Posted at 10:54 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Wow. I expect salesforce.com sellers to be sharing this video with everyone they know. Listen for the cheap shot at Microsoft's CRM capabilities.
Cramer hits on all the right themes: Cloud computing, sales people monitoring, improving customer relations, improving top line revenue.
I wonder, though, is Cramer such a lightning rod that you would want to know your audience's opinion of him before sharing? I don't think so. Even if you think he's just being a shill and don't trust him, his points are logical and beg at least a cursory look at salesforce.com's capabilities.
Posted at 10:06 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
You may have heard that here in the Atlanta area many are suffering
through repairing their homes after torrential rains and flooding - the worst EVER for our area.
Understanding that cleanup and waterproofing contractors are likely the same
folks who are hurting due to the present economic downturn, the following actual conversation is regrettable.
This dialogue occurred last week between our highly educated friend
Tina and a waterproofing contractor (emphasis added):
I just had a fine
gentleman leave who REFUSED to give me an estimate on waterproofing.
"I can only talk to the decision
maker", he said to me.
I explained I was
his audience...to which replied, "Yes ma’am, but this stuff is pretty
technical, beyond what you could explain to your husband, and may cost
more than groceries, so I should talk to your husband, can we call him and see
when I can meet with him?"
Guess which (2) of
these responses I said next....
a) I'm sorry he
doesn't let me make outgoing calls.
b) The truth is I
left my husband years ago in search of something more, like a waterproofing
salesman
c) I can see you
are a wise businessman with a solid marketing strategy - are you looking for
investors?
d) I'm quite
certain we will be giving someone else our money this week, but I am going to
find a very special place for your contact information.
e) I actually have
a wife, not a husband; can you imagine how hard it is for us to decide on
anything?
Anyone want me to
send this treasure to his or her house?
Though this real life example is obviously laughable, unfortunately, it
is also common.
If you haven’t figured it out yet, the problem with the above is two
fold:
1) 1) The seller is not treating the buyer with respect – maybe she’s
actually an engineer? Or maybe she is just smart enough to understand the
proposal he will make? In truth, Tina exudes intelligence form the moment you
talk to her. Often times,
listening is the most important selling skill.
2) 2) Though he is on the right track to try to qualify the opportunity,
the seller is ignoring any possibility the “wife” had decision making authority
and blows this important step in the process.
I discussed this train-wreck of a conversation with a client of mine
who manages a sales force. He will be sharing this conversation with his team because it reminds him of the subtle
ways his sales-people self-inflict injuries to their opportunities.
He compared it to the important CustomerCentric Selling® step of figuring out who the other
key players are when you only have one contact at an opportunity.
Guess which question below makes him want to poke his eyes out:
“So, who are the decision makers on this project at your company?"
Or
“So, who else, besides
yourself, will be involved in the decision making process?”
For me, we can glean two important lessons from Tina's conversation the sales manager's corollary. First, treat everyone with respect – seems like a life lesson as well as a business lesson, no?
Second, words count. Your company can have the best products and services and a slick marketing campaign that drives people to explore what you have to offer. Yet salespeople like Mr. Waterproofing will throw water all over your opportunities if you don’t help them watch what they say.
Good Selling.
Posted at 10:33 AM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: alignment, CustomerCentric, Decision Maker, Process, qualify, words
This one ranks up there with Freakonomics. It's that good.
Phil Rosenzweig's article, "Misunderstanding the Nature of Company Performance: The Halo Effect and Other Business Delusions", details why management is NOT an exact science and there is no formula or blueprint for success despite what you might have learned in the management aisle of Barnes and Noble.
More than just a debunker of wildly popular management tomes, the author also offers his own lessons.
For example, "Wise managers must therefore shift away from the search for blueprints and formulas, and instead think of the business world in terms of probabilities. Strategic leadership is about making choices, under uncertainty, that have the best chance to raise the probabilities of success, while never imagining that success can be predictably achieved."
This lesson resonates strongly with me and should be familiar to anyone who has participated in one of my CustomerCentric Selling® workshops. These folks have heard me over and over again instruct that implementing a sales process that enhances the customer experience, aligns well with your marketing message, and guides sellers through opportunities is NOT a silver bullet or magic formula.
