Ambitious accountants

Business tips, insights and ideas from Mark Lee

Are you an ‘Accidental Sales Person’?

Few ambitious professionals have ever chosen a career in sales. And yet, regardless of your professional discipline you will, almost by definition, have to be able to generate income. Inevitably that income will come from clients and you will have some, possibly a large, responsibility for helping to generate those ’sales’.

My friend, Richard J White, describes those of us who are in this position as “Accidental sales people”. We didn’t choose to work in sales but it is still an integral part of what we do. Richard’s view is that we will be more successful if we adopt a ’soft-selling’ style rather than attempt to emulate the salespeople whom we hate. You know – those pushy people who try to persuade people to buy things they don’t want.

We need to ensure that our sales techniques are appropriate and that our prospective clients do not feel we are pressurising them to engage us for services they do not want. For this reason traditional sales training techniques are unlikely to be very effective when trying to help ambitious professionals enhance the results of their networking and client development activities.

I have long admired Richard’s ’soft-selling’ techniques as they are very similar to solution based selling and consultative selling – being the approaches that I learned some years ago and incorporate into my mentoring programme. In essence the key point is to work with rather than against human nature. Rather than attempt to push your services, soft-selling demands that you first understand the primary motivations of your clients and prospective clients. Then, and only then, you should be able to make your services seem so compelling that they attract your clients to want to engage you.

The skills you need to develop are less a hard nosed approach to selling and more an understanding of human nature and a degree of patience.

March 15, 2007 - Posted by bookmarklee | Achieving success, Career development, Mentoring, Networking | | 3 Comments

3 Comments »

  1. I am an accidental sales person. One of the best sales books I read was “You Can’t Teach a Kid To Ride a Bicycle at a Seminar.” Soft selling has changed my perceptions (and abilities) of selling. Thank you for the link.

    Comment by Zach Katkin | March 15, 2007 | Reply

  2. Great article Mark, thanks for highlighting it to me – I can see some of the similarities between this and the topics that I am currently writing about.

    Comment by Ed Stivala | March 19, 2007 | Reply

  3. [...] at 8:29 am | In Adding value, Personal development, Consulting | I’ve mentioned my friend Richard J White before. I’ve just read a piece on his blog that reinforces the advice I give in my talk on [...]

    Pingback by Do you suffer from premature evaluation? « Mentoring ambitious professionals | April 3, 2007 | Reply


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