Success Tip #48 - Boost Your Business Batting Average by 20 to 50%
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to ike@businesssuccessbuilder.com.
Title: Success Tip #48 - Boost Your Business Batting Average by 20 to 50%
Word Count: 789
Author: Ike Krieger
Email: ike@businesssuccessbuilder.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=3525
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Success Tip #48 - Boost Your Business Batting Average by 20 to 50%
Copyright 2005 Ike Krieger
Let's take a look at how a baseball statistic can improve
your business bottom line.
I love baseball. I find the history of the grand old game
fascinating.
Baseball history and baseball lore are based on the
personalities of individuals and on more than a century’s
worth of statistics.
First, bear with me, especially you non-baseball fans,
while I explain one of the statistical components called
“batting average”. Batting average is a tool for measuring
a player’s relative success at hitting a baseball.
Hitting a baseball at the professional level is difficult
at best. A player’s batting average is determined by the
number of safe “hits” divided into the number of attempts.
The resulting percentage is the foundation for this
particular measuring stick.
Twenty seven safe hits out of every one hundred attempts
produce a batting average of 27%. Add one more decimal and
you have a .270 batting average. No player has ended the
season with a batting average of .400 or more since Ted
Williams of the Boston Red Sox accomplished the feat in
1941.
What’s the difference between a professional baseball
player of today with a batting average of .270 versus one
who is hitting .310?
The difference is $1,000,000 in average salary. That’s
right, $1,000,000 in average salary.
Professional baseball is willing to pay someone an
additional one million dollars because they are successful
31 times out of every 100 tries versus someone who is
successful only 27 times. Four additional safe hits out of
every 100 tries are all that separate the two.
Turn these statistics upside down and you arrive at an even
more intriguing conclusion.
A major league ball player who fails only 69 times out of
every 100 tries commands an average salary totaling a
million dollars more than someone who fails 73 times out of
every 100 tries.
This comparison can be transferred readily to the world of
business. A small change in your marketing and sales
effectiveness can make a big difference in your overall
success.
I’ve been boasting for years that I can help increase your
business by 20 to 50%. This seems almost outlandish until
you examine the numbers.
Your conversion average, your “C.A.”, is the business
equivalent of a batting average “B.A”.
Your C.A. is determined by the number of new clients, or
sales you produce, divided by the number of your qualified
prospects.
How many of your qualified prospects are converted into
clients or sales?
If you’re converting 2 out of every 10 prospects into loyal
paying clients, you have a conversion average of .200.
Increase your effectiveness to where you can get 3 out of
10 and you have increased your average to .300. But, by
what percentage have you increased your business?
When you experience an improvement from 2 out of 10 to 3
out of 10, you have increased your business by 50%. If you
go from 5 out of 10 to 6 out 10, you have increased your
business by 20%.
You can bring about this increase by making a simple, but
not so easy shift in what you say, how you say it, and the
questions you ask.
Baseball players turn to their hitting coach when they need
objective advice. I guess that makes me a “conversion
coach.”
Here are three tips that can improve your conversion
average.
• Talk Less
• Ask the right powerful open ended questions
• Listen More
As simple as these may seem, these three steps are the
secret ingredients that lead to a higher C.A.
My clients become really effective at all three. They learn
to ask the right question and say the right thing at the
right time.
Talking less will help you get, rather than give, valuable
information.
If you believe that talking more, or talking more glibly,
is the key to producing a higher conversion average, you’re
wrong.
Those who attempt to control a communication by talking
more don’t really control the conversation at all, they
dominate it.
The right open ended questions will help you control the
communication. With open ended questions you can direct the
conversation.
Effective listening is the most powerful communications
tool of all. When you listen you give a real gift and will
be viewed as a "great conversationalist.”
This quote by Wilson Mizner says it best. "A good listener
is not only popular everywhere, but after a while he gets
to know something."
So, when it's "your turn at bat" remember to Talk Less, Ask
the right powerful open ended questions and Listen More.
Use these three steps and you’ll be well on your way to
increasing you C.A.
Let's go. Batter up!
About the Author:
Ike Krieger is a speaker, author and mentor. Ike provides
tips, tools, ideas and resources that focus on boosting
your sales, business networking and business building
success. Ike will help you get in front of more of your
ideal contacts, and then turn your contacts into
contracts™...or clients... more easily and more often. -
Subscribe to Ike's Success Tips mailing list at
www.BusinessSuccessBuilder.com
|