Instead, if it is followed/coached/reinforced, it will help ratchet up the probability of success. And as Rosenzweig suggests, isn't that really all you can ask for?
Good Selling!
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Technorati Tags: blueprints, CustomerCentric Selling, formulas, management, marketing, probability, Sales, science, Selling
Posted at 04:50 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: CustomerCentric, Evaluaton, Managers, Marketing, Process, Prospects, Sales, Sellers, Solution Development
Last night, I attended a networking event hosted by the Atlanta Chapter of SMEI - Sales and Marketing Executives International.
The promised agenda was "How to Make Your Numbers Before Year End."
I usually have low expectations for this sort of thing, but have to relate that I was pleasantly surprised.
David Gibson – VP Sales, Reveille Software
David Riviere – MD, Alvarez and Marsal
1. The current macro-economic environment is all about execution - prepare, practice and deliver.
2. The world has shifted to one where defining your niche is vitally important.
3. You have to have a tight cost v. benefit analysis - payback has to come "in year". Do not try to close business based on an ROI (nasty acronym) too far into the future.
4. Think about the financial health of your prospects and potential customers to see what they might need from you and where they may be spending money.
5. CFOs and their direct reports are the key decision-makers on significant opportunities today.
6. Be creative and honest. Ask: "What does new normal look like?"
7. Be willing to share risk and outcome with your customers; be prepared to put skin in the game.
8. If "partnership" is the context of a deal, be sure there are agreed upon success metrics on set time periods.
9. The "value prop" is in buyers eye not sellers eye; and "Value Prop" as a concept is timeworn, nebulous and stereotypical. EDITOR'S NOTE - this is a pet peeve of mine. Can't stand the expression, but that's me.
10. Make sure you have a tight demonstration on business value so others (your internal champions) can sell for you.
11. "Provocative Selling" is not about being in their face but leaving prospects/buyers with a strong positive impression of you, your company and your offerings.
12. The inquisitive sellers are the ones who will do better in this economy.
13. Marketing and sales should report directly to one individual because they are so co-dependent.
You know, sure
these are universal truths of selling for all-time, everyone knows them and loves them.
But look at them again and compare your reaction if the economy was booming rather than the worst in at least a generation.
At the very least, the above baker’s dozen should cause you to consider or re-consider your recipe for success.
Good Selling, and isn't it time for dessert?
Posted at 02:12 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: champion, Marketing, payback, Process, ROI, Sales, selling, value proposition
See Part 1 here.
Posted at 10:45 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: B2B, customercentric selling, demand generation, Marketing, process, pushy, sales, selling
I spent the early part of this week going back to school
myself: At the CustomerCentric Selling® partners retreat. Lots of pearls of wisdom and enlightenment. This is Part I.
First off was an impressive keynote address from Greg Alexander, CEO of Sales Benchmark Index. After mentioning that his research shows that sales force effectiveness is the #1 objective of today’s CEOs, he discussed four main points that I’ll break out for you below.
1) Product and Price are no longer a sustainable competitive advantage. Everything cool and useful gets copied within 18 months or so these days. In the global economy, there seems to always be someone pricing their comparable stuff even cheaper than seems possible. See Michael Porter, Thomas Friedman, etc.
2) The key question executives need to answer then is “What is your strategy for maintaining or achieving a dominant position in your market?” Since it’s can’t be product or price, what’s left is The Customer Experience. Where does Customer Experience start? MARKETING AND SALES.
How? That experience starts with empowering your sales team to make your customers’ buying experience world class – that is, make it easy and enjoyable.
At this point, my mind wandered a little: (c’mon, I’m a sales guy, like my attention can be held in a vice without hypnosis). I started thinking about a recent success story I heard from a customer of mine. Seems they were locked into a hyper competitive opportunity against their archrival for a large contract from a F500 company – we’ll call them F500 for short. After awarding the business to my client, F500 actually told them, “You won because of salesmanship. When we asked your competition about differentiators they talked themselves up and then bashed you. You, though, described yourself in terms we could understand and then talked up your strengths without even mentioning your competition. We felt you must really care about doing things the right way.” THAT is caring about the customer experience.
