Sunday, August 26, 2012

10 Sales Competencies Of Steve Jobs


I read the Steve Jobs Biography and although he was a very talented designer, innovator and inventor, it was clear to everyone who worked with him, and even to Jobs himself at the end of his life, that he was an asshole.  A simply horrible human being. Despite his miserable people skills, he was on a mission to design products that would change the world.  But Steve was also a great salesperson and this article discusses ten of the things about Steve Jobs the salesperson that you might want your salespeople to emulate.

Preparation - It is well known that Steve obsessed over the most minute details of product design to assure a tremendous user experience.  But he prepared just as much for sales calls, like convincing Bill Gates of Microsoft to create Word and Excel for the first Mac.

Determination - Jobs probably didn't receive any formal sales training, but he was so determined to get his way,make the sale and seal the deal that he nearly always found a way.  He did not consider the possibility that he could fail.

Slide Decks - He didn't like people who hid behind their PowerPoint slides and he did not use more than a few himself.  He believed that if you knew your stuff you didn't need PowerPoint.  He preferred to have discussions rather than slide shows.  Amen to that!

Charm - Knowing that Jobs regularly treated people so badly makes it even more incredible that he could turn on the charm when he wanted something or someone to do business with him.  Although he seemed to have no empathy for the feelings of others, he was aware of the need to develop relationships in order to sell.

Negotiation - Steve usually cut very profitable deals because he was consistently successful at getting others to want what he had, and then was not only willing to walk, but did walk until he got his way.  There is a great story in the book about when he sold Pixar to Disney for something like 7 or 8 Billion dollars.

Building Value - Jobs was a master at building value.  He would talk about the individual components or features of a device, what they would sell for if available on their own, to demonstrate the tremendous value of the device itself.

Understanding - He always knew what was important - their compelling reason to buy - to his prospect and was able to leverage it, and get people excited about the opportunity to work with him.

Creating Trust - Jobs got people to believe in him and his vision.  Even when biased against Jobs, after they met him, talked with him and became caught in his trance, they wanted to do business with him.

Fearless - Steve would not hesitate to call anyone, anywhere, at any time to ask for what he wanted.  And he was persistent - he didn't give up and would get others to help him connect if he couldn't get connected on his own.

Showmanship - While he was a master of all the competencies listed above, he was perhaps best known for, and best at showmanship.  His Macworld appearances were sales showmanship at its best.  The book detailed some of those presentations along with the secrecy, preparation, practice, timing, theater and attention to detail that helped to enhance his mystique and allow him to sell millions of devices from the podium.

By Dave Kurlan / Omg Hub / Dave Kurlan

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