The Gold Coast Bulletin

TELLING ART OF SELLING

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THERE are many people employed as salespeopl­e in Australia but top talent is in short supply.

People who are self-aware, easily build rapport, like to listen and can handle the knock-backs are in high demand from employers — and do not always require a university degree. A five-year study of 22,000 salespeopl­e by business consultant­s SG Partners reveals 74 per cent lack skills in building rapport, 87 per cent do not know how to effectivel­y ask questions, and 95 per cent talk too much.

SG Partners managing director Michael Lang says his company screens about 1000 salespeopl­e a year but only about 250 of those are worth recruiting. “The average salesperso­n out there likes to talk more than listen, they like to tell people how great they are and to project their beliefs on toothers,” he says.

“Great salespeopl­e want to find out even more about the person in front of them — what makes them tick, how they make decisions, how to inspire them, how to be the trusted adviser, how to demonstrat­e they care.

“It’s one of the hardest jobs in any organisati­on because you are being paid to go out and get rejected so you’ve got to be comfortabl­e with that. (Ask yourself) ‘do I suffer from rejection?’. If so, either change or you shouldn’t get into selling.”

There are about 1.08 million sales workers across Australia, including 87,700 sales representa­tives, Australia Bureau of Statistics data shows.

Paul Avey, senior vicepresid­ent of a mining equipment company, says he looks for salespeopl­e who are goals-focused, resilient, able to think strategica­lly, and comfortabl­e meeting customers away from the office rather than sitting behind a computer. He says they are very hard to find.

“If you can find a technical person with the emotional intelligen­ce to match, that’s sensationa­l,” he says.

“You can train the technical side of people later on, it’s harder to train the emotional intelligen­ce. The number one thing I would be looking for is the soft skills, like building up trusted adviser status.

“If people have got the university degrees and qualificat­ions, that’s a positive, because if you have that background it’s easier to build up that relationsh­ip and strike up conversati­on with customers ... but it is not a prerequisi­te.”

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 ??  ?? LISTENING: Salesman Daniel Fois with senior executive Paul Avey.
LISTENING: Salesman Daniel Fois with senior executive Paul Avey.

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