Everything You Learned About Sales Is Backwards

Posted on March 4, 2010 By Bedros

Hey there, Bedros Keuilian here…

Here’s a really cool guest post by my friends Bob Burg and John David Mann, coauthors of The Go-Giver and Go-Givers Sell More.

“I’m no good at selling!” Have you ever heard someone say that? Or maybe said it yourself? (Now, tell the truth.)

We hear it all the time. Everyone who is not in sales thinks, “I could never sell” — and most people who are in sales secretly think the same thing.

There is a reason people feel this way: most of us look at sales backwards. Backwards how? In the most fundamental ways.

For example.

They see sales as convincing people to do something they don’t want to do. It’s not: it is about learning what people do want to do and then helping them do that.

They think sales is about taking advantage of others. Not so: in fact, it’s about giving others more advantage.

Most people think of sales as a talking business. Nope: it’s really a listening business.

Classic sales training focuses on the “close.” The true sales greats hardly notice the close — they are too busy focusing on the open.

But the biggest inversion of all, the great upside-down misconception about sales, is that it is an effort to get other people to do something. Ask most anyone to define sales and you will hear some variation of this: “Sales is getting people to buy something.”

The truth about sales is that it isn’t about getting at all. Sales at its best, at its most effective, is precisely the opposite: it is about — get ready for this — giving.

The word “sales” itself suggests this. It is derived from the Old English word sellan, which means, you guessed it, “to give.” Selling is giving: giving time, attention, counsel, education, empathy and value.

Of course, this is not how most of us have learned to think about sales. The traditional approach to sales aims to choreograph the process by putting control firmly in the hands of the salesperson. Which is probably why neither party really enjoys it. It’s not much fun to have someone try to control you. For that matter, it’s not much fun to be the one doing the controlling, either.

The problem is that little word, “control.” You can’t do it.

Nobody can.

The classic sales process succeeds if you “make a sale.” But you can’t make a sale. Again, no one can. It’s impossible to make a sale, because no one can truly make other people do what they want them to do.

What you can do is create a context that allows a sale to happen when the other person makes a purchase. This is not semantics: this is the secret of all great salespeople.

When you spend time with a genuinely successful salesperson, pay close attention and you’ll find something surprising: none of the hundreds of standard sales techniques are what makes them excel at what they do.

Genuinely great salespeople are not great because they have mastered “the close,” or because they give a dazzling presentation, or because they could shoot holes in any customer objection from fifty paces. They are great because they create a vast and spreading sphere of good will wherever they go. They enrich, enhance and add value to people’s lives.

They make people happier.

How do they do that? What is it that makes them great?

What makes a great salesperson great at sales is that he or she is wholeheartedly interested in the other person. The truth about selling is that it’s not about your product, and it’s not about you — it’s about the other person.

The remarkable thing about these consummate salespeople is that they are not as rare as you might think. In fact, you can find them everywhere. This is because being adept at sales does not require mastery of complex or elaborate skills.

The laws that govern good salesmanship are the laws that govern good relationships. Selling is not at its core a business transaction; it is first and foremost the forging of a human connection.

This is very good news, because it means that anyone can be great in sales.

It means you can be great in sales.

You might think that to do so, you need to have an outgoing, naturally jovial, gregarious personality. Not true. Shy people create relationships and get married. Introverts make great friends. You don’t need to be a “people person,” or any specific type of person, to be great at selling. In fact, the idea itself — that you might have to be a certain sort of person to be great in sales — precisely misses the point:

It’s not about you; it’s about them.

If you take away nothing from this post but those seven words, it will have been well worth the time to read it — because your life in sales will transform.

Bedros here again, If you have never read The Go-Giver I highly suggest that you do. It’ one of the three books I send out to all of my mastermind members. It’s an awesome short read.

And if you want to get your hands on their newest book you can order your copy of Go-Givers Sell More by going here: http://www.GoGiversSellMore.com/

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Comments on Everything You Learned About Sales Is Backwards »

March 4, 2010

Shawn Horwood @ 3:25 pm

THIS BOOK ROCKS! I heard Justin Brooke interview Bob Burg and then I checked out both books - they both rock and everyone should read both of them.

Being a Go Giver is definitely the best way to sell stuff. I highly recommend these books for everyone.

