The science of selling Proven strategies to make your pitch, influence decisions, and close the deal

David Hoffeld

Book - 2016

"The Revolutionary Sales Approach Scientifically Proven to Dramatically Improve Your Sales and Business Success Did you know that nearly half of salespeople fail to meet their quotas every year? Or that many of the most common sales behaviors drive down sales performance? In today's fiercely competitive marketplace you can't afford to lose sales that should be yours. But with so much conflicting advice from self-proclaimed "gurus," how do you know which sales strategies actually work? Leading sales trainer, researcher and CEO of Hoffeld Group, David Hoffeld, has the answer. Blending cutting-edge research in social psychology, neuroscience, and behavioral economics, The Science of Selling shows you how to align the w...ay you sell with how our brains naturally form buying decisions, dramatically increasing your ability to earn more sales. Unlike other sales books, which primarily rely on anecdotal evidence and unproven advice, Hoffeld's evidence-based approach connects the dots between science and situations salespeople and business leaders face every day to help you consistently succeed, including proven ways to: - Engage buyers' emotions to increase their receptiveness to you and your ideas - Ask questions that line up with how the brain discloses information - Lock in the incremental commitments that lead to a sale - Create positive influence and reduce the sway of competitors - Discover the underlying causes of objections and neutralize them - Guide buyers through the necessary mental steps to make purchasing decisions Packed with advice and anecdotes, The Science of Selling is an essential resource for anyone looking to succeed in today's cutthroat selling environment, advance their business goals, or boost their ability to influence others"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : TarcherPerigee [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
David Hoffeld (author)
Physical Description
277 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-267) and index.
ISBN
9780143129325
  • Introduction: Why Use Science to Sell?
  • Part 1. Foundations of Selling with Science
  • 1. Why Sales People Underperform
  • 2. The Two Methods of Sales Influence
  • 3. How to Sell the Way People Buy
  • 4. Selling to Your Buyers' Emotions
  • Part 2. The Salesperson's Toolkit
  • 5. The Science of Asking Powerful Questions
  • 6. Why People Buy
  • 7. Creating Value, Neutralizing Competitors, and Overcoming Objections
  • 8. Closing Redefined: Obtaining Strategic Commitments
  • 9. Five Science-Based Sales Presentation Strategies
  • Part 3. Merging Science and Selling
  • 10. The Future of Selling
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Behavioral economics is a science much in use these days, most visibly during the Obama presidential campaign, where the science of voting was honed. A logical next step to apply this relatively new approach to sales is the province of consultant Hoffeld, who takes advantage of tomes of research and his own experience to give a detailed (and often narratively dense) process for influencing buyers. After refuting traditional myths (e.g., extroverts are the best salespeople) and explaining the rules of influence, he lays out his philosophy and the necessary skills, from detailing the six whys and the ins and outs of decision-based and emotional selling to spins on traditional competencies such as questioning, listening, and creating value. Examples of conversations and stories help by lightening the tone and give a powerful sense of credibility to his science of selling assertions. Not just for the Willy Lomans of the world.--Jacobs, Barbara Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sales is due for a revolution-a revolution of data and scientifically backed methods, says Hoffeld, CEO of the Hoffeld Group consulting firm, in this crisp, unmissable guide. He observes that one out of every nine employees in the United States works in a sales-focused role, and yet sales training is woefully out of date, never having been sufficiently adapted to the Internet age. Salespeople tend to rely on their individual experience, rather than factual evidence or research-based data. As a result, customers remain a mystery to salespeople. Meanwhile, thanks to the Internet, customers are now more informed about products than they've ever been, and salespeople are left at a distinct disadvantage. Hoffeld describes embarking on a nearly 10-year-long research project, applying stringent data to sales techniques. Influence, he discovered, is the "foundation of selling," and everyone, not just professional salespeople, can benefit by applying the "science of influence" to their efforts. The main focus is not on how salespeople sell but on how customers buy and make decisions. Hoffeld's deft guidebook is a must-read for salespeople unsatisfied with anecdotal data and hungry for real data to improve their techniques. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

