Welcome to "Connect and Convert," the podcast that unveils the secrets to small business sales success. In this episode, hosts Dave Salter and Dennis Collins shed light on the challenges faced by small business owners in recognizing sales problems and providing actionable steps to address them effectively.
Drawing from their extensive experience and real-life examples, Dave and Dennis emphasize the importance of early detection and offer practical solutions. They guide business owners through a step-by-step process to conduct a comprehensive sales audit, assess accountability and rewards systems, and seek external feedback through secret shopping and customer conversations.
Furthermore, they highlight the benefits of working with coaches or consultants who bring fresh perspectives and objective insights. By implementing these action steps, business owners can proactively address sales issues before they become critical and position their companies for long-term success.
Join us on "Connect and Convert" as Dave and Dennis equip you with the tools and strategies to navigate the sales landscape and achieve remarkable growth. Tune in and unlock the potential to revolutionize your sales approach and maximize your business's profitability.
hi, I'm Dave Salter and you've landed on Connect and Convert
Dave Salter:the podcast where we share insider secrets for small business sales success.
Dave Salter:I'm joined today, as always by Dennis Collins.
Dave Salter:And Dennis is our resident rockstar sales training expert.
Dave Salter:He's been successfully training salespeople for about 153 years.
Dave Salter:Dennis.
Dave Salter:Good to see you.
Dave Salter:How are you doing today
Dave Salter:. Dennis Collins: Dave?
Dave Salter:I'm doing well.
Dave Salter:I hope you are.
Dave Salter:I am as well.
Dave Salter:Yeah.
Dave Salter:What we got, Dennis, I have to tell you, I, I learned too many things the hard way.
Dennis Collins:Don't we all?
Dennis Collins:Gee whizz.
Dennis Collins:I could give you a long list of things.
Dennis Collins:I'm still learning the hard way.
Dave Salter:So take for example the first car I bought when I got my
Dave Salter:first job when I got outta college.
Dave Salter:All right?
Dave Salter:So I had this car for about a year or so, and I start hearing
Dave Salter:this deep grinding noise.
Dave Salter:I have no idea where it's coming from.
Dave Salter:From my dad was an engineer, he was a car guy.
Dave Salter:So of course, I'm like looking for fluid leaky fluids.
Dave Salter:I've got the hood up on the thing, not having any idea what I'm looking for.
Dave Salter:And I don't see anything askew under the hood.
Dave Salter:I don't see anything leaking, so I keep driving the damn thing.
Dave Salter:Long story short I find out the hard way thousands of dollars for a new brake job.
Dave Salter:My rotors were shot, my rotors were grinding, but they were so far shot
Dave Salter:they were grinding into the drum.
Dave Salter:So anyway, like few thousand dollars worth of a brake job.
Dave Salter:And I, I didn't know what I didn't know, obviously.
Dave Salter:And we see small business owners are a lot like that when it
Dave Salter:comes to sales, aren't they?
Dennis Collins:I am continuously surprised Dave, at how many owner
Dennis Collins:operated businesses are not seeing the early warning signs, okay.
Dennis Collins:I live in hurricane country, so I've been in hurricane country for
Dennis Collins:a long time, and we get, thankfully we get, early warning signs of a
Dennis Collins:hurricane because it is important to protect yourself against a hurricane.
Dennis Collins:But what are the early warning signs of a sales problem?
Dennis Collins:Sometimes what I've seen, it's already too late.
Dennis Collins:The catastrophic failure has happened.
Dennis Collins:The early warning signs weren't observed, and now it's a big problem.
Dennis Collins:Just like your car.
Dave Salter:Yeah.
Dave Salter:And only 30% of small business owners hit or over-deliver on their revenue target.
Dave Salter:So today we're gonna talk about, you might have a sales problem if, and it's really
Dave Salter:interesting to me Dennis, because as you said, a lot of times, it's too late when
Dave Salter:the biz owner realizes he's got a problem.
Dave Salter:So talk a little bit about why business owners maybe have that
Dave Salter:difficulty seeing that problem.
Dave Salter:And then and we'll go from there, but talk a little bit about maybe that inability
Dave Salter:to have that vision on that sales problem.
Dennis Collins:There's a number of issues.
Dennis Collins:The first issue that I see is a lot of business owners, founders, are
Dennis Collins:trying to be the d-i-y sales manager.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:Hey, this is my business.
Dennis Collins:I understand the business.
Dennis Collins:I can be sales manager.
Dennis Collins:I can do this.
Dennis Collins:And what a great intention, shall we say, but usually it's the wrong intention.
Dennis Collins:How many red flags can a business owner respond to in any given day?
Dennis Collins:In sales, there's red flags in operations, there's red flags.
Dennis Collins:In accounting, there's red flags.
Dennis Collins:How many red flags can you get to in one day?
Dennis Collins:Okay, so if you're trying to do all these jobs as an owner, Uhuh, it fails.
Dennis Collins:I've seen it happen dozens of times.
