2011 alice heiman media placements
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Alice Heiman Media PlacementsTRANSCRIPT
2011 Media Placements ~ Abbi Public Relations, Inc.
Alice HeimanTable of Contents
Date Publication TitleFall 2011 Entrepreneur's startups Circle of Trust: Five rules for building a strong network
11/15/2011 Northern Nevada Chamber Ft. Alice Heiman11/13/2011 RGJ Heiman featured in Magazine
10/24/2011 NNBW Alice Heiman
10/17/2011 Wall‐StreetNetworkingul este esemtial. Cum poti construi o retea de
business de succes
10/14/2011 Entrepreneur Five Rules for Building Strong Connections
8/30/2011 RGJ Face‐To‐Face
7/25/2011 NNBW Alice Heiman7/16/2011 Successful Meetings How to Stay Sales‐Focused7/1/2011 Successful Meetings Jumpstart a Small Business
6/10/2011 Nevada Business What type of business consultant do you most value?
6/10/2011 B2B Buzz Coach to Create Top Sales Performers
6/1/2011 Nevada BusinessPeople: What type of business consultant do you most value?
Why?
6/1/2011 Nevada Business OnlinePeople: What type of business consultant do you most value?
Why?
5/24/2011 B2B Buzz When Deals Stick in the Pipeline
3/15/2011 AOL Small Business Maximize Your Networking Efforts
3/14/2011 NNBW Heiman wins national honor
3/13/2011 AOL Small Business Two Companies Are Better Than One
3/11/2011 AOL Small Business Always Follow Up
FACE-YO-FACE
FEATURED EVENT: BUSINESS OWNERSBIZTALK BLENDER
TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, LOKA TILE GROUP
Loretta Bonilla of Front Office Staff and Mike Kitson ofOCGCreative Inc. PHOTOS BY PAMELA HEISlERlRGJ .
FredMcElroy of Coldwell Banker Select and AngelaSwindells of Loka Tile Group
Keith Burrows of Sierra Intergated Systems, RonCampbell of C&CRefrigeration and Tim Erlach of Erlach .Construction Company
Shannon O'Hare of The Ubiquity Group, Kilryn Jensen ofThe Human ResourceConnection, TeniseGreen of GreenBookkeeping and Adele Trebil of Realestate SuccessStrategist
CHECK OUT THE ONGOING PHOTOGALLERYSee photos from networking events at RGJ.com.
SEND US YOUR PHOTOSSend photos from your networking event to pheisler@rgj.
com.
The Last Word - June 2011
What type of business consultant do you mostvalue?“I value my coach the most. I always have a coach and sometimes more than
one. Coaching makes me think. As a business owner I need to stretch and
learn constantly. My coach helps me stay focused on my business and
continuous improvement so I can do a great job for my customers.”
Alice R. Heiman • President & Chief Sales Officer, Alice Heiman, LLC
“Business marketing consulting is extremely important to my small business. Having a
professional and experienced marketing team on my side allows me the freedom to focus on my
clients and services.”
Marcus Niemo • Owner, Body Fit Las Vegas
“As a CPA, CVA, CFF I am often retained to provide an expert opinion. A skilled attorney, one
that is able to timely obtain documents for analysis and then understand and communicate my
findings, is invaluable. An attorney willing to invest this kind of time is more likely to help the
client succeed.”
Dana L. Tompkins, CPA, CVA, CFF • Stockholder, Business Valuation & Forensic Advisors
“Our marketing representatives are most valuable to me. They help me focus on the positive
aspects of my company and encourage me to broadcast our strengths. Plus, marketing comes
with a ‘fun factor’ that other business consultants often lack.”
Frank Gatski • CEO, Gatski Commercial Real Estate Services
“In commercial development the real estate
broker is extremely important. Their input
is invaluable in deciding whether to build
the project and the rental rates and type of
tenant we can expect. After it is built they
help market the project and serve as a
valuable member of our team.”
Doug Roberts • Senior Vice
President/Project Principal, Panattoni
Development Company, Inc.
“All consultants provide value, but
personally I place the highest value on marketing. They are usually associated with enhancing
the brand, and growing the business. Marketing consultants that do their job well add tangible
value to the business, and generate the highest ROI amongst consultant services.”
Larry Blumenthal • Chief Financial Officer, Good Night Pediatrics
Commercial Real Estate Firm first to use
DZ Realty, LLC Completes Sale of Single
Energy Efficiency Startup, Clausius...