PART ONE   FOUNDATIONS OF SELLING WITH SCIENCE           CHAPTER 1   Why Salespeople Underperform   A study published in the Harvard Business Review a fewyears ago should cause everyone in sales to cringe. Why? When the researchersanalyzed the behaviors of eight hundred salespeople on sales calls they foundthat only "37% of salespeople--were consistently effective. What's more, some ofthe behaviors of the remaining 63% actually drove down performance."1 In otherwords, the way that these salespeople were selling was actually preventing themfrom making the sale.      Unfortunately,these salespeople are not alone in their struggle. Lack of sales production isa devastating problem. In fact, surveys that measure the sales performance ofthousands of companies found that 38 to 49 percent of all salespeople do notmake quota every year.2 This means that roughly four to five out of every tenprofessional salespeople fail to meet the minimum standard their company hasplaced on them.      The way thatsalespeople sell is a mission critical issue, because the behaviors they usewhen interacting with potential customers is a determining factor in the buyingdecision. For instance, when the performance measurement firm Chally Groupconducted a series of studies examining the buying behaviors of more than100,000 decision makers, they identified the salesperson as a deciding factorin whether buyers chose to purchase from one vendor or another.3 In addition,research published by CEB, a leading advisory company, found that 53 percent ofcustomer loyalty--customers choosing to buy from a company repeatedly--is not theresult of the product, company, or service, but the behaviors salespeople usewhen selling.4 Every day, the fates of careers and companies hinge onsalespeople because they serve two imperative functions: creating customers andproducing revenue to keep their organization alive. As Peter Drucker, legendarymanagement expert and author of many culture-shifting business books, famouslysaid, "There is only one valid definition of business purpose: to create acustomer."5 That said, there is no doubt that selling has become morechallenging than ever. The marketplace is extremely competitive. Potentialcustomers are blitzed by sellers fighting to earn their business. At the sametime, buyers are extremely busy and have less time to deal with salespeople. Tofurther complicate the situation, as I mentioned in the introduction,technology allows buyers to research potential solutions online before talkingto a seller. As a result, salespeople are entering into the buyer's decisionprocess later than ever before. The data indicates that around 60 percent ofthe buying cycle is completed before a salesperson is able to engage apotential client. Because of these new realities, salespeople have no room forerror. They are selling in an extremely complex and competitive environmentwhere they must battle competitors for every sale.      To make mattersworse, these daunting challenges aren't the only reasons salespeople are struggling.   NATURAL ABILITY IS NO LONGER ENOUGH   For years, many in the sales community believed thatsuccess in selling is dependent on innate communication skills and a gregariouspersonality. The assumption has been, if you didn't have "it," you couldn't betaught it. However, a tidal wave of scientific research studying what makespeople successful has disproven that idea in recent decades.6 Though somepeople do have heightened levels of natural ability, talent is not enough tobecome a top performing salesperson. Because of the exceptionally crowdedmarketplace, you must continually improve your knowledge and skills.   To be successful in sales today, you must sell beyondyour natural ability.      One fascinatingexample of this is seen in the work of Carol Dweck, professor of psychology atStanford University, who has conducted several studies on how one's mentalityinfluences one's performance.7      She has foundthat people tend to embrace one of two common outlooks:   1.    Fixed mindset:the belief that you can do little to change your abilities.   2.    Growthmindset: the belief that through effort you can improve your abilities.      Below is a shortquiz that will help you identify what mindset you have.   QUIZ   Which of the following statements do you believe to betrue?   1.    Your abilityto sell is part of who you are and not something you can change.   2.    No matter howgood you are at sales, you can always improve.   3.    You can learnnew selling strategies, but you can't change much about your ability toinfluence others.   4.    Selling is askill that you can develop, regardless of your natural talent or personality.      Options 1 and 3are fixed mindset statements, while options 2 and 4 are growth mindsetstatements.   So do these mindsets influence sales results? Yes,because the outcomes these mentalities produce are radically different. Thosewho have a growth mindset are far more likely to be successful than those whodon't.8 One of the main reasons a growth mindset drives high achievement isbecause it alters how the brain perceives failure. Those with fixed mindsetsare more prone to see failure as a judgment on themselves. If they fail, theyfeel like failures. In contrast, people with a growth mindset view failure asthe feedback that shows them how to adapt and take their abilities to the nextlevel.      