Upselling Sales Strategies That Will Help You To Make More Profits

Jan 27
14:24

2008

Gavin Ingham

Gavin Ingham

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Upselling and cross-selling the right stuff at the right time is your duty. How many times have you bought something only to get it home and realise that you wish you had bought the more expensive option because it has features or benefits that you would have preferred. If only the salesperson had told you about it!

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Copyright (c) 2008 Gavin Ingham

I generally find that my best ideas for articles and tips come to me when I am thinking about something else and today was no different. I had just finished my sales calls for the day when my phone rang...

I was sat at my PC in my home office,Upselling Sales Strategies That Will Help You To Make More Profits Articles tidying up some emails when one of my good friends called. It's been a while since I have spoken to him so I was delighted to hear from him. It was great to catch up and find out everything that my friend had been up to! He said that he has something he thought I would be interested in hearing...

This story starts with my friend's 18 year old son who is currently enjoying a gap year, getting his head down and working. He has a job in major UK supermarket and he is really enjoying it.

Based in South West London the store he is working in is busy, affluent and diverse. It's not huge but it's a decent size. They have around about 150 staff and shifts would mean that at any one time there might be 40 or more people working in the store.

Like most retailers the store chain in question are keen on their customers owning and using store cards. This creates loyalty, allows the store to compile details on personal shopping habits and group trends and, perhaps most importantly, allows them to extend credit to their customers.

And as any business who has cards like these knows, customers on credit are worth far more than those paying cash!

So back to our little store...

Like most stores they have targets and goals and their most recent "push" is on encouraging customers to sign up for more store cards. Each member of staff, whether individually or as a group, is trained to "upsell" these cards and are then let loose on the customers. Not particularly ambitious, their target number of take ups is 4 cards per week... for the whole store.

So for the next week our young hero, despite not being on the till much of the time, asked every customer he could if they would sign up. Despite his lack of experience or formal sales training and techniques our hero signed up... 18, in one week. Now I have to admit that I have no idea how this rates or how many you or I would have signed up but it is obviously well over the target of 4 that was set for the whole store.

At the end of the week our young salesperson goes on his holidays, returning two weeks later to find out that in his absence the whole store, 150 people remember, have upsold exactly ... zero.

Zero in 2 weeks. So what do we learn from this?

1. Upselling and cross-selling to existing clients is critical if you want to sell more and make more money.

Clients who have already bought off you, who are in a buying mood and who believe in and see value in what you do are great prospects for upselling and cross-selling. There is every possibility that they will buy something else if you make it known to them.

I remember as a young salesman one of my best clients buying something off someone else. I spoke to my client some time later and he apologised to me saying that he did not know that I could supply him with what he wanted! Ouch! I never made that mistake again!

2. Know what you can upsell and cross-sell.

Up to date knowledge of what you can upsell is critical. Upselling the wrong or irrelevant products or services will just alienate your clients. Upselling and cross-selling the right stuff at the right time is your duty. How many times have you bought something only to get it home and realise that you wish you had bought the more expensive option because it has features or benefits that you would have preferred. You would have liked to have known about it!

A reader rang me yesterday to tell me that he was running a short training session on upselling. The first thing that he had done was outline for his team all of the options they had for upselling and how these would benefit the client. This information is important if you want to boost your sales.

3. Make sure that you ask.

Perhaps the biggest block to upselling is that salespeople do not ask. Maybe they feel scared. Perhaps they feel cheeky. Maybe they think that they don't have the right. Perhaps they "already know" that the client will say, "No".

Whatever! The biggest problem with upselling, as with asking for referrals, is that most salespeople quite simply just do not ask.

Call it the McDonalds affect if you like... you have to ask! They upsell on everything and they get a lot of "Nos" but they also get a lot of "Yeses"! Asking every time should be a key component of your sales approach too. You could significantly increase your sales results over night.

Yesterday morning I met my sister and her kids in the afternoon. I only wanted a cup of tea. As I ordered the woman said, "I've just baked some home-made scones. They're still warm. Can you smell them? Would you like one whilst they're still warm?"

"Yes please". An easy sale!

4. Learn how to "ask" properly.

Once you know the benefits of upselling and cross-selling, know what to upsell and commit to asking you need to improve your upselling techniques. McDonalds offer you bigger meals but have little clue as to whether you're hungry or not. That's fine in Mcdonalds, they don't have the time but you do. And you have the relationships to do this too.

As you are selling ask questions that uncover the need for an upsale. They needn't be complex but they do make a huge difference to the relevancy of your upsell and the final result.

When booking keynotes I don't just suggest that people buy the books or audios as well, I ask a few questions first to identify what exactly is needed and how it would add benefit for my client.

5. Keep it simple.

I've said it before and I will say it again but 80% of selling is about turning up, maintaining the right attitude and playing the game.

Many salespeople walk in to my seminars and demand the advanced stuff because they are so experienced yet, when you follow them around, they have forgotten or are not doing many sales basics.

Without the basics you are screwed!

My friend's son may not know the intricacies of selling yet. He may not have the skills or the experience. He may not be as experienced or as crafty as his elder peers yet. But subtlety, experience and cunning are no substitute for action and if he keeps on taking action he will outsell his more established but less proactive peers.

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