What Makes a Successful Sales Meeting?

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image of a meeting

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My friend Steve Lishanski has a saying that 80 percent of life is common sense but only 20 percent of people are using it. In my experience, a similar rule applies to sales meetings: 80 percent are a complete waste of time because simple common sense was never applied. Follow these rules for effective sales meetings and you will no longer find yourself in the 80 percent.

Rules for Powerful Sales Meetings

Rule #1: Keep Your Meetings Short, Positive and Energized

Most of the sales meetings I’ve been to are too long, and when people leave them they are tired and deflated. In fact, recently I ran into a company having sales meetings on Friday afternoons because they felt it was a good way to wind down at the end of a long week. Ouch! Sales meetings should last for 60 to 90 minutes max and leave people upbeat and ready to tackle the week. Here are some more important components of this rule:

  • The meeting starts and stops on time. No waiting for people who are late and punishing those there on time.
  • Have an agenda and stick to it. People have 30 seconds, 5 minutes, or whatever time is appropriate, and at the end of that time, they are done, whether they are or not.
  • It’s fine to start by reviewing the numbers and congratulating people for important wins, but this should last no more than a few minutes. No getting bogged down in details aided by boring Power Point slides.
  • Everyone stays positive and upbeat. While constructive conversation about problems and issues is fine and encouraged, you must focus on solutions. If the room turns “all negative with no solutions,” it’s time to put the brakes on and get the focus back on what you can do about the situation.
  • No rambling or getting stuck in the weeds with minutiae of detail on items that are best handled off-line after the meeting.
  • No one hijacking the meeting and taking more than their allotted time.
  • No random vendors, who are not exclusive to your company, talking about the flavor of the week.
  • No boring heads from other departments droning on about their problems and what they need from sales.

     Also keep in mind that in order for the meetings to be positive, everyone must be present for each meeting barring some extenuating circumstance. You must have a team mentality and no individual is an exception.

Rule #2: The Most Important Part of the Meeting Is Education

Focus on the areas that have the most impact: prospecting, presenting, closing, and building relationships with your biggest and most important accounts. Here are some areas you may cover:

  • Brainstorming strategy to win an account
  • How to beat the competition.
  • How to ask for referrals.
  • How to cold call or prospect effectively.
  • How to close more deals.

The objective here is to get the best stuff from your best people. Some people are great at referrals, others are great at cold calling, and others are great at closing. Also, it’s important that the successful people are talking. While we want to be respectful and inclusive, we don’t need to hear tips from someone who’s made one sale in the past nine months.

Rule #3: Open and Close the Meeting the Right Way

Logistically you want to hold meetings early on Monday morning to start the week off right. This best ensures everyone is in early and focused at the beginning of the week.

Start the meeting with something short and positive. A positive quote or passage from a book is good. You can also have a weekly focus point. Another idea is to highlight something positive that may have happened recently. Next, cover the agenda in 15 seconds or less then bridge into the main part of the meeting.

An effective way to close the meeting is to give everyone one or two action items that they can act on immediately. Here are some good examples:

  • Go call on that account you’ve been afraid to call on.
  • Do something you haven’t done before or challenge yourself to break your previous best. For example, if the most prospecting calls you’re ever made in a week is 50, shoot for 75 or 100.
  • Identify and do the one thing that once done, will ensure the whole week has been a success.

The key to effectively closing the meeting is to harness the energy created to take immediate action and get the momentum rolling toward a successful week. This will also help you develop the habits of stepping out of your comfort zone, facing your fears, and pushing yourself to become better.

MANA welcomes your comments on this article. Write to us at [email protected].

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  • photo of John Chapin

John Chapin is a motivational sales speaker and trainer. For his 5-Steps to Sales Success report and monthly newsletter, or to have him speak at your next event, go to: www.completeselling.com. Chapin has more than 32 years of sales experience as a number-one sales rep and is the author of the 2010 sales book of the year: Sales Encyclopedia (Axiom Book Awards). Email: [email protected].