Tbis success is gratifying to me. With this competitive situation, they were demonstrating the CustomerCentric Selling core concept - which I taught them - of “Make yourself equal THEN make yourself different… Otherwise you’re just different.” And you make yourself different by building a vision of usage and value around what makes you special.
(Back to Alexander’s Keynote)
3) Alexander then asked, “Why Now?” Well, because within a few years half of the sales talent is going out the door. It seems the US census tracks this sort of thing and reports that there are 20 million sales people give or take a few in the United States. Half of them are nearing retirement age. Someone needs to talk to these people!!!
Alexander is NOT suggesting a focus on the Willy Loman's out there that sold only on relationships. He's referring to the sales leaders who are planning to retire without so much as an exit interview, let alone a thorough interview about what made them successful.
For many companies, all that knowledge is going to go out the door without anyone writing down the tools or methods the "non-Lomans" (my term) have deployed over the years. Yet, writing down the tools, methods, processes a successful sales person uses is the first step in implementing a sales methodology. And having a sales methodology is the first step in focusing on the Customer's Experience, especially for B2B companies.
Stunningly, Alexander reports that many companies do not have a sales methodology even though his company’s research shows that it is a statistical fact that you will do better if you have one installed. Alexander points to Seth Godin and Zipf’s law – that is, in a winner take all society, the difference between #1 and #2 is huge, perhaps 10%. #3 is much further behind than that - for further evidence of the importance of focusing on Customer Experience and documenting why your salespeople are successful.
Folks, you're successful sales people are retiring, you haven't figured out how to clone them by recording the secrets to your success, yet you need to focus on Customer Experience. So,....
4) Where to start? Well, you had better benchmark. Sales Benchmark Index has data on 11,000 companies. Only 7.3% qualify as world class. That is, they are in the top 25% across 11 categories of metrics. Where do you stand? Do you have a sales process? Is Marketing involved? Do Sales and Marketing work together to insure a positive customer experience?
Thanks Greg for a thoughtful and entertaining keynote.
More from my "Back to School" days later....
Posted at 04:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: benchmarking, customer experience, Death of a Salesman, differentiators, Marketing, methodology, process, Sales, salespeople, sellers, Willy Loman
Steve Youngblood and I worked together years ago. He posts a nice short primer on Social Networking tools for business here. Steve summarizes Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Blogging.
Posted at 03:53 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Michael Bosworth, Co-founder & Co-author of CustomerCentric Selling®, comments here on how integrated sales and marketing teams increase sales.
Posted at 11:10 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: CustomerCentric Selling, messaging, sales, training
Posted at 01:06 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
My colleague and fellow CustomerCentric Selling partner Jim Naro has posted an excellent article on how to make sure your sales training and sales process improvement dollars are being spent wisely.
Posted at 01:33 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: process improvement, sales, sales methodology, sales training
At least once per year, I serve as a sales training coach for another CustomerCentric Selling®
practitioner. Last week, I helped Frank Visgatis, co-writer of the CustomerCentric Selling® methodology at a Workshop in Atlanta. This serves a few purposes:
Posted at 10:04 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: CustomerCentric, Loss to No Decision, sales messaging, sales workshop, Selling
From the Sales Training Practices Group on LinkedIn:
Matthew Kearns, a Sales Learning Consultant posted:
My company sells outsourced workforce management technology and service. I’m currently a sales trainer for their Major Accounts division (selling to companies with 50-999 employees). Over the past several years in the field and now preaching as trainer, its been mostly Value Based selling…meaning strategic, client centric to C-Level, finding out how we can help them to impact top line revenue and reduce expenses to stretch out their bottom line profit. This has been adopted very well assuming we’re talking to a true C-Level decision maker…price isn’t a barrier if there is opportunity to tie back our value to their TOP LINE initiatives...other factors come into play as well…The challenge is when there isn’t any other way into the account besides through a User, who in many cases can pull the trigger for change…this is were as sales professional you need to know when to call an auditable and get down to business, find out the buying criteria, strongly qualify the buyer and if it makes sense, take your seat at the table and position your solution and company accordingly…not always fun, gets more commoditized, however can be a quick turn especially if your replacing a like service. For new folks in my industry it is extremely hard to teach the latter. They want to talk strategic when their speaking with a tactical buyer…sometimes they’ll lose the sale because it could get over complicated. Any feedback on how to teach the difference would be welcomed!