Over the years,I have witnessed the vast difference in performance between salespeople who arecontent to rely on their giftedness to bring in enough sales to squeak by(fixed mindset) and those who work hard to surpass their natural aptitude toachieve or beat their sales goals each year (growth mindset). In fact, this isone of the things I recommend that sales leaders test for when hiring for anopen sales position. (We'll talk more about how to do this in Chapter 10.)Those with a growth outlook are more motivated to succeed and, as a result, farmore likely to become top performers.      What about you?If you have a growth mindset, great! If you have a fixed mindset, you shouldaddress it because it will hinder your ability to achieve the level of successyou desire. The good news is that your mindset is your mindset, and you canchange it. By choosing to embrace the new, empowering belief that your salesskills are like a muscle that needs to be continually strengthened, you willinspire the work ethic necessary to achieve high levels of sales performance.   SALES TRAINING HASN'T BECOME MANDATORY . . . YET   Why do elite salespeople make selling look effortless?It's easy to assume they have always been terrific at selling. But restassured, they make selling look easy because they have been capably trained.Science has shown that these individuals' brains have been altered by training,and this is what allows them to competently execute selling behaviors. Let meexplain.      People used tobelieve that the human brain was static, remaining unchanged through adulthood.However, neuroscientists have recently demonstrated that the brain containsneurons that are constantly changing based on one's thoughts, behaviors, andexperiences.9 Neuroscientists describe the brain's flexibility as"neuroplasticity."10      When you learnany new behavior, your brain changes and new neural pathways are created. Themore these neural connections are used the more they develop and, as a result,the more proficient you become at the activity they are associated with.11      For example,research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesanalyzed the brains of experienced London taxi drivers who were skilled atnavigating the complex streets of London.12 The researchers identified that thepart of the taxi drivers' brains (the hippocampus) that deals with spatialrelationships (navigation) had grown in size and contained an elevated numberof neural networks. Essentially, these taxi drivers had changed their brains.      In much the sameway, when salespeople go through effective training, their brains are beingrewired. New clusters of neurons are formed and existing clusters connectedwith previously learned behaviors are strengthened.      Here are twofascinating examples that illustrate how training reprograms the brain andequips people to perform well beyond their natural abilities.      Behavioralscientist K. Anders Ericsson has led a series of research studies over analmost thirty-year period on how training can produce exceptional levels ofperformance. In one of his most famous studies, Ericsson and two otherresearchers studied how memory could be enhanced with continuous training.13They recruited a college student (whom they referred to by his initials, S.F.)with a normal IQ and memory; after listening to a sequence of numbers, he couldrecall around seven digits. After several hundred hours of memory enhancementtraining, S.F. drastically exceeded the goal of the training (fourteen digits)and was able to memorize eighty-two random digits. Just so you appreciate theimpact of this, below are eighty-two random numbers. Read through them and trymemorizing all these yourself. It's harder than it looks!   2 4 7 9 3 6 2 5 3 2 6 8 9 1 1 0 3 6 3 2 6 1 7 3 4 6 2 7   9 0 1 4 9 7 8 2 5 2 3 5 1 7 9 2 8 4 5 2 7 9 2 1 4 0 5 9   6 3 7 0 5 2 7 9 5 6 6 8 2 1 7 2 0 8 6 4 8 6 9 5 2 1      The researchersattributed the vast improvement of his memory to his use of mnemonicassociations--such as converting random numbers into running times, so 247became 2 minutes 47 seconds--and relentless training.      The effects oftraining on memory performance have been replicated many times by numerousresearchers and participants.14 When behavioral scientists from Florida StateUniversity analyzed the decades of research in this area they concluded thatthere is no "evidence that would limit the ability of motivated and healthyadults to achieve exceptional levels of memory performance given access toinstruction and supportive training environments."15 Even more fascinating isthat when Ericsson and others analyzed how those in other professions such asbusiness, music, mathematics, and sports become experts capable of superiorperformances, they found that it was due to continual training.16      Anotherintriguing example of how training can significantly boost skill levels is seenin the work of Betty Edwards, an art teacher who takes people with ordinaryabilities and teaches them how to draw impressive self-portraits. Sheaccomplishes this feat not in years, months, or even weeks. She does thiswithin a mere five days. In her book, The New Drawing on the Right Side of theBrain, Edwards writes that once a person understands the technical componentsof drawing, he