Dennis Collins:When you start experiencing that steady, steady decline in sales, guess what?
Dennis Collins:It's too late.
Dennis Collins:The hurricane has hit your shores, okay.
Dave Salter:You've got you, you've got a sort of a top 10 list, if you will.
Dave Salter:And you, as you talked about I was gonna use that example as well.
Dave Salter:You know, we look at the weather channel all the time to see when
Dave Salter:the next storm is coming or the be next bad weather maker, if you will.
Dave Salter:And what are some of the early warning signs that a sales
Dave Salter:storm is about to strike?
Dave Salter:You've got a top 10 and maybe you've got a couple in there that are really important.
Dennis Collins:Yeah, this reminds me of Jeff Foxworthy;
Dennis Collins:"You might be a redneck if."
Dennis Collins:No I've been down that road.
Dennis Collins:We're not gonna do that today, but I am gonna say high
Dennis Collins:turnover if you are experiencing extraordinarily high turnover.
Dennis Collins:You just may have a sales problem and you also may have to worry a lot
Dennis Collins:more about just replacing people.
Dennis Collins:There may be some other issues.
Dennis Collins:How about the slow season that never speeds up?
Dennis Collins:You know, I talk, I talked to business owners.
Dennis Collins:"Well, we're in our slow season right now", and six months later I talk.
Dennis Collins:Yeah, we're in our slow season right now.
Dennis Collins:Well, that's what you said six months ago.
Dennis Collins:A slow season.
Dennis Collins:That never speeds up.
Dennis Collins:How about your sales leadership and your accountability?
Dennis Collins:Is it a plus or a minus?
Dennis Collins:Is your sales leadership helping you or hurting you?
Dennis Collins:What's your account?
Dennis Collins:Accountability?
Dennis Collins:What are people responsible for?
Dennis Collins:Who holds them responsible?
Dennis Collins:What happens when they do perform well and they don't perform well?
Dennis Collins:How's your cash flow?
Dennis Collins:Hey, my kids used to ask me that, Hey, dad, how's your flow?
Dennis Collins:Well, how is your flow?
Dennis Collins:I mean, if you have a a problem with cash flow, you probably have a sales problem.
Dennis Collins:Where are your prices?
Dennis Collins:Your prices just right, too high or too low.
Dennis Collins:Too low.
Dennis Collins:You have a sales problem.
Dennis Collins:Too high.
Dennis Collins:You have a sales problem.
Dennis Collins:We've gotta get the pricing just right.
Dennis Collins:The wrong customers?
Dennis Collins:Are you chasing the wrong customers?
Dennis Collins:I have had salespeople in my past that thought Everyone is a prospect.
Dennis Collins:Everyone is a prospect.
Dennis Collins:Well, not true if everyone's a prospect, no one's a prospect.
Dennis Collins:So what do we do?
Dennis Collins:In in sales training?
Dennis Collins:We teach people how to qualify a prospect.
Dennis Collins:It depends on the industry, but we might have five or six
Dennis Collins:elements of qualification.
Dennis Collins:Maybe the intake person on the phone who's making the appointments, does it?
Dennis Collins:Maybe the salesperson does it.
Dennis Collins:Somebody's gotta do it.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:What I've done in the past with clients is built what, what's called
Dennis Collins:the I-C-P, the ideal customer profile.
Dennis Collins:Who is that person that is the most ideal prospect to become a customer?
Dennis Collins:Hopefully for your business, the ICP.
Dennis Collins:There's all kind of ways to do this, but if your business is not focusing
Dennis Collins:in on the most likely prospects to buy, you may have a sales problem.
Dave Salter:I love that.
Dave Salter:I love that that process you've set up.
Dave Salter:You've got a couple more bullet points on your top 10.
Dave Salter:Why don't you finish those off and
Dennis Collins:Yeah, how's your communication?
Dennis Collins:How's the communication in your business up and down the business?
Dennis Collins:Are ideas flowing from staff up and from leadership down?
Dennis Collins:And how's your communications with your customers?
Dennis Collins:Do customers get responses instant responses to their problems?
Dennis Collins:If you aren't.
Dennis Collins:If you don't have a good communications program, you do have a sales problem.
Dennis Collins:Lack of standards.
Dennis Collins:I am shocked, I am shocked, Dave, in this day and age of the number
Dennis Collins:of small businesses that don't have accountability for their salespeople.
Dennis Collins:"Oh, just go sell, make some sales."
Dennis Collins:No.
Dennis Collins:What are.
Dave Salter:So they have no targeted goals.
Dennis Collins:No targeted goals.
Dennis Collins:Sad but true.
Dennis Collins:Last but not least, and this is the biggie.
Dennis Collins:You may have a sales problem if the right people are not on the bus.
Dennis Collins:Thank you to Jim Collins.
Dennis Collins:No relation for writing that book all those years ago.
Dennis Collins:Are the right people on the bus?
Dennis Collins:Do you have the right people?
