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CHAPTER 13

CHAPTER 13. Managing Yourself and Your Time. Demand the best from yourself, because others will demand the best of you. . . . Successful people do not simply give a project hard work . They give it their best work .”. Win Borden. Becoming An Agility Master.

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CHAPTER 13

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  1. CHAPTER 13 Managing Yourself and Your Time

  2. Demand the best from yourself,because others will demand the best of you. . . .Successful people do not simply give a project hard work. They give it their best work.” Win Borden

  3. Becoming An Agility Master • Great leaders have learned the art and science of mastering self-improvement and time management • In many ways, these principles apply to salespeople • To be effective in sales, one must have courage and a positive attitude, even in the face of adversity

  4. Six Aspects of Leadership • Each aspect can be applied to selling and to life in general • Having a set of beliefs and sticking with them • Optimism • Courage • Relentless preparation • Teamwork • Communication Mayor Rudy Giulianni, from a speech given to the Direct Selling Association on June 11, 2003

  5. Self-Discipline • Learning to manage oneself and one’s time requires self-discipline, which requires determination • Determination begins with a purpose or a “calling,” the creation of passion, which drives one toward reaching specific goals

  6. “Your dreams will not progress to failure unless you fail to progress” Fern Jones

  7. Becoming Self-Disciplined • Self-discipline is defined as making a “disciple” of one’s self • Becoming one’s own teacher, trainer, coach, disciplinarian • Becoming disciplined helps salespeople develop and manage their personal and professional goals (their purpose) Source: William J. Bennet, The Book of Virtues

  8. Habits: Powerful Factors • A good habit,consisting of three elements, is defined as “the intersection of knowledge” • Knowledge: the what to do • Skill: the how to do • Desire (motivation): the want to do Source: Stephen Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People

  9. Seven Habits of Highly Effective People • Stephen Covey’s seven habits are: • Be proactive • Begin with the end in mind • Put first things first • Think win/win • Seek first to understand and then to be understood • Synergize • Sharpen the saw Refer to Table 13.1--How the Seven Habits Apply to Salespeople

  10. Sharpen the Saw Effectiveness and Efficiency • Successful people are accountable for how they manage both themselves and their time • Managing oneself is largely concerned with learning how to make oneself more effective • Managing time is largely concerned with making oneself more efficient

  11. “Always demanding the bestof oneself, living with honor, devoting one’s talents and gifts to the benefit of others—these are the measures of success that endure when material things have passed away” Gerald Ford

  12. Managing Oneself • When people engage in self-management, they are engaging in a practice of determining what qualities lead to agility and success • Self-management also involves learning how to develop those qualities to build and maintain relationships

  13. Success In Today’sKnowledge Economy • Success in today’s knowledge economy comes to those who know: • Their strengths • Their values • How they best perform

  14. Accountability • Why some people succeed and others do not is largely due to how they manage their accountabilities • Accountabilityrefers to being responsible for someone or some activity • Two facets • Simply performing the activities specified • How effectively the person performs those activities

  15. Maintaining Accountability • Maintaining accountability involves several aspects: • What the salesperson wants to be • How the salesperson is going to get there • The salesperson’s assessment of how she is doing

  16. “A great attitude does much more than turn on the lights in our worlds; it seems to magicallyconnect us to all sorts of serendipitousopportunities that were somehowabsent before we changed” Earl Nightingale

  17. Attitude: The Great Motivator • The difference between the professional and the amateur is more a matter of attitude • Having the agility to compete successfully depends on many things, but high on the list is attitude • Attitude conveys a zeal for the work and a sincerity of interest in it

  18. Image • A professional image is extremely important • Image is a function of both physical qualities and personal qualities • A person’s image is a mental picture of what others think of that person • Remember, a person never gets a second chance to make a first impression Review Chapter 7--Attention

  19. Physical Qualities • Physical qualities are those that a customer can see or hear • The physical dimension of “sharpen the saw” is caring for our bodies • Eating the right foods • Exercising • Getting enough rest and relaxation

  20. “Success Breeds Success” People who look successful will be perceived as successful

  21. Ego Drive Empathy Commitment Maturity Personal Magnetism Sincerity Self-Confidence Trainability Personal Qualities of Agile Salespeople Refer to Table 13.3--Qualities of Successful Salespeople

  22. Ego Drive • Ego Drive is a balance within oneself • Energy: • Some goal must energize the salesperson • Image: • The salesperson must have a good self image • Optimism: • The salesperson must remain optimistic about achieving her goal

  23. Empathy • Throughout Selling ASAP, the importance of having empathy has been emphasized • Empathyis the capacity to participate in another person’s feelings or ideas • Agile salespeople can put themselves in their customers’ situations • Only with empathy can salespeople truly understand customers and inspire them

  24. Commitment • The spiritual dimension of “sharpening the saw” has to do with commitment to one’s value system • A person’s value system inspires that person and affects how he treats other people • In a sales context, commitment encompasses the feelings a salesperson has toward the various aspects of his sales career and his customers

