| The Sales Funnel Concept - So Simple And Yet So Effective |
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By Jonathan Farrington, The JF Consultancy It is also a time-management tool, which will help them to accomplish the following essential selling tasks: Sales Funnel is conceptually divided into three distinct parts, or levels, which correspond to the three different types of selling work. To enable salespeople to utilise the Funnel concept efficiently they must first sort their sales objectives into these three levels: Above the Funnel - Prospect & qualify. Above the Funnel: In The Funnel: It is important that the salesperson understands the response mode of each buyer, identifies the results each buyer needs in order “to win” and ensures they understand that the proposal will serve his/her individual criteria. Finally, at this stage of the cycle, they need to continually reassess the sales picture and eliminate areas of perceived weakness within their bid using the principle of capitalising on their strengths. Best Few: The tasks involved are end-tasks, like overcoming last minute objections, agreeing terms and conditions and signing orders etc. As sales professionals they must be able to do all three kinds of work, but obviously they will have several possible orders that they are working on at the same time. Since they will all be at different stages of completion, they will not be doing the same kind of work on all of them at the same time. By following this system they could potentially reduce the normal sales cycle by 50%! Using Sales Funnel over time, helps to plan time required ahead of time.The eventual objective in utilising the Sales Funnel concept is to be able to move the various sales opportunities down the Funnel at a steady and predictable rate. This in turn will mean that income and achievement level is steady and predictable. To achieve this, there is a need to work on two interrelated tasks: The simple rule of thumb is: “Every Time You Close Something; Prospect or Qualify Something Else” Finally, Let Us Not Forget Good Old Villfredo Pareto And His 80/20 Rule: Generally, since 80% of sales are generated from 20% of customers, 80% of salespeople’s time should be focused on 20% of their most important customers/prospects. |