Denny's Inc. executed a $15M lease,...
Nevada Solar Company Reaches ‘Mega’.
Accounting Groups Merge, Expand Busin
Atlantis Casino Resort Spa and Offsite Da
Past Issues search site web
Members Login Renew Subscription Top Rank Nevada Nevada'sPost & Track Nevada's Biggest Real Estate Deals: Only at THE RED REPORT.COM
SUBSCRIPTIONS FEATURES INDUSTRY NEWS BOOK OF LISTS SERVICES ADVERTISING CONTAC
What type of business consultant do you most value? http://www.nevadabusiness.com/issue/0611/39/2430
1 of 2 7/5/2011 9:23 AM
HomeSales »Marketing »Small Business »About Us
B2B Buzz
A Community of Business Information Experts
Contributing Sponsors:
Home > Blog > Coach to Create Top Sales Performers
June 10, 2011 By hhackney Leave a Comment
By Alice R. Heiman
Manager: “Jay, how did that sales call go?”
Salesperson: “Great!”
Manager: “Did you close the deal?”
Salesperson: “No, but they love me and they want the product.”
Manager: “When will it close?”
Salesperson: “Probably this quarter.”
Sound familiar? What does this sales manager now know about the sales call his salesperson just finished? The answer: not much.
Coaching salespeople when they return from a sales call is important business. It needs to be done routinely and consistently. Way toomany salespeople “wing it” and others may try to prepare but just really don’t know how to do so effectively.
Successful sales calls have several ingredients:
Pre-call preparation1.Execution2.Post-call assessment3.Follow up on commitments4.
Salespeople will do a much better job if they know they may be asked for very specific information after a sales call. In fact, having apost-call report format is a good idea, but a quick email or phone call with the right information can tell you exactly where the salespersonstands with that sales objective.
Salespeople should prepare for sales calls. At a minimum they should look at their call notes from the last call, determine how to makethe best use of the time, determine their objective, write down the questions they need to have answered to move the sale forward, and
Coach to Create Top Sales Performers http://www.b2bbuzz.org/2011/06/coach-to-create-top-sales-performers/
1 of 3 6/23/2011 12:17 PM
determine the action the customer would need to take to move the sale forward.
The preparation will improve their execution and help insure they don’t forget anything. It will also make the customer feel like their timeis valued and used wisely.
The post-call assessment is critical to ensuring your salespeople will be top performers. You won’t be able to assess every sales call butintermittently working with salespeople on this is crucial. These post-call assessments can be very quick and painless.
Here are some questions you could ask:
What did you do to prepare for the call?1.What was your objective for the call? 2.What did you do to make good use of the customer’s time?3.What questions did you get answered that tell you where the customer is in the sales process?4.What are the next steps?5.What action did the customer commit to take?6.What action did you commit to take?7.Did the customer give you a close-date?8.What will you do in follow up to this sales call?9.
Far too often salespeople get way ahead of the customer. As in the conversation at the beginning of this article, they predict a close-datebased on their quota instead of on the customer’s needs. The end of the quarter comes and the business doesn’t close and many times thesalesperson doesn’t understand why. The only way to know when a deal will close is to ask the customer. To avoid missed quotasmanagers need to debrief with their salespeople using questions similar to those above. This will help insure that the salesperson ismoving along at the same speed as the customer.
Another thing this process will help is over-commitment on the part of the salesperson. Salespeople are quick to promise the world if theythink it will close a deal. That is why questions 6 and 7 are so important. By asking those questions you can determine if the commitmentof the salesperson is comparable to that of the customer. If it is way beyond, it may be a sign that the salesperson doesn’t understandwhere the customer is in the sales process. If the customer doesn’t commit to do anything to move the sale forward, the salesperson mayneed to change the strategy.
Managers will have fewer surprises if they make these questions a part of their daily coaching routine. Benefits will be a shorter salescycle, more efficient selling and better close ratios. In the long run, this will lead to more accurate forecasting.