I answered:
Matthew:
Your challenge is real: Yes, often opportunities start as leads from "users". You say, sellers must "find out the buying criteria, strongly qualify the buyer and if it makes sense, take your seat at the table and position your solution and company accordingly..."
What if we take the first task out of the equation? Is there really a "buying criteria" yet when starting with a user? Many sellers ("closers") knock themselves out of alignment with users by assuming they have arrived at a point where there is a buying criteria. You are on the right track, though, by including "qualifying the buyer", etc. There is a real difference between qualifying the buyer and qualifying the opportunity. For us, without a qualified buyer, you cannot have a qualified opportunity. For a "user based" lead, then, what does a rep have to do to qualify the buyer (as a champion)?
How's this?
* Does the user's company and user herself have goals and objectives similar to those we've helped our clients reach in the past?
* Do we have conversational and then correspondence-driven agreement with the prospect that there are real and measurable issues and challenges that are keeping them from reaching these objectives?
* Does she agree that with the capabilities (discussed) we can offer, the prospect can overcome these challenges or issues and reach objectives?
* Are they willing to introduce us to others who with them will evaluate these capabilities, allow us to prove ourselves and buy if there's a strong enough cost v. benefit?
This probably seems like "motherhood and apple pie". if I can re-phrase your question: So then, how do you teach "new folks in your industry" to have conversations so they can perform the above buyer qualification process?
The answer lies in how you prepare them for their sales conversations.
To prepare them, what if leaders from product marketing/management and sales knew how to get together and create tools to arm new reps with the actual questions to ask - by title - and the conversational process to follow to drive the building of visions of a) Usage (when would they need your stuff?) b) Value (what do I get out of using your stuff?) and c) Implementation (how do i get to where I am using your stuff at geat benefit?)?
If a user develops these visions (with the help of your sales rep) and can get to others who would be involved in an evaluation, then don't we have a qualified buyer? Wouldn't the rep be able to answer the four qualification questions above?
Too often, new reps try to mimic existing/successful sellers. They wing-it and fail without following any sort of process. Why? The good existing reps act intuitively out of experience and often succeed, but the new reps who do not have that experience fall back bad habits and behave badly.
By documenting the conversational model and the best practices of experienced reps, can you see then how sales, marketing etc. could clone the "intuitives" and create questioning templates for new reps? In essence the leaders will be "loading the lips" of the new folks who otherwise would be relying on their ability to figure it out for themselves. Think of these templates as product usage/value/implementation training tools.
In many companies, product folks teach new reps about the products or offerings as a separate process from new hire sales training. What I am suggesting above is that product and sales need to combine the two. "What a feature is?" is of less importance to a new sales hire than "how does a customer USE it?" or "how do they get VALUE out of it? and how do I have a conversation to build those visions."
What if new hires could practice the buyer-qualification-conversation ahead of meetings? Can you see how they could qualify better?
This strategy will better prepare new reps when getting into an account through a user.
Posted at 03:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: buying process, new hires, sales conversations, sales process, sales process, sales training
Business Problem
VersionOne offers its software development project management tools through a sales organization of now 26 people, including sales representatives, product specialists, sales operations and executives. Early in 2008, VersionOne had several sales challenges which it sought to overcome by implementing CustomerCentric Selling®. For example, the sales organization needed a process for ramping up new sales people quickly to reduce the time from hire to first sale. The sales team sought a common language or way to effectively describe capabilities. Additionally, they needed a best practice to adequately process inbound requests from prospects. VersionOne also wanted to address the following concerns:
· How do we adequately train and coach our existing and new sales force when we are running around growing the business?
· If we are going to grow personnel and sales, we need to codify our best practices and learn how to repeat them and coach them. When are we going to do that?
