One of the common stumbling blocks we see holding salespeople back is self-limiting beliefs that prevent them from moving the sales conversation forward, moving an opportunity to the next step, or asking the kind of tough, timely questions that can stop a prospect in their tracks and think "Wow, I've never thought of it that way before." And if your sales managers are not aware of these self-limiting beliefs - and the impact they can have on their salespeople - their coaching effectiveness will be significantly slower.
While we can empirically measure 64 specific self-limiting beliefs when we evaluate a sales team, there's probably over a hundred of these beliefs that we regularly observe in salespeople, and as we coach sales leaders to coach their salespeople. In your next coaching conversation with a member of your sales team, listen for signs of some of these beliefs. Here’s a few examples:
One of the more common issues that we see in salespeople is having a hard time discussing money. They're uncomfortable exploring the financial situation of a prospect. They're uncomfortable
The last self-limiting belief we will cover in this article is the fear of cold calls. This is really prevalent in sales. A lot of bloggers and social media experts have talked about how cold calls are dead, and how social media, inbound marketing, and content driven email campaigns are going to basically destroy the need for cold calls. The truth is, cold calls are alive and well and will be for a long time, yet we see sales people get paralyzed with fear and the phone weighs 10,000 pounds when they have to pick it up. One of the things you can do to combat this is scheduled time with yourself to make calls. Block out 30 to 60 minutes on your calendar and treat it like an appointment. Make sure you change up the day and time you do cold calls every once in a while as well, that way you might catch someone at just the right time. Another thing you can do to combat a fear of cold calls reframing how you think of rejection. Instead of looking at it as a rejection, look at it as a projection. When you start tracking rejections as a positive progress toward your goal rather than a negative, you start to look forward to that rejection because it gets you one step closer to a conversation that's going to go somewhere.
There are hundreds of self-limiting beliefs in sales, these are just a few examples. Hopefully this gives you a framework of what to look for and how to coach through them. If you’d like more guidance, you can subscribe to an online course designed specifically to address self-limiting beliefs by going to https://learn.objectivemanagement.com/courses/salesmind?ref=220. And you can always contact us at http://www.intelligentconversations.com/ or visit us on Facebook.
Want to read more about self limiting beliefs? Check out this great article below:
https://inlpcenter.org/five-step-process-for-releasing-limiting-beliefs/