Selling Tools, Working Smarter

How One Failing Salesperson Became Invaluable - Fast!


become invaluableHave you ever felt that what you're selling is just like what your competitors offer?  Well, if you think that, imagine how your prospects feel. They get multiple calls every day from sellers who are all saying the same thing.

Crazy busy buyers don't want to waste one iota of their precious time with these sales clones.  Instead, they want to work with people who:

  • Have a deep understanding of their business challenges.
  • Continually bring them suggestions and insights.
  • Provoke their thinking.

In today's business environment, YOU are the primary differentiator - not your products or services.  When you focus on developing and leveraging your own expertise, you'll start seeing immediate results.

Just ask Bill.  When he moved into sales at a printing firm where he'd worked for years, he thought the transition would be easy. But after leaving over 2,500 voice mail messages, he was getting nowhere.

His prospects rarely answered the phone. And, when he left messages, they never called him back. Bill was getting desperate - until the day he decided to embrace the approaches detailed in SNAP Selling.

What did he do first?  He decided to quit selling "printing." It just wasn't working anymore.

Decision makers were simply not interested in talking to another printer who offered one-stop shopping for all their needs combined with great customer service. Their current provider was fine and their pricing acceptable.

Bill's next step was to narrow his focus.  But in what area? After reviewing a variety of projects that his company had done over the years, he decided to become a menu expert.

This is an incredibly hard decision for sellers to make - especially when business is bad. But it is necessary in order to increase your effectiveness.

With this new identity, Bill immersed himself in the restaurant industry.  He learned the lingo, studied the history, analyzed how big restaurant chains worked, examined their challenges, and read everything he could on the topic of menus.

Then he targeted the companies he wanted to land as clients.  As he studied their menus, he discovered ways that he could help the restaurants improve them, possibly in ways they'd not yet perceived.

He followed the trade press to identify potential opportunities for new menu sales. He looked for chains that were lowering their prices, expansions into new markets, announcements of new menu offerings, and more. When he noticed these trigger events, he'd get in touch.

Finally, he unleashed a carefully crafted campaign directly on the chief marketing officers (CMOs) of these big firms. All his communications included:

  • Strong value propositions with statistics;
  • Up-to-date commentary about the restaurant's current direction; and
  • Fresh new ideas about how he could help.

Things started changing almost immediately.  Bill was soon engaged in interesting conversations with the marketing people. They talked about how to energize offers and drive revenue growth with newly designed menus. The "how much" question was barely a consideration.

Meanwhile, his competitors were fighting pricing battles with the supply chain people. Because they were viewed as a commodity, they were discounting like crazy.

The results?  In just two years, Bill's company has printed over two million menus for the country's best-known restaurants. He's in active discussions with his top one hundred targeted restaurants. He's blowing out his sales numbers and having more fun than ever before.

And he's expanding his expertise into his next target market right now - but I'm sworn to secrecy and can't reveal it.

That's why one of the four SNAP Rules is to Be iNvaluable.  In today's marketplace, it's imperative for sales success.

Even if your company offers a wide product line or a variety of services, you can still chose to become a specialist - just as Bill did. While it requires an upfront time investment, the payback can be huge.



After a successful career in the sales world, writing five books, and speaking internationally, Jill is now tackling an even bigger challenge. She's focused on bringing the "millions in the middle" together to solve some of the biggest issues facing our country and the world. Jill truly believes so much more is possible if we can work together.