Alice Heiman is the founder and Chief Sales Officer of Alice Heiman, LLC (www.AliceHeiman.com). As a sales expert, Heiman mentorssales executives, transforming them into proactive coaches, while helping management establish a sales culture that will continue togrow the bottom line. Her blog can be viewed at http://smartsalestips.com/
Photo by nocklebeast
Filed Under: Blog
Speak Your Mind
Name *
Email *
Website
Community Twitter
How can you become an #entrepreneur while working a full-time job? http://ow.ly/5oDwy Q&A w/ @SmallBizLady &@TaiGoodwin about 6 mins ago
Coach to Create Top Sales Performers http://www.b2bbuzz.org/2011/06/coach-to-create-top-sales-performers/
2 of 3 6/23/2011 12:17 PM
The Last Word - June 2011
What type of business consultant do you mostvalue?“I value my coach the most. I always have a coach and sometimes more than
one. Coaching makes me think. As a business owner I need to stretch and
learn constantly. My coach helps me stay focused on my business and
continuous improvement so I can do a great job for my customers.”
Alice R. Heiman • President & Chief Sales Officer, Alice Heiman, LLC
“Business marketing consulting is extremely important to my small business. Having a
professional and experienced marketing team on my side allows me the freedom to focus on my
clients and services.”
Marcus Niemo • Owner, Body Fit Las Vegas
“As a CPA, CVA, CFF I am often retained to provide an expert opinion. A skilled attorney, one
that is able to timely obtain documents for analysis and then understand and communicate my
findings, is invaluable. An attorney willing to invest this kind of time is more likely to help the
client succeed.”
Dana L. Tompkins, CPA, CVA, CFF • Stockholder, Business Valuation & Forensic Advisors
“Our marketing representatives are most valuable to me. They help me focus on the positive
aspects of my company and encourage me to broadcast our strengths. Plus, marketing comes
with a ‘fun factor’ that other business consultants often lack.”
Frank Gatski • CEO, Gatski Commercial Real Estate Services
“In commercial development the real estate
broker is extremely important. Their input
is invaluable in deciding whether to build
the project and the rental rates and type of
tenant we can expect. After it is built they
help market the project and serve as a
valuable member of our team.”
Doug Roberts • Senior Vice
President/Project Principal, Panattoni
Development Company, Inc.
“All consultants provide value, but
personally I place the highest value on marketing. They are usually associated with enhancing
the brand, and growing the business. Marketing consultants that do their job well add tangible
value to the business, and generate the highest ROI amongst consultant services.”
Larry Blumenthal • Chief Financial Officer, Good Night Pediatrics
Nevada Solar Company Reaches ‘Mega’.
Accounting Groups Merge, Expand Busin
Atlantis Casino Resort Spa and Offsite Da
David Zacharia of DZ Realty, LLC Sells...
Rural Nevada Saves Money and Puts Nev
LOCAL EXPERTS TELL TIPS AND TRICKS O
Offsite Data Depot Adds Secure,...
Past Issues search site web
Members Login Renew Subscription Top Rank Nevada Nevada'sPost & Track Nevada's Biggest Real Estate Deals: Only at THE RED REPORT.COM
SUBSCRIPTIONS FEATURES INDUSTRY NEWS BOOK OF LISTS SERVICES ADVERTISING CONTAC
What type of business consultant do you most value? http://www.nevadabusiness.com/issue/0611/39/2430
1 of 2 6/23/2011 11:54 AM
HomeSales »Marketing »Small Business »About Us
B2B Buzz
A Community of Business Information Experts
Contributing Sponsors:
Home > Blog > When Deals Stick in the Pipeline
May 25, 2011 By hhackney Leave a Comment
By Alice Heiman
What is going on with that huge deal that was supposed to close last month? Why isn’t that deal closed yet? It seems like everything isstuck in the pipeline, when are these deals going to close?
There isn’t a sales manager alive who hasn’t wondered why the salespeople aren’t closing deals, especially the deals that were forecast. Sales managers expect and rely on accurate information about when deals will be closing. “Accurate” is the operative word here becausewhat most salespeople give their managers is their best guess of the dates on which they would like their sales to close. Then, when dealsdon’t close in that timeframe there is always a “good reason” or some excuse as to why the deal hasn’t closed.
Closing is not about the salesperson or your company. It is about the customer and their needs and timeline. When salespeople get aheadof customers in the sales cycle, they usually predict the close without any input from the customer at all. They seemingly pull a date outof thin air or assume a date that allows them to make quota that month. What they rarely figure into the forecast is the close date has tocome from the customer. It is the date the customer is ready to buy, as it is almost impossible to force someone into closing a deal whenhe or she is not ready. If something weird should happen and salespeople actually force the close, they usually find themselves in a verybad position and often that customer will probably never buy from them again. Worse, the customer may tell others about the situation.
