You're welcome, unpinkpanther.
I'm going to bring the Pictogrigm of Persuasion into this post. This will be fun and altogether shorter than the last one.
I was thinking about the word "confrontation" from my previous post and Gordon J's teachings.
The "confrontation" is like the "wow" in the Pictogrigm of Persuasion. You know, the "rock" that you throw to interrupt the pattern, to get a response.
In a back-and-forth sales conversation, there is a dynamic that whoever throws the "wow" that becomes the dominant pattern interrupter is the leader of the conversation.
There is a point that can really feel like a confrontation if you are both throwing "wow's" at each other. This is the meaning of the saying:
"A sale is always being made. Either you will sell the prospect on why they should buy or the prospect will sell you on the reason that they won't buy."
Either it will be the salesperson or the prospect leading. If you follow the prospect's "wow" - they are going to convince you that they don't need to buy anything. That's what they say more often than not, right?
"Just looking" sound familiar to anyone.
But if they follow your "wow", then they will buy. And that's your whole job and responsibility as the leader - is to provide a suitable solution and convince them to take part in it. The money exchange is more of a matter of logistics.
Everything costs money, including your services as the leader of this expedition, correct?
Anyways, here was the really interesting point I was going to make. Let's go back to the 1/10,000 second thing again.
When you have a tool like the Pictogrigm of Persuasion, this tool goes directly into your subconscious mind where it resides.
Because it is a picture, it can be recalled by both sides of the brain at a moment's notice, like recognizing the house you grew up in. Especially if you write it out in your own handwriting with both hands, backwards and forwards, possibly multiple times.
If you are familiar with it to the point where it is an instant recognition, then you don't need to memorize specific rules of persuasion anymore.
You will keep coming up with your own creative "wows" to persuade other people, and you will see that they are throwing "wows" in your direction.
But you don't need to remember what So-and-so said in page 32 of her book about such-and-such a tactic. Because you have the overall "picture" embedded in your subconscious mind.
Make sense? Catch you on the flip side.
P.S. I'll come back, maybe tomorrow if I have some time, to complete the post on take away selling.
