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We do a lot of practicing here at Sandler. In fact, one of the
major misconceptions people have is that our training means
learning about things -- like the best techniques for asking
questions, creating bonding and rapport, or prospecting. It is
certainly important to learn about the submarine and the system,
but learning about the system is only the surface of our
training.
You already know our training is more than a couple of days in a
seminar. Since we are committed to fixing what might be broken
or improving sales processes to help sales forces accomplish
their goals, we are usually eager to help people modify their
behaviors. Some people might think training is like going to
school. Maybe that is why I often hear prospects asking me:
"What will people learn in the training?" When I think of
training I think more about spring training for baseball
players.
When major league baseball players come to spring training,
don't they already know how to play baseball? Don't they know
how to bat, catch, run and pitch? So why do they have to come to
practice? They have to practice to reacquaint themselves, not
with knowledge, but with the behaviors, attitudes, and
techniques that will help them accomplish their goals. These
highly trained players are hoping to make the best behaviors
automatic so they don't even have to think about how to respond
to thrown balls, oncoming runners or high flying balls. And they
have to reacquaint themselves every day.
Maybe practice doesn't make perfect as much as it makes
automatic (and unconsciously competent). In training, people
move from not knowing they don't know how to do something
(unconsciously incompetent), to knowing they don't know how to
do certain behaviors (consciously incompetent), to knowing how
to do behaviors, but only if they are paying attention to what
they are doing (consciously competent), to the place where
professional baseball players try to live: where they do the
right things without even having to think about their behaviors
(unconsciously competent).
So we are not trying to be perfect. We are trying to become so
familiar, so comfortable with a system of behaviors, attitudes
and techniques, that we will automatically use them, even under
stress. Ask a baseball player: This is not easy. It might take
several years or even a good part of a lifetime to become the
best baseball player one could be. Does it make sense that it
might take two, three or more years of focused practice to
become the best sales person one could be?
Each year baseball players come to spring training to reacquaint
themselves with the behaviors, attitudes and techniques that
will equip them for success. They practice every day to make
these automatic.
If you were to come to our training
sessions, would it be appropriate to say the same thing about
what you would be doing? The only real question is: How good do
you want to be? How good do you really want to be? How much time
are you willing to commit to make what you learn automatic? What
kind of difference would there be in your life if you were that
good?
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