This goes along perfectly with the last “Ah Ha!” moment from Leanne’s blog post - Give others what they want and you’ll get what you want.

Shawn

Clarence Ferguson @ 3:27 pm

Good stuff as usual Bedros
See you in Anahiem

Jason muir @ 3:28 pm

Love it!! That is the best sells info I’ve read in a long time. I’m getting that book.

Fred Noten @ 4:01 pm

Great content Bedros! Same as the new issue from the Manifesto!

Pete Tansley @ 4:13 pm

B, out of interest… what are the other two books you send?? Thanks for this great read, Pete Tansley

Jacob Mcluskie @ 4:16 pm

That was awesome. Great points you make and such an under rated part of our industry. Will be checking out your book for sure!

Adi @ 4:22 pm

WOW, this is so true. Its all anout them (customer,client) NOT you!

saman Bakhtiar @ 5:27 pm

I love that book. One of my favorites of all times. Great post

Fred @ 6:51 pm

Excellent book. I was just reading this this past weekend.

Andrew Schmarje @ 6:52 pm

I wish I would’ve read these sales books when I first starting in the industry. God knows I’ve read most of the other classic sales books from Tom Hopkins, Zig Ziglar and the like along with listening to audiobooks on my way to work.

Shawna Kaminski @ 7:16 pm

Gotta get that book! Love the whole concept. If all sales people were like this, no one would ever feel ‘sold’.

Brandon Campbell @ 7:57 pm

Outstanding post! The Go Giver changed the way I look at life and business! I got the recommendation to read it last year from Cabel at FBS and then actually listened to it on the way down to Orlando for FIS. I enjoyed it so much I listened to it on the return flight as well. I love the book and I recommend it to everyone. I just got Go Givers Sell more this last week and I am very excited to read it as well! Thanks for the amazing content!

Hey Bedros,

That’s a great post and even though I haven’t read those books (yes), anything that has an endorsement by Spencer Johnson MD on the cover is definitely worth reading.

I think in general we all have this “image” of a salesperson from real estate agents to car sales, no disrespect to any that are… There are just some things in life that have been marketed into our brains, like people STILL thinking crunches will help them lose weight, that are hard to shift and sales is no different.

Have a great weekend!

Regards, Clayton
Adelaide Personal Trainers

March 5, 2010

Trainer Ken @ 1:38 am

Great concept…

Luka Hocevar @ 2:11 am

One of the best reads ever.

I bought my whole family the book for Christmas and they loved it.

I just got the Go Givers Sell More in the mail last week.

Loving it!

Luka

John David Mann @ 6:09 am

Thanks so much, Bedros — and to all of you, from Shawn on, for your great comments, too! It’s an honor and a blast to know you’re all getting that kind of value from the books ~ JDM

Dr. George @ 6:12 am

Thanks for a great post!!!

- Dr. George

Bob Burg @ 6:28 am

Wow, Bedros; was just notified of your very kind post, Bedros, about John David Mann’s and my book. Thank you! And, thank you to all the others above who said such encouraging things about it. You ALL are greatly appreciated!!

Bob

Nikki Layton @ 7:39 am

I haven’t read that on yet, I will have to check it out but the key point is awesome. It is about them, not you!

John Thompson @ 7:42 am

Awesome post. The Go Giver is one of my favorite books. I didn’t know they had another one. I’ll have to go pick this up asap.

John

Callie Durbrow @ 3:32 pm

Great post guys! I just got the Go-Giver from Amazon recently and looking forward to diving into it. It’s amazing what happens when you shift your thinking about selling. I used to think it was annoying to be “sold” something…and it is when the person goes about it the wrong way. Giving someone added value is the true key.

March 6, 2010

Temecula Personal Trainer @ 8:43 pm

Great post Bedros. You’re right; nobody likes to be sold anything, but they will certainly buy what they want.

March 13, 2010

adelaide personal trainer @ 6:44 pm

great post, i think a lot of people model their business from big multi-national companies even though they themselves are only a very small company and that is where the problem lies, what works for a big multi-national company doesn’t always work for a small local business

March 17, 2010

ross aubrey @ 3:54 am

Awesome stuff! I’m excited about getting into this one soon!

March 21, 2010

Andrew Nelson @ 7:06 am

Great post!! I was the one that said I can’t sell. I’m getting the book.