Persuasion Is The Art Of Getting What You Want
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Article Title:
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Persuasion Is The Art Of Getting What You Want
Article Description:
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Traditional sales training has been broken for quite some
time. Buyers today want something more than slick talkers
and hackneyed closing lines.
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761 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: Thu Sep 22 23:02:12 EDT 2005
Written By: Dave Lakhani
Copyright: 2005
Contact Email: dave@boldapproach.com
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Persuasion Is The Art Of Getting What You Want
Copyright © 2005 Dave Lakhani
Ask The Persuader
www.askthepersuader.com
Traditional sales training has been broken for quite some time.
Buyers today want something more than slick talkers and hackneyed
closing lines. They don’t want to be put through a process that
is designed to fit everyone, in fact, they are willing to vote
with their dollars and long term business if that is what you
offer.
What customers really want is access to relevant information from
knowledgeable professionals who move them.
Persuasion when done correctly creates change at a physiological,
psychological and biological level in the person you are
persuading. It allows them to check their internal map of what it
true or not against a story that you’ve carefully crafted for
them after eliciting their buying criteria, not a list of
features, but a list of emotional criteria that allows them to
say yes with total confidence.
How To Persuade
1. Open With A Powerful Persona
2. Elicit Information
3. Tell A Powerful Story To Lead Them To Their Own Most Logical
Conclusion
In order to persuade effectively, you start with your persona.
Much of a decision about whether or not to buy from you comes
within seconds of meeting you and long before you have a chance
to open your mouth and say your first words.
In order to create a powerful persona you need to check several
areas. First, take a look at your clothes, go beyond the basics
like freshly shined shoes and pressed clothes. Ask yourself if
your hairstyle is current (note, if it is over 3 years old, it is
probably out of date whether you are a man or a woman). If you’ve
gained or lost more than 10 pounds in the past year and haven’t
had your clothing altered or updated they will not give you a
powerful first impression. Are you dressed at the right level?
You should dress at least as well as the CEO of the company you
are selling to or one step better. But dressing is just the first
step, there are at least a dozen other areas that you must
consider.
Simply by making those small changes to your current presentation
will increase your persuasive quotient instantly. If people are
going to judge you by what they see, be sure that they see your
very best package first. In my book Persuasion: The Art of
Getting What You Want, you’ll find a complete persona checklist
that includes clothing, your voice and communication skills and
the presentation of your total package, your compete persona.
In order to craft a powerful story that will draw people in and
resonate with them in a way that makes them want to draw your
conclusion, you must ask better questions. The questions you want
to ask elicit not only product or service requirements, but
emotional requirements which will be the true criteria by which
your offer is judged.
To elicit emotional buying criteria you have to ask very detailed
and penetrating questions. Here are a few examples of questions
that will begin getting to emotional buying criteria:
* What specifically will successful implementation of this
product or service mean to you personally?
* How will you define success in relation to this product or
service?
* What was the final straw that made you decide to purchase
this product or service or to replace your existing product
or service?
* Other than you, who will be evaluating the success of this?
* If you could wave a magic wand and get exactly what you want,
what would it look like? Why specifically would you want it
to look like that.
When you begin to stop asking open ended questions and start
drilling down, you’ll find the pain and the requirements to
successfully position your solution.
Stories lead people to draw their most logical conclusion,
the one that the moral relates to. We are deeply persuaded
by powerful stories because they are the oldest form of
communication we know. Rather than rattling off a list of
features and benefits, if you tell a story about how someone else
used the products specific features and benefits or used the
service to get a similar set of results and demonstrate it deeply
by using metaphor, the person listening can draw only one
conclusion, the one you want them to, but they’ll defend it as
their own forever.
Persuasion is both an art and a science, but one that everyone
must master. Your ability to earn is in direct proportion to your
ability to persuade. Persuasion truly is the art of getting what
you want.
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Dave Lakhani is the author of Persuasion: The Art of Getting
What You Want. The book covers 17 specific persuasion tactics
and demonstrates the neuroscience and psychology behind true
persuasion. Dave is providing a rare free tele-seminar for our
readers. To register and to get a free chapter from his book
visit www.askthepersuader.com right now, lines are
limited, you can also learn more about persuasion at:
www.howtopersuade.com.
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