How I Got Into Sales
Grant Cardone
Private Equity Fund Manager & Real Estate Investor ?$4.5BAUM ? Cardone Capital ? Cardone Ventures?10X Health System ? Author ? Cardone Vets ? Cardone University ? Real Estate Bitcoin Investment - Text (305) 407-0276
I am a salesman because I had to be, not because I wanted to be. Truth be told I hated sales when I got into it. I hear people say, “you are a natural salesman.” Wrong. I am the most unnatural sales person you would ever meet and hated sales the first eight years I was in it. At the age of 17 on my first sales job in a clothing store my card said, "sales associate" and I hated it. I hated talking to strangers, “is there something I can help you with?” I was awkward, often tongue-tied, scared to approach people, hated rejection and my results relied purely on luck. My results relied on whether I met the right customer or not -- or so I thought.
I got in sales because my survival depended on it not because I wanted to. The career that had been set for me didn’t pay any money. Sales was the only job offered to me and I hated it. I told my uncle, "I didn’t go to college to become a salesman.” And he said, “You didn’t go to college to be out of work either.” So I took the sales job and for the next two years I hated it. I hated building rapport with a customer, asking probing questions, and hated asking for the offer. Hate is not too strong of a word. I hated the ups and downs, the commission only, the rejection, appointments not showing, customers lying to me…and the begging and follow up it seemed I was expected to do.
Fast forward 32 years. I was recently doing an interview with Fran Tarkenton, NFL Hall of Famer and super successful entrepreneur who said, “You own the sales niche man. How did you do that?”
Good question, how does an average sales guy go from hating sales to being the leading authority in the industry writing a dozen bestselling sales programs and five business sales books?
When I realized my life depended on sales and decided to quit moaning and groaning and made a commitment to being great at sales, well, everything changed. A guy named Ray told me one day, “You hate sales because you don’t know anything about it. Listen to this tape.” He gave me a cassette by an old sales trainer who talked about sales like it was a formula for selling step by step from the moment you met the customer to the close. It was amazing. I called the company to asked about what else they had and invested $3000 in a 12 tape training program in 1983. Every day I invested 30 minutes to one hour watching video footage of this guy explaining sales step by step. Within 30 days my production had doubled and, interestingly enough, what I had been hating on for eight years I now started to enjoy. Within nine months I was in the top 1 percent in my industry and had fallen in love. Within five years I started a business where I would teach sales people and sales organizations a new way to sell.
Over the years I have talked to tens of millions of professional sales people from every industry. I was speaking to a thousand insurance agents in Scottsdale, where the average earner in the room makes $970,000 a year. I asked them, “How many of you got into sales because you wanted to be in sales?” Almost no one raised their hands. I was speaking to three thousand network marketers in Vegas and asked, “Who likes sales?” Almost no one raised their hands.
The point is you don’t need to like sales -- you need to understand your entire future depends on it and quit fighting it. Very few people inherently like sales. Everyone I know who loves sales love it because they are successful at it. In 25 years I have never met a person in sales who loves it that is failing at it. I have met a lot of sales people that do love their profession and they all have two things in common -- they make money and they KNOW what they are doing. I’ve met thousands of greats; introverts, extroverts, male, female, boomers, millennials, all the varying different personality types from the very competitive, direct, and results driven to those much more reserved, modest, low-key and cautious.
I have helped thousands of salespeople over the years learn to fall in love with their career and it is my experience that to really love sales and make a lot of money doing it, two things must happen.
1. Commit to it as your survival. You don’t need to want to do it, love to do it, or even like to do it—that will come when you get results. You must commit to it with no other options.
2. Learn how to do it. If you were born a sales person, whatever that means, then you will have to learn it step by step. By the way, I know lots of people I grew up with who felt like they were born sales people and I sold circles around them once I learned the game.
Once committed, there is so much to learn.
- Right Attitude
- Meeting a customer
- Putting them at ease
- Differentiating yourself
- Making a lasting impression
- Building Rapport
- Effectively qualifying
- Determining motivation to purchase
- Identifying reasons to create urgency
- Presenting your solution
- When to talk and when to listen
- How to build value
- How to Create excitement
- How to present your offer
- How to negotiate
- How to Close
- How to Press for the Close
- When to Back off from the Close
- When to Lock a deal down
- How to handle influencers
- How to Determine Decision maker
- How to Handle Long Sales Cycles
- How to Handle Multiple Decision Makers
And that is just the sales cycle, that doesn’t include prospecting, follow-up, cold calls or how to stay motivated. So are you ready to get in sales yet? Before I committed to sales I was broke. Once I committed and started learning everything I could about sales, I began making real money for the first time in my life. I’ve mastered sales and now I’m a hecta-millionaire. You can have anything you want in life if you learn how to sell. People go to school to get a “good job” paying 60-80K a year. In sales you can start doing 60-80K a month, but you have to learn sales. If you are serious about ever getting rich, commit to sales today.
Make the commitment by getting on Cardone University TODAY and I’ll teach you how to do it. You’ll only learn when you are truly committed. Commitment takes sacrifice. Be willing to pay the price today so you can pay any price tomorrow.
Be great,
GC
Grant Cardone is an American entrepreneur, New York Times best-selling author, speaker, motivator and online sales training expert. Cardone is a respected, highly regarded master salesperson whose passion is to teach people how to sell themselves, their products and services regardless of economic climate. His books, audio packages and seminars provide people of all professional backgrounds with the practical tools necessary to build their own economies towards the path to true freedom.
“Success is your duty, obligation, responsibility."
Owner at Autumn Supply
8 年Very well said
ENX Difference Maker for 2022.Top 100 Influencer w/ Office Technology in 2022. 8 Times Awarded "ENX Difference Maker" for Technology. I enjoy helping clients with print devices and digital transformation
8 年Thought the blog was excellent, always love to hear how salespeople started out. Not sure about the pitch at the end though, however that's why we are in sales because we are always prospecting! $3,000 was a lot of money in 1983. probably more like a $10-15K investment today. Seems you were doing well before the tapes.
RM/ Florida Auto Care Systems
8 年Love this article, you are great....
Web Development at Broadcom Limited
8 年Ha. When I started reading this I thought you wrote it Alex and I was thinking "He hated sales?" Then I figured out it wasn't you. :) Good article.
I think this is pretty common with many sales professionals. Sales is not sexy, this is one reason why there are not many higher ed programs geared to it. I think many people fall into it because of the earning potential and it fits their personality. Another reason people like myself go this particular route is there are always sales jobs for kids coming out of school. Many employers are willing to to give somebody with little or no experience a shot. Unlike a lot of professions you can tell pretty quickly if the individual has a hope at making it long term in sales. If the prospect is not cut out for a career in sales the supervisor and or the employee should know fairly quickly.