šŸ„§ Jane's Pies, Bob Marley, Higher Sales

By 3:31 pm on Saturday, it's clear...

šŸ– Happy Mittwoch!

Issue #66 is a 3.0-minute read.

Janeā€™s Pies, Bob Marley, Higher Sales

By 3:31 pm on Saturday, itā€™s clear I might not make it.

16 miles out, and Iā€™m racing to Janeā€™s bakery three towns away.

Folks say her pies are better than Martha Stewartā€™s.

Got to get there before she closes at 4 or Iā€™m in the dessert doghouse for Thanksgiving.

I make it to the bakery, I think.

Thereā€™s a faded yellowish sign, and the place looks closed.

I try the door.

Inside, itā€™s a garage sale from 1986!

Thereā€™s three bins of used classic rock albums, two racks of concert t-shirts, and a long row of burning incense.

She comes out from the back room.

ā€œYeah?ā€ she asks, in a hostile tone, like I just called her a cheat in a saloon card game.

ā€œHi.ā€ I reply, not exactly sure what Iā€™ve walked into.

ā€œI heard you have amazing pies for Thanksgiving,ā€ trying to win her over with praise.

ā€œI donā€™t know,ā€ she replies. ā€œDo you want to buy one?ā€

I look at the smudged glass display.

Not one pie.

Thereā€™s a tiny brownie and two broken eclairs that escaped from the island of misfit pastries.

ā€œHmm,ā€ I sigh. "Okay if I look around?ā€

ā€œMy bowling league starts in ten minutes, so hurry up if you want anything,ā€ she mutters.

Next to me thereā€™s a 5-foot-high rack of random spices marked down to $.25 a jar.

In the back corner, thereā€™s a woman in a lawn chair doing something odd with a doughnut.

ā€œYou make the pies here?ā€ I ask.

"Yeah. Out back,ā€ she answers. Business has been crappy, so itā€™s a complete shitshow back there.ā€

Hearing the s-word describe a food prep area seals it.

ā€œOkay, well, thanks for the tour,ā€ I say.

No response. Sheā€™s gone.

I didnā€™t buy a pie.

Jane didnā€™t win a new customer.

Business isnā€™t crappy because sheā€™s selling Bob Marley records instead of carrot cake.

Her business is a disaster because of three words.

SHE. WONā€™T. SELL.

I get it. Sales is tough.

If youā€™re a born seller, you know you have toā€¦

Sell Everyday

Three steps to keep sales high.

1. Sell yourself

Jane gave me no comfort that she knew how to bake pies.

  • No oneā€™s buying your premium product or service before they buy YOU!

  • Before anyone believes you can fix their pain, they have to believe youā€™re the expert.

  • Your confidence, conviction, and clarity show youā€™re a pro and you can help.

2. Sell your energy

The doughnut lady had more spark than Jane.

Had Jane been full of zest while she showed me incredible pies, I would have been all in.

āš”ļø In my first business, when clients asked me about how I managed money, I got them EXCITED!

I made them feel energetic about earning money in the market and what it meant to their future.

  • Premium buyers want to know you have a pulse, and they want to see you glow when you talk about how you fix their problem.

  • Energy is contagious. Share yours. šŸ”„

3. Sell the NEXT step

I wasnā€™t going to buy 8 pies from Jane this year.

She didnā€™t try to sell me even one.

Folks need time before they buy.

Especially if itā€™s an expensive solution.

You donā€™t have to sell (right away) your $500 digital class or a $10,000 do it for them solution.

Instead, sell ā€˜whatā€™s NEXT!ā€™

  • A subscription

  • A discovery call

  • A trial period

  • A download or sample solution

  • Your premium product

Sell step 1 before step 10, and meet them where they land.

Know where they are in the cycle and sell the next step.

Three keys to selling premium solutions to high-tier clients:

  • Sell yourself

  • Sell your energy

  • Sell the next step

šŸ“¢ A subscriber asked for a pic of winter in their home city, Munich. Happy to do it!

I appreciate your sharing this newsletter with your friends and contacts.

Stay curious in your business and keep opening doors.

šŸ¦ƒ Have a sensational Thanksgiving.

-Erik

P.S. If you dream of getting to $150K of sales, letā€™s do it!

When youā€™re set, hereā€™s your custom, 90-minute consulting session to bring you there. Faster.