Samurai Sales Training – Handling Difficult Situations in the Sales Process
January 11, 2012
There you are. In the midst of what seems to be a positive sales presentation. Then out of the proverbial blue, comes a totally unexpected, off point question or statement. You fumble for the right words to answer the question and return to a positive presentation. What do you do? WHAT DO YOU DO?
The Samurai, when in an inferior or defensive position, turned a positive into a negative. In a sales situation, it is conversational Jujitsu.
Under the guidance of Sensei Robert Lambert, of the Samurai Business Group, we learned and practiced conversational Jujitsu. The techniques taught should be used when a question is asked and you don’t know why. Or the timing of a question may be off topic, or your answer would hurt your presentation.
For example, you’re talking about how your product / services will help the prospect when they interrupt with: “I heard you had problems at XYZ Corp.” Your response, using jujitsu techniques, could be: “There were a couple of issues that have been resolved. Would you mind helping me understand what specifically concerns you and why?”
Perhaps the prospect starts a negative comparison of your product or service to a competitor. “Harmont Services are much less expensive, and their contract is only for six months. If I’m not happy, I have more flexibility and a smaller commitment..”
“It sounds like you’ve decided to go with Harmont. But now I’m confused; if you’ve already made your decision, what were you hoping to accomplish at our meeting?”
Or maybe they ask a question about something that hasn’t been discussed before and / or seems irrelevant: “Does your system have a throckmorton feature?” Your response could be: “It’s interesting that you should bring that up. Obviously, you have an application in mind for that feature?”
The secret to Jujitsu on the field of battle, or in the conference room, is to take the prospect’s advantage and turn it against them. How? There are three basic moves. The reversal is used 90% of the time. “That’s an interesting question. What do you believe are the advantages if we don’t sync our teams during implementation?”
Or perhaps a take away move would make sense. The enemy thrusts a spear at you. You side step, grab the spear, add energy to the forward motion and take the spear away.
In conversational Jujitsu, you might answer, “Interesting comment. For us to professionally implement this program, we will need to work with your staff. If that is not possible, perhaps we shouldn’t move forward. What is your alternative?”
This will either get the project back on track, or stop wasting your time in an impossible situation. In the 1980’s, there was a stockbroker (now known as Wealth Management executives), who was a master of the take away. His reputation for helping clients was national. His process was methodical. But if the prospect or client refused to cooperate, he stopped wasting his time and would immediately close the prospect’s file.
Finally, there is the pre-emptive move. In battle this was best shown in “Raiders of the Lost Arc.” An obvious masterful swordsman challenges Indians Jones to a duel. Jones calmly pulls out a gun and kills the swordsman.
In conversational Jujitsu, the actions are not as bloody. A few days after learning and practicing in our class, I was faced with the situation of telling a prospective client t
“Dan, I carefully reviewed your website. Please don’t shoot the messenger. The platform that was used is not suitable for a website. In addition, there are typos, dead links and one section that could get you in legal trouble.” The now client appreciated my candor and the fact I kept the conversation about helping him move toward success and didn’t make it personal.
Like all of the Samurai Business Group’s teachings, this needs to be practiced under the guidance of an expert. If not, you might experience being run through by a “spear.”
For further details on “Handling Difficult Situations in the Sales Process,” contact either Dan Kreutzer or Robert Lambert or visit the Samurai Business Group website.
Spencer Maus, of SpencerConnect, is a senior-level, public relations executive. Samurai Business Group is a client and providing compensation to SpencerConnect
Samurai Sales Training – Prospecting: Do You Have a Plan?
November 29, 2011
Let’s be honest. No one really enjoys prospecting. But to build a successful business or practice, you need clients. You need a continuous flow of clients. And to have this flow, you need to build the prospect pipeline and a disciplined tracking system.
Out of college you were a trained an attorney, creative, engineer, accountant, etc. Trained to create, engineer, account or do law stuff. Not trained to sell. You joined a firm, agency or company. They had business development team (sales people). All you had to do was show up and do that thing you were trained to do.
Then, without warning, the economy went south. Sales people were laid off. You were laid off. And now you need clients. You start networking. You’re meeting new people, collecting cards. In fact you’re hitting a lot of networking events; meeting a lot of people, collecting a lot of cards. You follow up; meet for coffee, exchange emails. They really like you. So what?
You contact friends, colleagues, golf buddies, etc asking for quality introductions in your quest for new clients You even contact former clients (assuming you didn’t sign a non-compete and have a good attorney, “Where is that attorney’s card I picked up at some networking event three weeks ago?”).
So what is working for you? What efforts are building your business? What is your tracking system?
In the last session of the Samurai Business Group “Brown Belt Program,” Sensei Bob Lambert led us on a journey of organizing and tracking our prospects and prospecting efforts. It requires discipline (there’s that word again from the last blog post).
We were given a system. In fact, it is a very good system for tracking and monitoring a new business pipeline. If you are honest and disciplined, it will show you what business development efforts are working, and not working. It evaluates your list of prospects, who’s hot, who’s not, who’s really interested in hiring you and who just wants free, professional advice
First, look at where you found your current clients and prospects. Track all of the variety of efforts you are making and see if they are important to building your business – or just leading you into a false sense of accomplishment. If the latter, it’s time to adjust.
So what is the Samurai method of building a pipeline tracking system? Easy if you have discipline (no, not that word again!). Forms were provided to execute the system.
- The Top Five Prospects – You’ve met face-to-face. The prospect has shared information. She has completed her “homework.” You talk or send an email once a week and get a positive reaction or response.
- The Farm Club – Fifteen, prioritized prospects. There is synergy between his business and what you offer. You contact him once a month, share pertinent information and get a positive response. If a top five prospect falters, you promote someone from the Farm Team to the Top Five.
- Suspects – Twenty who have shown promise. They have said they don’t see an immediate need for your service. You touch base once a month and respond to their emails and phone calls, as long as they are not seeking pro bono work, with the promise of “one day, when business picks up…
So when you review your prospecting efforts are you saying “SO!” or “So what?”
For further details on “Discipline,” contact either Dan Kreutzer or Robert Lambert or visit the Samurai Business Group website.
Spencer Maus, of SpencerConnect, is a senior-level, public relations executive. Samurai Business Group is a client and providing compensation to SpencerConnect











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