· Are we saying the right things at the appropriate time in the sales or recruitment process?
· Many of our leads are inbound, so they are either already looking at someone else like us or we are the first on a list – how do we distinguish ourselves and conduct appropriate discussions?
· How well are we tracking our opportunities?
Solving these
combined challenges would directly impact VersionOne’s revenue potential.
The CustomerCentric
Selling® Solution
VersionOne’s sales and marketing team began working with Adam Shapiro, CustomerCentric Selling® (CCS) Business Partner in February of 2008 by building an initial sales-ready messaging kit of scripts, success stories and conversation prompters. Later, they held three CCS workshops, the last in September of 2008, all led by Shapiro. With Adam’s help and the CCS methodology, VersionOne immediately saw positive results.
The sales people were able to arm themselves with messaging tools that they could then utilize throughout each step of the sales process. These tools are especially helpful in knowing how to effectively qualify or disqualify a prospect early in the process. CustomerCentric Selling® was also able to help VersionOne define a common language for how they can discuss opportunities as an organization. Most importantly, the new methodology helped VersionOne create a process for working through opportunities that honors what buyers need in order to make a purchasing decision, while also setting them apart from competitors. The net results of this CustomerCentric Selling® implementation have been remarkable – VersionOne more than doubled its sales in 2008 over 2007.
Richard Fuller, Vice President of Sales for VersionOne states, “Demand
for our products were clearly ahead of our sales capacity prior to
CustomerCentric Selling® (CCS). We
needed a process that recognized the value of consistent messaging, the demands
of a consultative sale and the realization that our buyers are well-educated
and well-informed. With CCS, we
received all of this in a highly effective, repeatable process that helped us
quadruple our sales team in less than one year.”
VersionOne CEO, Robert Holler also credits the hands-on guidance they received throughout their implementation by stating, “Adam is one of the few I have met with truly exceptional insight into sales messaging and the sales process. As we scale, it is beneficial to have someone to turn to for assistance with training and messaging. We subscribe to the CustomerCentric Selling® sales methodology and Adam just happens to be one of the best I have seen at helping teams reach their potential through the associated best practices.”
__________
“The CustomerCentric Selling® methodology drives a much more collaborative experience between sales and marketing. It definitely gets you 180 degrees away from selling on price and into consulting with customers on solutions to their issues or challenges that match up with the key strengths of our product. The methodology helps you clearly articulate and deliver your value proposition to the customer.”
–Denise Grey, VP of
Marketing for VersionOne
_________
Customer Closeup
VersionOne is recognized by Agile
practitioners as the leader in Agile project management tools. By
simplifying the process of planning and tracking Agile software projects,
VersionOne helps development teams consistently deliver software faster. Since 2002, companies such as Adobe,
BBC, Siemens, Disney, Dow Chemical, IBM, Lockheed Martin, Sony, 3M and Business
Objects have turned to VersionOne to help provide greater value to their
customers. Today more than 10,000 teams and 70,000 users in 50 countries
use VersionOne’s Agile project management tools to streamline and standardize
their Agile development efforts.
VersionOne offers the most feature-rich, easy-to-use Agile project
management tools available. No other Agile project management tool gives
more visibility into and confidence in the software development process.
Using VersionOne, all project stakeholders – project managers, developers, testers, product owners, customers and software executives - can work together to easily coordinate project plans, priorities and progress.
More information on VersionOne can be found at www.versionone.com
I had a client meeting last week that you might be interested to hear about. This client asked me to address his sales and marketing personnel about how to have sales conversations when the sellers anticipate that the target market is having a rough time due to the economy. I focused my remarks on two types of conversations:
1) The informational interview – how to have a relaxed open-ended conversations with targets about the goals, objectives, challenges, issues they are facing/working towards in a non-threatening, non-”salesy” manner. This sort of conversation is similar to the job applicant who is looking to switch industries so she talks to players who have insight into the opportunities in the new area.
