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|  | |  | | | The New Conceptual Selling: The Most Effective and Proven Method for Face-to-Face Sales Planning | | | | | SKU:
I9780446695183 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1 business days | | | | | | The Book That Changed The Way America Does Business In 1987 Miller Heiman published a book that turned conventional thinking on its head and offered powerful, practical lessons that broke down the boundaries of traditional product-pitch selling. This modern edition of the classic Conceptual Selling shows why Miller Heiman has become the world's most respected name in sales development, with a client list leading the Fortune 500. And it shows why the principles of Conceptual Selling are more important today than ever before. The New Conceptual Selling Even in a world of cyber commerce, nothing beats a face-to-face meeting. And if you're one of those men and women who make their living in this highly demanding environment, this new edition of Conceptual Selling will change the way you interact with customers and clients, and the way you conduct your business career. Learn: * How to identify your customer's real needs and use listening as a powerful selling tool * How to tailor every sale you make to one specific client-and how to create a system that is consistent, flexible, and successful * How to earn and maintain your credibility-by creating a pattern of Win-Win sales * How to use Miller Heiman Personal Workshops to identify your strengths and weaknesses-and make the changes you need to make. | | | |
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| | Product Details | | Author: | Stephen E. Heiman | | Paperback: | 386 pages | | Publisher: | Business Plus | | Publication Date: | April 20, 2005 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0446695181 | | Product Length: | 5.5 inches | | Product Width: | 1.0 inches | | Product Height: | 8.13 inches | | Product Weight: | 0.69 pounds | | Package Length: | 7.95 inches | | Package Width: | 5.2 inches | | Package Height: | 1.1 inches | | Package Weight: | 0.71 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 15 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 15 customer reviews )
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20 of 22 found the following review helpful:
Revised, Updated...and Better May 04, 2005
By Robert Morris NOTE: The review which follows is of the revised and updated (i.e. most recently published) edition co-authored by Robert B. Miller and Stephen E. Heiman with Tad Tuleja.
I read the first edition of this book when it was published 18 years ago. Hence my curiosity about this edition. What's new? In fact, a great deal. Miller and Heiman have thoroughly revised the original material, "page by page, to tighten the prose, clarify explanations, and provide up-to-date examples from [current and recent] Miller Heiman clients." For example, they have refined their explication of Concept and product (as indicated in Chapter 4) and expanded their discussions of Question Types while providing clarifications of two concepts which, apparently, often prove puzzling: Action Commitment and Valid Business Reason.
They have also included discussion of Single Sales Objective in Chapter 5. (This concept was originally developed within the Strategic Selling program and is now a component of Conceptual Selling.) "Most dramatically, we have revised the entire sequence of the Conceptual Selling `modules'...Another new element is a question-and-answer epilogue where we address some of the interesting challenges which our clients have posed to us."
Miller and Heiman respond to 15 questions generated by their "continuing dialogue" with those who enroll in various Conceptual Selling workshops. For example:
#1. Isn't Conceptual Selling just another name for consultative selling?
A: "There are similarities, to be sure, but they're not the same." Miller and Heiman pay due respect to Mark Hanan (author of another business bestseller, Consultative Selling) while explaining how his ideas -- which they greatly admire -- and theirs differ. See the complete response to this question pages 348-349.
#6. Having a Valid Business Reason implies that you know something about the customer before you go in. How do you do that when you're making a cold call?
A: "You're still making cold calls? The whole point of a Valid Business Reason is to render them unnecessary." How so? See the complete response to this question on page 349.
#14. Is Unique Strength another name for "competitive advantage"? And should I compare my company's Unique Strengths to those of the competition?
A: "Not exactly." Miller and Heiman briefly explain that, in economic theory, a "competitive advantage is a point of superiority that one company has over its competitors" whereas a "Unique Strength is much more specific than that: It's the contribution [italics] one company's solution can make make to [italics] one customer in [one] area that the customer perceives as better than any competing solution." See the complete response to this question on pages 361-362.
