As
an author, publisher, or book marketer you are always looking for ways to sell
more books. Could one get strategic advice on how to sell more books by reading
a book geared towards professional salespeople who normally battle in the
corporate arena? Certainly.
In
skimming Target Opportunity Selling: Top Sales Performers Reveal What Really
Works by Nicholas AC Read (McGraw-Hill Education), I came across chapter four,
which focuses on convincing a potential customer through a 9-step process
called “PRECISION.”
Though
this work is really geared to help salespeople sell products and services to
the corporate C-suite, I distilled his points to be relevant for selling books.
Step 1: Problems
Ask
questions about what problems/needs someone has. If you wrote a book related to
weight control, you want your potential customer to acknowledge he or she is
overweight, has failed to lose weight, and wants to reduce his size.
Step 2: Risks
Next,
define the risks that the customer has made to resolve his weight problem or
that he may need to make.
Step 3: Effect
Start
to identify how you have a solution to his problem that is risk-free.
Step 4: Consequences
Make
sure the customer fully understands the consequences of doing nothing or
keeping the status quo.
Step 5: Impact Points
Show
how one problem leads to others. Sure, being overweight by itself has a
disadvantage, but then explain how it impacts your appearance, your
relationships, your health, and your abilities.
Step 6: Scope
Convey
the scope of the solution they’ll need to attack the problem.
Step 7: Ideas
Ask
questions and learn of their ideas and priorities so you can be aware of how to
give them a hard sell.
Step 8: Options
Identify
what their other options could be, gradually dismissing them or showing their
weak points.
Step 9: Needs
Show
how your solution is exactly what they need.
By
having an engaging conversation with a potential customer you can position your
book as the solution to their troubles and do it in a way that sounds factual
and logical. In the end, they customer will convince himself of needing your
book simply because you got him to discuss the key points that makes him aware
he has a need and you have the answer.
Book Excerpt: Uh-Oh, Robert Fulghum
“Questions, actually, that I keep on the front
burner of my mental stove. Such as:
How shall I achieve a living balance between the
mundane and the holy?
Between humor and grief?
Between what is and what might be?
Between self-concern and concern for the common
good?
“Between the worst that I often am and the best I
might become?”
DON’T MISS THIS!!!
Here is my 2014 Book Marketing &
Publicity Toolkit: Based on 20+ years in publishing --
Brian Feinblum’s views, opinions, and
ideas expressed in this blog are his alone and not that of his employer, Media
Connect, the nation’s largest book promoter. You can follow him on Twitter
@theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more
important when discussed in the third-person. This is copyrighted by
BookMarketingBuzzBlog © 2013
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