Most people struggle to see what is holding them back from the highest levels of success. It’s hard to read the label from inside the bottle.
A person with a strong belief in the opportunity and themselves will be able to experience failures and not be wiped out emotionally. When your “why” is weak, any failure feels like a catastrophe which will have a much greater and longer lasting negative effect.
You may know what to do but fail to execute your plan. You may not be sure you have the right strategies. You might just be calling on the wrong people at the wrong time. Successful people develop goals, plans, systems, and habits that consistently lead to positive results.
Mastery means you can recognize the situation you are facing, identify the strategy needed, and apply the skills required to find success. Selling skills can be learned, developed, and honed. Focused practice, regular debriefing, and learning from mistakes will take your game to the next level.
One of the best things about success is that you get to define it for yourself. David Sandler identified three elements required for success in anything: behavior, attitude, and technique.
Your perception, beliefs, and outlook about yourself, your organization, and the marketplace have a huge impact on how you sell and what you are willing to do to succeed in sales.
Your goals, plans, and actions determine how often you do the right things at the right time and place. It is a result of your discipline, vitality, and guts that determine how quickly and consistently you will succeed.
Your strategies, tactics, and personal presence while executing your behaviors impact the effectiveness of those actions. It can have a dramatic effect on your overall success and affect your attitude over time.
THE SANDLER SUCCESS TRIANGLE
Typically, succeeding in sales is like succeeding at the plate in baseball. You don’t have to be perfect to be an all-star; you just have to be better than your competition! Major League Baseball All-Stars will hit about .300 for the year. Average baseball players will hit about .250. The difference is only one more hit per 20 at bats.
What would it mean to your career if you got one more sale per 20 attempts?
Whether you are talking about your sales career or your personal life, improving your BAT-ting average is the surest path to success. Success is the combined result of your Behavior, Attitude, and Technique.
On a scale of 0-10, how do you rank on each of the three Success Triangles?
How much of the time do you have the right attitude about yourself, your company, and your marketplace?
How much of the time do you do the right thing at the right time and place?
How well do you use the right strategies, tactics, and tools? How good are you at your job?
Next, take those three scores, multiply them together and then divide by 1,000 possible points your percentage (for example, (B x A x T) / 1000 = your sales batting average).
Note: This is not an actual average. You do not divide by 3, but by 1,000. Success is not an average of your efforts but rather multiplied by your attitude, behavior, and technique. You cannot have a 10 attitude with 0 actions and expect to succeed.
Record your batting average in your notes and re-evaluate yourself over time. If you gave yourself a lower score on one of the areas, take a minute to write down why and what changes would be necessary to raise the score.