NOTE: In Buyer-Approved Selling: Sales Secrets from the Buyer's Side of the Desk, Michael Schell also suggests all manner of strategies and tactics by which to formulate and then present what Miller and Heiman identify as a Unique Strength. Presumably they and Schell agree with Warren Buffett, however, who once suggested that cost is what we charge but value is what someone else thinks it's worth. Nothing is a Unique Strength (or whatever else you call it) unless so perceived by customers and, equally important, by prospective customers.
Everyone in sales should have her or his own "toolkit." Some of its contents are provided by the given employee, others are provided by formal training and/or a supervisor, and still others from a book such as this. Long ago, I realized that strategies are "hammers" and tactics are "nails." The former drive the latter. That said, I presume to offer a caveat. Keep in mind this bromide: a camel is a horse designed by a committee.
Obviously, it would be foolish to stuff a "toolkit" with everything offered by Miller and Heiman in combination with everything offered in other excellent books such the aforementioned Consultative Selling and Buyer-Approved Selling as well as Neil Rackham's SPIN Selling, Anthony Parinello's Selling To VITO (The Very Important Top Officer), Michael Bosworth's Solution Selling: Creating Buyers in Difficult Selling Markets and CustomerCentric Selling,and Keith M Eades's The New Solution Selling: The Revolutionary Sales Process That is Changing the Way People Sell.
Presumably Miller and Heiman agree that readers of books such as theirs must be aware of everything available in what could be called "The Salesperson's Super Hardware Store." The challenge is to select and then use effectively those tools which are most appropriate to the given marketplace.
Given how attractively priced the most recently published paperback editions of The New Strategic Selling and The New Conceptual Selling are, I highly recommend both. My guess (only a guess) is that The New Conceptual Selling will be most valuable to those who have sales management and/or sales training responsibilities as well as to those whose career ambitions include obtaining such responsibilities.
6 of 7 found the following review helpful:
Combine it with "Strategic Selling" and start selling! Apr 09, 2003
By Laurens I read this book to prepare myself for a salescourse at the company where I work. As it turns out I am no salesman, but the trainer did note that I had a very good insight into the salesprocess. So good, in fact, that he advised me to become a selling consultant for my company instead of a salesman. All that, thanks to having read this book in combination with "The New Strategic Selling" (also by Heiman). If you really want to start selling, you must read this book!
17 of 23 found the following review helpful:
same old sales ideas Jul 08, 2004
By Bob M. Lansburg
"gauncho99"
After reading enthusiastic reviews I bought this and the Conceptual Selling book. A basic premise is the salesperson's ability to ask questions, and not just talk. Maybe this is a revelation for someone new to sales, but as I kept reading I found this book just restating the obvious. I've been in sales for 25 years, and this book is nothing new. Catchy title, they obviously have a lot of big name clients. Good book for a rookie though, but an insult to veteran salespeople.
19 of 26 found the following review helpful:
Highly Recommended! May 29, 2001
By Rolf Dobelli
"getAbstract"
Throw the old rules of traditional sales out the window. Stephen E. Heiman and his co-authors, Diane Sanchez and Tad Tuleja, state in no uncertain terms that to remain a successful sales professional, you need to change the way you view the selling process. They advocate a customer-driven model of sales as the only approach for long-term success. The book includes “personal workshops” to allow you to apply these concepts directly to your sales situation. We ...recommend this book to anyone frustrated by the limitations of product-pitch selling. Note: This book is a revision of Conceptual Selling (by Robert Bruce Miller with Heiman and Tuleja, Warner Books, 1987), which has been updated to reflect the economy of today and tomorrow.
4 of 5 found the following review helpful:
An important contribution Sep 08, 2004
By Alexander Fürstenberg While today the book's content seems pretty basic, at its publication the idea of thoroughly understanding the concept of the customer wasn't exactly widespread. Presenting without prior analyzing the goals and theories of the client, or misunderstanding them, is a prescription for objections. Don't make assumptions, is what we learn from this book, and we should be thankful for being reminded by the authors about this fundamental sales rule.
See all 15 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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