Posted at 04:42 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: conversations, metrics, open-ended, role plays, sales, sales and marketing, sales questions, success stories
It's January. Seems like a good time for business planning. Though I've helped others with mission/vision/business planning etc., to get the juices flowing, I googled for some nourishment on mission and vision. I came across this excellent Q&A. Some of the headings captured my attention:
Don't Include Everyone
The Vision is the Reason
Fit the Hire
The Mission is the Second Reason
Fit Ideas with Vision/Mission First
Good Selling!
Adam
Posted at 10:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Clients:
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Technorati Tags: client, conversations, process, sales, sales reps, success stories
If you pay attention to pop culture, have some appreciation for history or at least historical perspective, and love sports, you should be regular reader of "The Sports Guy" on ESPN's Page 2. Bill Simmons is a smart and hysterically funny writer. Very intelligent. While watching my New York Giants tonight - (we're winning!), I am reading his NFL mid season report. Simmons ranks the Giants #2 and comments:
Our friend Mike Lombardi did a tremendous job describing Tom Coughlin's coaching style over at the National Football Post last week: "He is using a very simple leadership strategy called the 'Law of Threes.' On each team there are three types of players. The first are the ones who will do anything that is asked, willing to help the program. The second group are the undecided players, the players who are not sure what to do. And the third are the malcontents. These are the players who want to buck the system all the time and try to break down the team. As a leader, there is a tendency to try to win over the players in group three by trying to make them happy. But all that does is move the players from group two into group three, and cause you to start to lose the players in group one. What Coughlin has done is focus on group one. He pays no attention to group three and what has resulted is that Plaxico is on an island and no one wants to join him. The team is bigger than Plaxico."Love it. Now THAT makes perfect sense to me. The Law of Threes. I really respect how the Giants have defended their title this season. We don't see it enough in sports anymore. The road to Super Bowl XLIII goes through them.
I love it too! Sure, it speaks highly of my favorite NFL team. But, sales managers - and really all managers - take note:
Do you pay minimal attention to your malcontents? Or are they poisoning your team?
Do you focus on those in the middle group? For them, is it an enthusiasm or expertise issue that is keeping member of the second-middle group from joining the first?
Figure this out first.
Quit trying to make your malcontents happy.
Maybe you'll win the Super Bowl, too!
Posted at 11:22 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: enthusiasm, expertise, focus, malcontents, Managers, Sales, training
Web browsing is awesome. I am currently evaluating whether to move away from a laptop running windows to a new MacBook. While researching how to switch over without losing productivity and gobs of time, I stumbled on an insightful post in Michael Hyatt's Web log "Working Smarter".
If you scroll down the home page, you will come upon an entry titled:
Monday, February 27, 2006
What’s the Secret to Your Success?
or link Here.
In a word, Hyatt says it's "responsiveness." I could not agree more. His explanation resonates well with me especially after some pipeline reviews I held last week. I am helping a client by meeting one on one with a few sales reps and going over individual opportunities. Continually, these reps are having excellent opening or introductory conversations with prospects, some of whom are former colleagues or social contacts.
I will ask, "Did you offer and have you followed up with a recapping email note?" and their response is, "Non and not yet, I am waiting to get more information." But, the rep doesn't know when that next contact will be or it isn't scheduled. Wouldn't it be better to show that you listened and are thinking about your new prospect's goals, objectives, issues or concerns by recapping the previous conversation while it is fresh? Would that show you are not just interested in a "close", but also getting it right? Might that note become an artifact at the prospect's organization shared to generate interest in what you have to offer?
This note should fit into the following outline:
1) I would like to recap our last conversation, please let me know if I get it right
2) The prospect's current situation - the goals, objectives, issues, problems etc.
3) "Would the following help the above?" Describe your company's capabilities in a way that shows, usage and value?
4) ask for a meeting to discuss the above and make sure you understand their current situation.
In my mind, this all fits in well with Hyatt's kernel of responsiveness as a centerpiece of success.
Summary to sales people: If you get some meaningful information from someone who COULD be a prospect, be repsonsive: offer to recap and DO IT!
P.S. I just fouind Hyatt's new blog, "From Where I Sit" HERE.
Posted at 09:25 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: conversation, email, letter, pipeline, prospect, recap, Sales
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