Dennis Collins:That's a tough one, but I would say in at least 50% of the cases that
Dennis Collins:I've consulted, I would say 50% have the wrong people on the bus.
Dave Salter:So Dennis, let's for instance, say you're a small business
Dave Salter:owner and you sort of in your gut, you see a couple of these problems on the horizon.
Dave Salter:Maybe the situation isn't catastrophic at this point you've got some problems.
Dave Salter:So if you are that business owner and maybe you're catching it
Dave Salter:before it's too late what would you recommend that business owner
Dave Salter:do before the business tanks?
Dennis Collins:First thing, Dave, take a step back.
Dennis Collins:Take a step back, do an audit, spend some time in the sales department.
Dennis Collins:Okay?
Dennis Collins:See what's going on.
Dennis Collins:Acknowledge that you don't know what to look for.
Dennis Collins:I am not knowledgeable about sales.
Dennis Collins:What should I look for?
Dennis Collins:Mm-hmm.
Dennis Collins:Find out what to look for.
Dennis Collins:Review your accountability and rewards programs.
Dennis Collins:That which gets measured and rewarded or punished is what?
Dennis Collins:Is your culture.
Dennis Collins:That becomes your culture.
Dave Salter:Can you explain that a little bit, Dennis?
Dave Salter:What would, how, what's a rewards program?
Dennis Collins:How do you pay, how do you compensate your people?
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:You would be surprised, maybe not.
Dennis Collins:You would be surprised at how many small businesses don't have a comp
Dennis Collins:plan that's in line with their culture, with their top line goals.
Dennis Collins:They've gotta be lined up.
Dennis Collins:Okay?
Dennis Collins:What do you reward people for?
Dennis Collins:What do you not reward people for?
Dennis Collins:What consequences are there for not performing?
Dennis Collins:If there's no consequence, then there's no standard.
Dennis Collins:And likewise, if there's no reward for the performance that you want, so clearly
Dennis Collins:define what you want and reward it.
Dennis Collins:That's what keeps things happening.
Dave Salter:Beautiful.
Dave Salter:You've got a couple more ideas on this.
Dennis Collins:Ask another trusted business owner.
Dennis Collins:So maybe you have a friend, a colleague, and a same or other business.
Dennis Collins:Ask them to maybe become a secret shopper.
Dennis Collins:Maybe call in and pretend to be a customer and see how they're treated.
Dennis Collins:Talk to your customers.
Dennis Collins:How many of us ever talk to our customers after the sale?
Dennis Collins:After the sale.
Dennis Collins:Follow up.
Dennis Collins:Talk to the happy customers.
Dennis Collins:Talk to the unhappy customers.
Dennis Collins:Work with a coach or consultant.
Dennis Collins:It's very hard to see what's going on when you're inside the bottle.
Dennis Collins:Get somebody outside the bottle.
Dennis Collins:A coach a co can help you.
Dennis Collins:And of course, contact your Wizard of Ads Employee Optimization and Sales RX team.
Dennis Collins:That's what we do.
Dennis Collins:We have a product called Sales Scan which we can use in your business to
Dennis Collins:answer all these questions to help you identify those early warning signs.
Dave Salter:What I heard from you today is that oftentimes small business
Dave Salter:owners don't realize they have a sales problem until it's too late.
Dave Salter:Yep.
Dave Salter:You gave us some really good indicators of what some of those problems could be,
Dave Salter:and then also some really good solutions.
Dave Salter:So 25 years ago, my youngest daughter convinced me to coach
Dave Salter:her five year old soccer team.
Dave Salter:I had no clue.
Dave Salter:I had no idea.
Dave Salter:So what I did was a local high school had a program whereby their students
Dave Salter:got credit for community service hours.
Dave Salter:And I, through third party found this high school soccer
Dave Salter:player at the local high school.
Dave Salter:I brought her in to runes cuz I did not know anything about it.
Dave Salter:Good move Dave.
Dave Salter:So she came in and ran my drills.
Dave Salter:She was standing next to me during games.
Dave Salter:So I found that third party expert to come in.
Dave Salter:She examined my problem and said, I'll take care of this for you.
Dave Salter:And then, I provided the leadership.
Dave Salter:But I, we all need that sort of neutral third party eye to come
Dave Salter:in and take a look at what's going right and what's going wrong.
Dennis Collins:Yeah.
Dennis Collins:We're just not objective about our performance.
Dennis Collins:We tend to overrate our performance and not give a very
Dennis Collins:read on how we're actually doing.
Dennis Collins:So that outside party may be the most important of all the things we've
Dennis Collins:talked about, highly encourage it.
Dave Salter:I think the sign of a great leader is admitting that
Dave Salter:he or she doesn't know everything.
Dennis Collins:That's correct.
Dave Salter:Dennis, thanks for your wisdom and insight today, folks up
Dave Salter:another edition of Connect and Convert, the podcast that lets you behind
Dave Salter:the curtain with inside strategies for small business sales success.
Dave Salter:This is Dave Salter with Dennis Collins.
Dave Salter:Thank you for joining us.