  25. Maturity • A mature person is one who can make personal adjustments to people and circumstances • Salespeople show maturity in their ability to control personal feelings • Self-control is a necessary attribute of the successful salesperson Review the Social Styles Matrix in Chapter 5

  26. Personal Magnetism • Personal magnetism is a combination of enthusiasm, intelligence, and smartness • It is a trait that strongly attracts others to those who have it • Salespeople who have personal magnetism are just that much more ahead of their competition

  27. “Sincerity and truth arethe basis of every virtue” Confucius

  28. Sincerity • A mental dimension of “sharpening the saw" is sincerity • Sincere salespeople develop trusting relationships with customers • Sincerity convinces the prospect that the salesperson knows what she is talking about • Sincere salespeople are truly convinced that their products and services will meet their customers’ needs and wants

  29. Self-Confidence • Self-confidence is • The belief in oneself or one’s own abilities • The belief that success comes from hard work and intelligent effort, not luck • Covey’s first habit, be proactive, means that salespeople must take responsibility for what they do • Taking initiative requires self-confidence Refer to Table 13.2--How Salespeople Can Develop Self-Confidence

  30. Trainability • Successful people respond well to training and view learning as an opportunity for improving themselves • Achievers are those who thrive on new data and welcome a new challenge

  31. Complacency • Complacency is feeling secure and ignoring any threats that exist • Complacency can erode salespeople’s relationships with their customers • Salespeople who become complacent risk using obsolete sales tactics Refer to Table 13.4 Things Salespeople Should Avoid

  32. Managing Time • Covey’s third principle deals with prioritizing • The primary reason people cannot find time to be reflective is that they mix up what is urgent and what is important

  33. “People become addicted to the urgent.They simply define important as urgent. They neglect preventive thinking, they neglect long-term strategic thinking, they neglect the building of high trust relationships, and they are consumed by an addiction called urgency” Stephen Covey

  34. Importance and Urgency • Four combinations of importance and urgency relate to activities in which salespeople engage: • Not important, not urgent • Not important, but urgent • Important, but not urgent • Important and urgent

  35. How Much Is Time Worth?

  36. It’s About Time • Time is a precious resource that should be used wisely • The allocation of time between nonselling and selling activities represents one of the salesperson’s most important challenges • The key for salespeople in building long-term relationships is to make sure that nonselling time has a focus

  37. Success Is a Race Against Time • Advanced technology has accelerated the pace of work life • Time is part of the agile professional’s inventory • Agile sales professionals adjust their work habits to meet the changing demands on their time

  38. The work you do between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. is what you get paid to do The work you do between 5:00 P.M. and 8:00 P.M. is what gets you promoted

  39. Professional Selling Efficiency • Efficiency is often described in the sales profession in the form of advice: “Plan your work, and work your plan” • The time-management challenge for salespeople is to separate the unnecessary from the essential • Salespeople must learn to assign priorities to important activities

  40. Planning • Planning involves setting SMART objectives • Specific • Measurable • Attainable • Realistic • Time-based

  41. Cycles of Productivity • Productivity involves making the clock work to a person’s advantage • Individuals must determine their own peak periods and use them to their advantage • Salespeople should do the most demanding activities when they are at their best

  42. Set goals Manage interruptions Clear the clutter Use multiple contact media Learn to say no Manage appointments Call on prospects who can buy now Put a time value on entertainment and travel Increase personal efficiency Suggestions for Managing Time

  43. Setting Goals • By setting goals, people know exactly what is to be accomplished and where they want to be • In order to be effective goals must: • Be in writing • Be specific and relate to results • Be realistic • Have a time schedule and a target date for finishing each step as well as each goal Refer to Table 13.5--Possible Goals for the Salesperson

  44. Managing Interruptions • Constant day-to-day interruptions are huge time-wasters for people • Unnecessary visits • Unplanned social conversations and meetings • Self-sabotage is another form of wasting time • Procrastination • Perfectionism

  45. Clearing the Clutter • A good way for salespeople to eliminate clutter and get organized is to • Standardize all routine tasks • Consolidate tasks by combining separate but similar ones • Redistribute work to the appropriate people • Anticipate what is to come by identifying tasks that can be done in advance

  46. Managing Appointments • Salespeople should work cold calls and appointments concurrently because this maximizes the salesperson’s available time • Many salespeople use both appointments and cold calls, reserving their cold calls for fact gathering and finding out about a company’s products Refer to Table 13.6 Working Appointments and Cold Calls

  47. Calling on ProspectsWho Can Buy Now • The salesperson’s best opportunity to impress prospects is on the first call • The average cost of a sales call is increasing • Calling on customers who are not “real” prospects costs a lot of money

  48. Personal Efficiency • Salespeople who are striving to increase their efficiency should record their transactions using: • A Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) • A Pocket Calendar or Day Planner • A Tickler File

  49. Those who are persistent and who work hard and work smartcan fulfill their visions

  50. Going Back In Time • The following are people who believed in themselves in spite of criticism from others • Michelangelo • The Wright Brothers • Benjamin Franklin • Henry Ford Can you name a few?

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