The most common reasons deals don’t close are:
The competition comes in at the end with something “better.”Something at the customer company has changed (that no one knew about).The budget was appropriated to another project.The possible sale was fiction – the salesperson was clueless and it wasn’t going to close in the first place.The salesperson (or someone at your company) did something to irritate the buyers.
All of these can really be summed up in one word, “position”. Your salesperson was not positioned well enough to completely
understand the buyers and their needs, including timeframe.
Positioning is the key to closing and positioning depends on many factors, the customer’s budget, budget cycle, needs, attitudes,accounting practices, decision making policies and let’s not forget the competition. It is the salesperson’s job to ask questions to uncoverall of the information needed so he or she can get well positioned. Who are the decision makers involved in this sale, is there a budgetestablished, what is the procedure for procurement, what is their attitude toward your solution, what is the competition for this sale is it anin-house solution, another vendor or using the money for something completely different?
When Deals Stick in the Pipeline http://www.b2bbuzz.org/2011/05/when-deals-stick-in-the-pipeline/
1 of 3 6/23/2011 11:49 AM
Asking good questions and listening is the only way that I know of to combat the “Oh, no, it’s not going to close”. Sales managers need tocoach their salespeople to uncover and gather the information needed to be well positioned. This is the only way he only way to get anaccurate close date from the customer and/or to get information first hand if that changes.
Questions like these need to be asked early in the sales cycle: What is your timeline for having this purchase completed? When do youneed this to be up and running? When do you want to have this installed? The answers to these questions will help the salesperson start atimeline that will allow him to help the customer get what is needed. If a customer wants something installed or up and running by acertain date the salesperson can help them work backwards from there to understand the timeline for signing the contract.
Other important questions are: Who else besides yourself will be involved in this decision? Will we need approval from any otherdepartments? Are there others you would like me to talk with about the product and how it will work? These questions are importantbecause what holds up a deal many times is that the key contact working with the salesperson is not the final decision maker and has noauthority to proceed. They may be waiting on approval from someone that is unknown to the salesperson and so the deal doesn’t close. Knowing early in the game all the people involved in the decision gives the salesperson a chance to get to know the others and theirviews. Often, it also allows the salesperson to bring in management, to get better positioned with the decision makers. It is very rarethese days that any one person at a company would make a buying decision of any size on their own, so salespeople must be coached tofind all of the decision makers.
For salespeople to know where they stand and what they are up against in a sale, they should ask questions like these: What do you seeas my competition for this sale, other vendors, and in-house solution another use for the same dollars?
Keep in mind that most of what you do to be sure a deal closes has to be done early in the sales cycle. When the deal is stalled at the endit most likely is too late. That is not to say a deal can’t be saved at that time, it is just much harder and the probability of success is lower. At this point salespeople have to be coached to go back and ask tough questions like these: This deal was moving along and it looked likewe would close on this date, what has happened to delay that? What did I miss in the decision making process? It appears to me thatsomething has changed and I am not aware of what that is, can you help me understand?
Closing should not be a big deal. If you have a solution that a customer wants, at a price they are willing to pay and understand theirneeds and timeline, then your sale will close. It will close when the customer is ready for it to close and you will have a happy customerthat will more than likely buy from you again and become a good referral source. Closing, it’s all about the customer.
Alice Heiman is the founder and Chief Sales Officer of Alice Heiman, LLC (www.AliceHeiman.com). As a sales expert, Heiman mentorssales executives, transforming them into proactive coaches, while helping management establish a sales culture that will continue to growthe bottom line. Her blog can be viewed at http://smartsalestips.com/
Filed Under: Sales Tagged With: initiative, pipeline, strategy
Speak Your Mind
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How can you become an #entrepreneur while working a full-time job? http://ow.ly/5oDwy Q&A w/ @SmallBizLady &@TaiGoodwin about 1 min ago
Thanks for all the RTs & mentions: @mike_weinberg, @SellingPowerMag, @aliceheiman, @MMoujan, @SociallyBooked,@360surveys! about 1 hour ago
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More Small Business Tips »
By GEOFF WILLIAMSPosted 3/ 15 11 at 6:00 AM | Tip of the Day
"The number-one way to make networking a waste of time is to fail to do the follow-up. And the
number-one reason people don't follow up is because they didn't schedule time to do the follow-up. The
number-two reason is they don't know what to do. Every time I schedule a networking event on my
calendar, I schedule the follow-up time. During that time I look at the cards I collected and decide who I
would like to meet with and who I would just like to stay in touch with. I send everyone a 'nice to meet
you' note and comment on something we discussed. I often attach a relevant article to the e-mail, either
one I wrote or something pertinent that I read recently. I also go to LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook and
ask to connect with them, always writing a personal note reminding them where we met. For those I feel I
might be able to collaborate with in some way, I schedule coffee, lunch or cocktails. I try to meet with at
least four of the people I meet at each event."
