|
How Good Are Your Sales Skills?
by Dirk Zeller
from totalrealestatesolutions.com
Let me share an example. My father had open-heart
surgery a few years ago. He was blessed to have an excellent
heart surgeon. That was exactly what this doctor did -- heart
surgery, and only heart surgery. There was an anesthesiologist
who put my father to sleep. There was another surgeon who
retrieved a vein out of my father’s leg and prepared
it for by-pass. There was another surgeon who opened the chest
cavity and readied the heart. After all those functions were
complete, the heart surgeon stepped in for his part. He completed
his bypass sections of the surgery and left the others to
complete the operation. Do you have the skills and the systems
to run your business that way? What would your production
look like if you did? How balanced would your life be with
this type of a business?
If you had that level of sales skills and consultation skills,
you would be paid better than that heart surgeon is paid.
There are more people who truly need your services than there
are who need a heart surgeon. You have a bigger market to
sell your service in today than the heart surgeon has. The
question is whether you are truly taking advantage of it and
preparing yourself to win.
Abe Lincoln said, “If I had six hours to chop down
a tree, I’d spend the first four hours sharpening the
axe.” He would spend two thirds of his time improving
the tools that make him effective at work. What would your
business look like if you spent time sharpening your axe?
What do we normally do? We start right in trying to chop
down the tree. We don’t evaluate how best to chop down
the tree. We just start chopping and hope that the tree will
eventually fall. We keep swinging the axe until the sweat
is pouring down before we evaluate if this is the best approach.
Most of us work to make progress in our life. By working
hard, we make good time. But we are often making good time
in the opposite direction from our desires in life. The problem
is that we don’t know where we are going. Many of us
have not clearly defined what we want. We also haven’t
spent the time to sharpen our skills so that our efforts can
produce much fruit.
Many speakers talk about being efficient. When your efficiency
increases, they say, you have won the game. It is true that
there is value in increasing your efficiency. Efficiency is
great, as long as we are effective as well. But being highly
effective is more important than being highly efficient. Let
me give you an example. Being efficient is having the skills
to drive at 70 mph versus being able to control a car only
up to 55 mph. Being effective is taking the most direct route
to drive from Denver to Chicago. If you are not focused on
effectiveness, you may drive from Denver to Dallas to get
to Chicago. The goal is Chicago; even if you can drive at
70 mph the whole way, going to Dallas first wipes out all
of your efficiency gains. Take the time to ensure that you
are heading directly in the direction you desire; that you
are not taking the wrong turn; that you are not stuck on the
turnpike of life with no exit for hundreds of miles.
You must spend time to focus on being effective, to “sharpen
the axe.” What is your axe in the real estate business?
Which tools do you need to spend time sharpening in order
to be more effective? Most of us have quite a few things that
we need to sharpen in our business. Select one thing that
really needs your attention today. Don’t wait until
tomorrow -- do it now. Then work, focus and improve that one
area, even if only for 30 minutes a day, to sharpen your axe.
You will be amazed at the ease with which you can fell the
big trees of life.
|