or she will progress rapidly with focused practice.17 Sheemphasizes that most people do not lack drawing skills, but rather seeingskills. She maintains that once she shows her students how to perceive thingssuch as edges, spaces, lighting, shadows, and relationships among objects,their ability to draw quickly improves. On the next page are some examples ofthe self-portraits her students drew on the first day of the class and the samestudents' drawings on day five.18      Likewise, I havewitnessed salespeople who were struggling to keep their jobs go throughhigh-quality sales training and transform their careers. Salespeople cannotsell beyond their training. Why? Because the training they receive is whatcreates their philosophy of selling, which I refer to as "sales truth." Theseare the core beliefs that govern how they sell, and especially which salesactivities, behaviors, strategies, and skills they use or ignore. As professorsat the Leavey School of Business James Kouzes and Barry Posner confirm, "theinvestment in training will pay off in the long term. People can't deliver onwhat they don't know how to do . . . you have to upgrade capabilities."19 Theway you do that is by training them how to do something better.      What's more, intoday's hypercompetitive marketplace, if salespeople do not receive propertraining they will fall behind; selling, like any other skill, must bedeveloped. This is why a competent, well-trained sales team is often acompany's most significant advantage--and an incompetent one its biggestliability.      As intertwinedas sales training is with the success of salespeople, sales leaders, andcompanies, there is a glaring problem with modern sales training: most of itdoes not properly equip salespeople to sell in today's challenging businessenvironment.   MODERN SALES TRAINING HAS NOT ADAPTED TO THE NEW SELLINGCLIMATE   The marketplace has radically changed, but sales traininghas not. No longer can salespeople get by using the same old selling strategiesthat have been used for generations. (I will share some of these antiquated andineffective strategies with you later in the chapter and throughout this book.)This is why, alarmingly, when salespeople go through sales training, much of itmakes little difference in their job performance.      For example,research published by both ES Research Group and CEB has identified that 85 to90 percent of all sales training has no positive impact after the training.20Now, this does not negate the need for competent training, but it doesilluminate the fact that modern sales training is failing salespeople.      When you addtogether the fact that most of sales training makes no impact on the salesresults of trainees and the widespread lack of sales production that wasdiscussed at the beginning of this chapter, you start to see the scope of theproblem. There is something horribly wrong.      Many in theprofession of sales realize this problem exists, but they fail to properlyidentify the cause. Often, the finger is pointed at a variety of concerns, suchas:   Failing to follow-up and reinforce training   Ineffectively leveraging technology (social selling)   Making training an event, not a process   Improperly assessing sales people before training (thustrying to solve the wrong problem)   Participants or management not buying in sufficiently   Not linking the training with the strategic initiativesof the company      To be sure, eachof these issues should be addressed, but the evidence points to something muchdeeper as the reason why sales training and selling is in dire straits.   WHY SELLING SHOULD BE FOCUSED ON BUYING   In the introduction, I admitted that years ago, before Idelved into finding and developing a successful sales strategy based onscience, the way I sold was completely subjective, and relied on my ownopinions and experience. I have since realized that I was not alone in thispredicament. Virtually everyone else in business struggles with this issue,because our modern sales training methodologies are not founded on anyobjective standard, but rather are rooted in conjecture.      That's a bolddeclaration, I know, so let me demonstrate what I mean. A while ago, I led aWebinar whose audience included salespeople from numerous leadingorganizations. During my talk, I polled the participants, asking them amultiple-choice question: "In your organization, what are your sales behaviorsbased on?" In other words, why do you sell the way you do? Here is how theyanswered:   1.    Trial anderror (45 percent of participants)   2.    Recommendationsfrom experts (45 percent of participants)   3.    Wishfulthinking (5 percent of participants)   4.    Unsure (5percent of participants)   5.    Scientificfindings on how the brain formulates a buying decision (0 percent)      These responsesmirror those I have received in numerous training seminars and workshops I'veconducted over the years. The two most common answers are always trial and errorand recommendations from experts. Let's stop for a minute and consider theimplications of each. Excerpted from The Science of Selling: Proven Strategies to Make Your Pitch, Influence Decisions, and Close the Deal by David Hoffeld All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.