Alice R Heiman
President and Chief Sales Officer
Alice Heiman LLC
Reno, Nev.
www.aliceheiman.com
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1 of 4 6/23/2011 12:22 PM
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By GEOFF WILLIAMSPosted 3/ 13 11 at 6:00 AM | Tip of the Day
"One great way to increase sales is to find companies to collaborate with. These can be companies that do
the same thing (yes, a competitor) or companies that do complementary things or have basic services that
your clients need. If you do the same thing, it is possible to sub some work out to each other when one of
you gets too busy or refer a client who needs the service but is just not a good fit personally. With
complementary services, share lists of customers and see who you have in common and work together to
bring added value to those customers. Look at your lists and think about who could use the other's service
and then strategize on a way to introduce that service. You can share leads and make introductions
informally or you can write an agreement that allows for commissions. Make a list of companies you know
that you could partner with and schedule meetings to explore the possibilities."
Alice R Heiman
President and Chief Sales Officer
Alice Heiman LLC
Reno, Nev.
www.aliceheiman.com
MORE SMALL BUSINESS TIPS
Building Initial Structure
Ask Your Customers What They Want Before You Sell
Play to Win
Pay Attention to Niche Markets
Increase Exposure Using Social Media
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Use Your Customers for Marketing
Social Media Isn't Free
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Glen Stansberry
Julie Rains
Mike Michalowicz
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2011
"Do your homework. There are
ways to initially structure your c
smart, think it through and wor
experts. Make sure ...
Continue Reading
Sen
You might also like: DailyFinance, WalletPop and More
Main News Business Advice Success Stories Video Topics Industries About Us Mobile Tools
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Two Companies Are Better Than One - AOL Small Business http://smallbusiness.aol.com/2011/03/13/two-companies-are-better-than-one/
1 of 4 6/21/2011 2:34 PM
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By GEOFF WILLIAMSPosted 3/ 11 11 at 6:00 AM | Tip of the Day
"I am simply flabbergasted at the amount of salespeople who do not follow up. They send one e-mail or
make one call and then report that the prospect didn't get back to them. Some will try again, but after the
second attempt they give up. People are busy and they may not necessarily need your product or service
this minute, but you need to give them a chance to buy. Don't be a pest, but do be persistent and provide
valuable information they can use as a means to stay in front of them so they remember you. Many deals
go to competitors because people are ready to buy and can't find your contact info. Be there when your
prospects are ready to buy."
Alice R Heiman
President and Chief Sales Officer
Alice Heiman LLC
Reno, Nev.
www.aliceheiman.com
MORE SMALL BUSINESS TIPS
Building Initial Structure
Ask Your Customers What They Want Before You Sell
Play to Win
Pay Attention to Niche Markets
Increase Exposure Using Social Media
Don't Over-Network
Vacation is Good
Use Your Customers for Marketing
Social Media Isn't Free
Before Starting a Business, Read This List
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn RS
View
10 Superb Ways For A
Business To Friend Fa
8 Effective Strategies F
Marketing
Is Collaborating A Tim
Presented by
Latest OPEN Forum Insights
Glen Stansberry
Julie Rains
Mike Michalowicz
|
June
2011
"Do your homework. There are
ways to initially structure your c
smart, think it through and wor
experts. Make sure ...
Continue Reading
Sen
You might also like: DailyFinance, WalletPop and More
Main News Business Advice Success Stories Video Topics Industries About Us Mobile Tools
Sig
Always Follow Up - AOL Small Business http://smallbusiness.aol.com/2011/03/11/always-follow-up/
1 of 4 6/21/2011 2:32 PM