Archive for March, 2010

Developing Your Sales Positioning Statement: What Keeps IT Executives Awake

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 10:18 No Comments
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Crafting rock-solid positioning statements is essential to qualifying and closing a sale. The statements should also incorporate your product’s value propositions; they must relate to the problem or opportunity you’re trying to solve for the company. Creating positioning statements can be very difficult if you don’t have correct knowledge about the account you’re trying to close. Utilizing sale intelligence resources and asking the right questions are the best ways you can collect information about a company.

This was posted under category: Marketing and Sales, Sales Strategies Tags: , , , , ,

CIO Budgets and Capital Spending Will Increase in 2010

Monday, March 8, 2010 10:31 No Comments
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According to the December 2009 CIO Economic Impact Survey, CIO budgets and capital spending are both increasing from the previous years levels. When asked the same question in May 2009 only 14% of respondents said their budgets would be increasing compared to 40% in December 2009.

This was posted under category: Enterprise Technology, Sales Strategies Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Top 5 Sales Faux Pas

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 12:54 No Comments
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While faux pas in the world of sales may not be as material as mismatching socks or flood pants, the implications of committing a sales faux pas are arguably more devastating. Committing these five “no-nos” will almost assuredly cost you the sale, or at the very least, will lengthen your sales cycle and hinder your ability to hit your quota.

This was posted under category: Sales Process, Sales Strategies Tags: , , , , , ,

LinkedIn and Sales Intelligence: Two Great Sales Enablement Resources That Can’t Be Overlooked

Monday, March 1, 2010 11:51 No Comments
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One of the most important sales enablement tools is sales intelligence; you must have accurate and up-to-date sales intelligence on your prospects. Sales intelligence tools will help you answer the who, what, where, why, and when questions in your planning process. If you have that information at your disposal, all you need to do is figure out the “how.” The “how” should be focused on relationship building. Using your sales enablement and sales intelligence tools you can start developing relationships with the key stake holders and decision-makers at the accounts you’re going after.

This was posted under category: Sales Enablement Tools, Sales Strategies Tags: , , , , ,