มกราคม 2555

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
 
 
21 มกราคม 2555
Eight Ways to Stand Out from the Crownd
EIGHT WAYS to STAND OUT FROM the CROWD

written by Charles M. Marcus, 6 August 2004

Sometimes I think we may feel that we have to do the big things in life to
stand out from the crowd, to make a difference, but in my experience I have
found that it is the little things that we do on a consistent basis that
are usually the most powerful. I would like to share with you 8 ways that I
have found help you stand out from the crowd. Some are based on my own
personal and professional experience, and some I have observed in other
people who I admire and respect. Make your own list, compare, but the main
point of the exercise is to integrate the points in to your daily life and
the key to its success is by implementing them.

1. Make it a habit to follow-up with people promptly. It sounds simple,
right? In my experience, and surveys regularly back this up, 67%
(amazingly!) of people do not follow up in business. Did you know that
most sales are not closed until the sixth, seventh or even until the eighth
attempt; very few deals are achieved on the first few attempts, and yet
only three percent of sales people follow-up more than twice. Whatever
business you are in, if it involves making a sale, signing that contract,
or building relationships, the best way to stand out from the crowd is to
follow-up promptly, follow-through, and be persistent and determined. Don't
give up if you are initially rejected, keep following up! Somebody once
said, "a no is only a request for more information!"

2. Equally as important as following-up is taking the time to respond to
people who leave you messages. This is only common courtesy. How often do
we not find the time to follow-up with someone who has emailed us or left a
voice-mail unless we know specifically why they have contacted us, and even
then we do not always take the time to respond. Not only is this bad
manners, it is also bad business. How many important relationships have you
missed out on by not responding to a message? The people who stand out from
the crowd take the time to respond.

3. When you are speaking to people, give them 100% of your attention,
and I mean 100%. There is nothing more annoying or obvious to people than
you having your own agenda and only waiting for the other person to take a
breath so that you can jump in to get your point across or to turn the
conversation around to yourself. Develop your listening skills, most people
are not truly good listeners. I have found that you gain much more from
being a great listener than being a great talker. Be interested in other
people and what their point of view is. Ask lots of open-ended questions.
Dale Carnegie once said: "To be interesting to other people, you have to be
interested in them first". Wise and true words from a great and wise
person.

4. Get in to the habit, and that is all it is, of sending a hand written
note or card to someone who has given you an order, a referral, or has been
nice, courteous or helpful to you. It takes a few minutes, but means a lot
to the recipient, especially in this day of impersonal and easy e-mail
messages. I don't know about you, but I really appreciate it when someone
goes to the time and trouble of hand writing a letter or card to me,
actually puts a real stamp on it and writes out my name and address on the
envelope instead of a computer label. It personalizes it for me, makes me
feel like I am more than just a prospect in a list of many for that person.
Maybe I am making a big deal out of this, but from the response I get from
people when I do this, I know it is appreciated.

5. People expect the expected of you. Why not do the unexpected. Do you
acknowledge people who for whatever reason do not give you that order,
where you didn't get the contract or make the sale? Remember, they did let
you make the presentation? Do you acknowledge the person who didn't hire
you for that job, but at least gave you the experience of the interview?
Most people don't take the time or have the discipline to do this, and yet,
a sale or a job lost or a contract given to one of your competitors today,
does not mean it is lost for ever. Do not give up, think long term, think
about the relationship you may be developing, the connection you are
building for the future, and not about the lost sale, or your bruised ego!

6. If you belong to an association or a group either in your personal or
professional life, and this includes a church, synagogue, mosque, etc., get
involved. Do not get involved because you want something in return, but
because you want to contribute. People will respect and acknowledge you for
it, look at you and treat you differently. And this is just an added bonus
to the personal satisfaction of getting involved and contributing to
something you believe in. In the process you learn to become a leader
instead of just a participant.

7. Invest one hour a day, at least, to your own individual personal and
professional development. You can take the one hour all at once, or break
it in to segments, whatever fits in to your lifestyle and schedule. During
that time read a book, maybe an autobiography of someone you admire or a
business book, listen to tapes and the words of wisdom from the experts in
the fields and areas of your life that you want to improve, subscribe to a
daily e-zone with wonderful quotes or ways to motivate you, inspire you,
and to challenge you. We can all say we can't find the time, but this is so
important to your personal growth. For many years the only thing I ever
read was the sports pages of the newspaper when I was growing up in
England. What a waste. I wish I would have devoted more of that time to my
development. I am not saying you should not read the sports page or a good
fiction book, or whatever interests you, we all need that down time for
ourselves, but don't do that a!
t the expense of opening up your mind to new ideas and areas for
improvement. Do not look at your education as an expense of time but as an
investment of your time. Knowledge is wisdom when applied correctly. Never
stop learning.

8. Stretch your comfort zone; do one new thing every day. Take a chance
on something you have always wanted to try. Don't be afraid of being
rejected, of people saying no to you, or of failing. The people who stand
out from the crowd are the ones prepared to take that chance. I am not
saying do something radical or fool hardy, but you can become a sensible
risk taker. We all have choices and decisions to make every day. We all
know the things we want to do and the things we need to do. Take some risk,
defy conventional wisdom and make your own wisdom come true. My old boss,
when I was a sales professional, used to say after every sales meeting: "Do
you want to stay safe and be good, or do you want to take a chance and be
great."

The choice, my friends, is yours, every single day.

About the Author
Charles Marcus is a professional speaker, trainer and facilitator. He
works internationally with companies and associations who want to inspire
excellence in their people. For more information please contact his
office. For contact details, visit his website at
//www.cmarcus.com or
call him at 416-490-6744.




Create Date : 21 มกราคม 2555
Last Update : 21 มกราคม 2555 13:30:04 น.
Counter : 893 Pageviews.

0 comments
ชื่อ : * blog นี้ comment ได้เฉพาะสมาชิก
Comment :
 *ส่วน comment ไม่สามารถใช้ javascript และ style sheet
 

Jookjik
Location :
กรุงเทพ  Thailand

[ดู Profile ทั้งหมด]
 ฝากข้อความหลังไมค์
 Rss Feed
 Smember
 ผู้ติดตามบล็อก : 1 คน [?]



MY VIP Friend