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Your Destiny Is Your Decision
April 4, 2008

One of the things that I appreciate the most about our profession as salespeople is that we control our own destiny. As a salesperson, you alone wake up every morning and choose what the outcome of the day will be. You alone can decide if you are going to repeat the actions of the past or look for new and better ways to do your job. You alone control your attitude, enthusiasm and commitment.

Just as a company has to reinvent itself on a regular basis so must you, the sales professional. Look at yourself and your profession as a one-person organization. You are a one-person sales organization that has the capability to make as much or as little money as you decide you want to make. You can decide for yourself if you are going to be an entrepreneur or an employee. You can be a success or a failure. You can excel or remain idle. You can lead a great life or you can lead a bad life. All these decisions are yours and yours alone. You can lead, follow or get out of the way it’s your choice. Whatever the choice they all take the exact same time commitment.

As a one-man sales operation you need to be proactive rather than reactive. As an entrepreneur you need to continually ask yourself several questions, get the answers, then make the changes necessary. Those questions are:
Where are my skills lacking?
What further knowledge do I need?
What trends do I need to watch in my industry?
What is my competition doing? (Internally & externally)
What information do I lack?
What training do I need?
What can I do to improve?
Why do people buy, or not buy from me?

You alone control your destiny. What other profession allows for that much control involving your destiny?
www.iastraining.com

Posted by Brad Huisken on April 4, 2008 | Comments (1)


April 6, 2008
In response to: Your Destiny Is Your Decision
babu2cfar commented:

Excellent set of questions that do provoke the thought process, as we all shuffle between papers, reluctant customers, simply "browsers" and the vast numbers of internet savvy clients who parade down on our stores. The fact that the sales models and exposition areas are so different now, leads one to assume that we are in the wrong. However, the conventional wisdom should show that the clients are rather hesitant to accept lower quality of products, as seen from rising imports, and greatly expanding choices of similar products, that only are marginally different from one another. If we could add exceptional value to the products on sale, and not just romance the settings, the and only then could we say that we are a better sales force. The perils of commission only compensations, massive lay offs, staff reductions, repeated GOB types, and slow but marked fragmentation of the business arena hav all caused more miseries than what transpired in Dickensian world. When we notice top level CEOs barely earning their keep or comparable compensation packages, what can an ordinary salespaerson aspire?? Thus we wallow in our own despair. This professiona has to be more PR oriented and get more professionally demanding. We just cannot afford to be beaten up by clients, economic storms or general apathy. Let us march together for a BETTER tomorrow!!





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