The Secret to Building your Influence in Sales

How do some people influence us so easily? They seem to effortlessly sway us into an agreement. Those razor-sharp, crystal cut people skills that acknowledge our importance and make us feel so special. You might call it the what’s-in-it-for-me clause that all great marketing and sales gurus just to seem to find in each of us so easily.

But how do you replicate this technique of sales influence?

The Secret to Sales Influence
The Secret to Sales Influence
What’s in it for them

Imagine the situation. The mother needs the child to get ready for school however, her demands for what she wants are ignored That is until she plants the seed of what’s-in-it-for-them.

Why rush later when we can leave now and we can get more choice of lunches from the deli, before the good ones are all gone?’. Is it a bribe? The lunch will still be bought yet the choice will be better made early. What does Mum want – to get to school on time. And we do this with every person we meet that we want to impress. We sell them something.

Rather than suggest what I want, add what’s in it for them.

Look at how on-line stores market their goods. “Only one left” or “prices will rise at the end of week”. The suggestion is that purchasing now saves you from losing something, and you gain the best deal. Yet we find another small device tucked into the last idea of suggesting a purchase.

Loss Aversion

People will hate the idea of losing something. We see this happening so much in relationships, in habits and in opinions. The fear of giving up something, that although it may be possibly harmful to us, losing it causes us to avoid the action.

The Official

Other areas where we are influenced is the act of the official. If for example, you walk into a doctor’s surgery and on his walls is an art gallery of certificates and licences you will be easily persuaded to follow their directions.

This idea can work wonders to sell the next person on in your organisation. “I will pass you to my colleague Phil, who has seventeen-years in solving issues like this.” The client is immediately sold on anything that Phil might suggest, having been persuaded that Phil is the expert.

Personality

Other areas that can influence us easily in the personality of the person you are dealing with. Have you ever met a salesperson you have just liked?

They make you feel a part of a friendship and engage you at such a level of communication you try to impress them. They almost bait you with ideas, that they are really glad to meet you, and oh yes forget the product I am selling, what brings you out today?

They share jokes about themselves and engage you with such rapport that minutes vanish into an hour, and before you know it, you have their product nicely locked under your arm and you’re walking away feeling pretty happy about the great deal you just made, and the top person you just impressed.

Don’t believe it? Watch how easily attractive salespeople can light you up and make you feel more important than their product.

And that’s the key isn’t it, the secret to being influential. It’s all about how you make the person feel.

Learn more about developing your sales skills or influencing effectively on one of our many sales training programmes.

6 Exercises to Improve your Memory and Stretch your Mind

Memory plays a very important part of all our lives. From young to old age, it creates connections and shared experiences between people, gives us the skills to develop and improve our performance and gives us joy in long-term recollection.

Memories allow us to act in the present and prepare for the future. Without it we wouldn’t be able to remember what happened yesterday, what we should do today and what we plan for tomorrow. Therefore, we should look after it and practice to improve it.

We spend a lot of money and time on improving our bodies – let’s not forget our minds! Below we explore 6 practical exercises to keep your mind in top shape. Practice makes perfect!

6 Practical Exercises to Improve Your Memory

1. Activate all your relevant past knowledge. The more that you know about something, the easier it is to learn new information related to it. Generate a link to past knowledge and you’re more likely to remember the new information and increase your productivity. This can help with remembering people’s names: look for a meaning in a name and link it to the person. This is also sometimes called name association.

Old photos in the box

2. Think of new information in different ways. Making rhymes, tunes or even puns and jokes with the new material can help your memory by creating more cues and links. Generating really distinctive ideas, sounds or images can also help with recall.

3. Learn the phonetic system for translating numbers into memorable words. It’s bad security to set all your PINs to the same number, so use this technique to memorise different pins for different cards. You can remember any string of numbers more easily by converting the numbers to words that are memorable to you, especially if they create a funny image.

4. Form mental images linking the things to be remembered. Mental imagery underlies some of the most powerful mnemonic techniques that have been recommended for over 2000 years. Forming mental images allows you to link together things which are not otherwise connected. Explore more in the following video:

How to Memorize Numbers - Nat Geo Brain Games Memory

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5. Practise retrieving information after a suitable interval. Retrieval practice is one of the most powerful ways to improve your memory. Unlike some of the other methods, reminding yourself to remember does not require creativity or a great deal of expertise. Almost everyone can benefit from retrieval practice, from the young to the old. Timing is the key: practise too soon and it won’t help, too late and you won’t be able to remember. The best time is just before you would have forgotten the information. It’s also a good idea to test yourself quite early – especially for names – then after a short while, then after a bit longer and so on.

6. Explain or teach something to someone else. You will have to recall or restudy the information in an organised way and you won’t be able to fool yourself over parts that you don’t understand. You’ll need to make sure you understand it fully to explain or teach it to someone else!

Conclusion
New research has estimated that the brain can hold at least a petabyte of information, which is about as much as the World Wide Web currently holds. Isn’t that worth investing in it and using to its fullest potential?

To find out more and build your memory skills attend one of our dedicated training courses: Improve your Memory or Improving Memory with Mindmapping.