
This was a great blog I came across! I am simply going to link to the blog as well as re-posting it here… enjoy. Wait, I’m not done. This is the type of article that you need to do more than read, etch it into your head. It may seem like simple information, but it leads back to why we develop plans and stick to what works. Sometimes it looks like people are running their companies on hope and dreams. . . .
Continue reading “Lessons Learned: Why My First Business Failed by, Alyssa Gregory”

What do I mean by, “invest and divide?”
Invest: Take the time to sit down and map out your companies processes. Then, look at how you track goals and how your push sales along. Next, does project management and work-flow integration matter? Do you need a help desk or call center? Does there have to be website integration? This list goes on and on, but take the time to go through this process and you will be 90% home.
What you may . . .
Continue reading “Why CRM Implementations Fail Part 2”

A good amount of my professional life is spent dealing with sales methods, processes and systems. When it comes time for a company to implement a CRM, you hear the same statement all the time, “we just won’t something that will ___.”
The killer word in that request, “just.”
CRM’s (customer relationship management) are complex database driven systems and there are hundreds to choose from, literally. Besides the systems being complex and there being many to choose from, you also have to . . .
Continue reading “Why CRM Implementations Fail Part 1”
If you walk around your local book store, you’ll see more than one piece of literature proclaiming the hidden truths of selling. Now, I myself, I’m a big blog reader. But regardless of where you get your information from, there is no shortage of people handing sales reps the “keys to the kingdom.” Most of the information is OK, but none of it is ground breaking.
This is because buyers have fairly similar purchasing processes. In this blog, I wanted to . . .
Continue reading “The Economy of Words”
It’s funny when you’re right-smack-dab in the middle of something, it seems normal. Entering data two, nay three times! Updating a calendar in one application, call sheet in a second application and proposals in yet a third application. Oh, lets not even talk about trying to cross reference the data!
A while back (quite a while back), I was selling granite for a fairly large fabricator/dealer. Clients ranged from developers looking for fifteen floors of granite to new construction, single family homes. This . . .
Continue reading “Life… Before a CRM”