooze button again? Or buy Cheerios instead of Wheaties?” He adds, “because you felt like it!” Michael goes on to say “As long as you have previous experience with a situation you have a “feeling,” a “hunch,” an “intuition” that triggers your decision”

To succeed – to grow your business, simply learn to activate other’s internal triggers. Check out Michael’s article at:

http://www.mrinternetnews.com/blog/decision-triggers-get-what-you-want/

Creative Commons License photo credit: Olivier Bareau

Persuasion: The World’s Most Researched Skill

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

2800038671_15648e808d_m Why is persuasion the world’s most researched skill? That’s easy—as history shows, it’s the world’s most important skill!

Take a trip back to the Fifth Century B.C., when Athenians were experimenting with a new form of government. The Athenians quickly discovered that to succeed in a democracy, they had to be persuasive. Leaders used persuasion (then called rhetoric) to gain agreement and win support. Everyday citizens used persuasion before a new legal body—the jury.

Recognizing its importance, Athenian scholars, including Plato and Aristotle, began to study the powerful process of persuasion. Circa 435 B.C., they defined three elements of the process of persuasion: Logos, the appeal to logic, reason, and facts; Pathos, the appeal to emotions; and Ethos, the appeal of the speaker’s character and credibility. These scholars found that one or more of these appeals characterize any instance of persuasion.

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Why We Fail To Persuade

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

2695841885_8b99522115_m Several large surveys show that most people believe a logical discussion, with good data and the right logical supporting facts, is the best way to persuade. Often, they break the persuasion process down to three main steps:

1. Present your proposition clearly, with conviction.
2. Present your supporting data, with the right facts, logic and information.
3. Structure your "deals" and move on to closure.

But according to Dr. Jay Conger, Director of the Leadership Institute at the University of Southern California Business School, "Following this process is one surefire way to fail at persuasion."

Why?

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Get Quick Easy Agreement – For Any Request

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

381758655_0d5bc1c298_m Want outstanding success in business and in life?  You’ll achieve your goals when you can influence others to agree with you and act on your requests.  Any requests. Successful people get things done with and through others.  They get decisions and results with one skill:  the power of persuasion.  Persuaders rule.  They always have, they always will.  They have enormous power. They accomplish their wildest dreams for wealth, power and influence.  Your challenge:  Become a great persuader.

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Want a YES Decision From Anyone? Trigger it!

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

292642699_8e8a8b5aa8_m You can have anything you want, yes, anything! All you have to do is to persuade someone to decide to do what you want. The most successful people in the world are those who can get things done with and through others. By applying new scientific breakthroughs, it’s now quick and easy to get “Yes!” decisions and actions.

Before persuading others to say “Yes!” let’s take a quick look at our own decision process. Only when we understand how the brain makes decisions can we successfully influence others’ decisions

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Persuasion: The U. S. Presidents Need It – How About You?

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

2682464768_30013e3f14_m History shows that persuasion skills are critical for everyone who wants to succeed—even for the President of the United States. In his book Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents, Richard E. Neustadt states, "There is a widely held belief in the United States that a reasonable President would need no power other than the logic of his argument." That belief is naive, inaccurate.

Dwight D. Eisenhower was one President who could have benefited from better persuasion skills. As a career army officer, he expected people to do as he said—he didn’t need to know how to persuade. But when he reached the Oval Office, things were different. And because he was not a persuader, he amassed a poor record of getting things done.

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Persuasion: THE Critical Sales Skill

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

2547595587_880720367e_m Selling is easy—partner with your client, find a need and fill it, right? Sure, this is the antiquated, long standing formula for success in today’s sales arena—but it’s incomplete. The truth is, to sell effectively, we must get clients to make a decision to act—now!

So how do we do that? Simply put, there are three approaches we can use:

  • We can force them.
  • We can negotiate.
  • Or we can persuade.

But which is best?

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Great Ideas Don’t Persuade

Monday, September 1st, 2008

366754582_2d4c114c50_m Most people think a great idea, a great product coupled with a well reasoned logical presentation will produce the reaction they want. Nothing could be further from the truth!

The world’s most creative and important products, inventions, and solutions were nothing more than ideas until someone persuaded someone else to do something. Great persuaders bring ideas to life. Persuaders make things happen.

The greatest historical achievements ever created are the results of persuasion. The empire builders, the Caesars and Napoleons, won by persuading others to follow. Cities and civilizations were built with persuasion. Columbus persuaded Queen Isabella that he could reach the East, India, by sailing west; then persuaded her to finance his ships. Slave Frederick Douglass wrote, "If I can persuade, I can move the universe." He persuaded Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. JFK persuaded Congress and the American public to support and fund a plan to put an American on the moon.

But what happens when people can’t persuade?

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Are You a Sales One Trick Pony?

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

365662957_73598a6914_m Is your sales mantra “find a need and fill it?” Is your training, and sales operation built around the Consultative Needs/Benefit approach? That’s a very limiting One Trick Pony!

One trick may be all a pony needs, but why severely limit sales success with just a single approach? Needs/Benefit selling activates only a small part of just one of the 7 internal triggers buyers depend upon to make a buying decision.

Play it!
One-Trick_Pony.mp3
One Trick Pony by Paul Simon

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