The Virtual Selling Mindset

3 Characteristics every salesperson needs for success

Success in virtual selling starts with your mindset

To defend revenue and even grow throughout the turbulent market conditions of recent years​​​​​, sales professionals have needed to develop a specific set of Virtual Selling skills. These range from setting up their camera, background and lighting, to engaging customers through the online medium.

However, developing this new skill set does not address the whole picture. To achieve success when selling virtually, salespeople must not only adapt their approach, but their outlook.

In this article, we explore the three characteristics salespeople need to drive success in virtual sales: Resilience, Responsibility, and Rigour.

Responsibility

The first characteristic of the virtual mindset is Responsibility; the extent to which the individual takes accountability for the outcome of a given situation.

In every sales process, many events take place at each stage of the buying cycle that will determine whether the sale is successful.

The extent to which we take responsibility for these events can be plotted on the “Locus of Control”, developed by Julian B Rotter in 1954.

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Individuals with a strong internal Locus of Control believe that events result primarily from their own behaviour and actions. This belief means that they are more likely to attempt to influence the outcome than those with a high external Locus of Control.

Whilst there is no perfect position to take, an Imparta study discovered that top sales performers shared a strongly internal Locus of Control. They all believed that their performance was under their own control, not purely driven by external factors. As a result, they were bold in their approach, more likely to be proactive in managing their time and better at working with their own colleagues.

Our Advice:

  • Recognise your own locus of control. Listen to your internal dialogue to identify when you’re blaming the customer, your team, the technology or even the pandemic itself.
  • Ask yourself what you could do to anticipate, reduce or work around any issues.
  • Equally, don’t try to fix those things that are genuinely outside your control.

Resilience

A second part of the virtual mindset is Resilience; the ability to bounce back from setbacks.

Virtual selling – whether it’s a group pitch, a 121 meeting or large workshop to a group of stakeholders – is a journey filled with rejection, failure and setbacks as well as triumphs.

Resilience is what lets you succeed despite these setbacks.

It comes from breaking the links in the vicious cycle that can happen when things go wrong:

Identify your own cycle, and anticipate the things that can undermine your resilience. Then you can spot when it’s happening, and take steps to break the links in the cycle.

Research shows that having a clear sense of purpose helps you to deal with panic and loss of self-esteem.

Our advice:

  • Reduce the impact of setbacks simply by expecting that they’ll happen. Be mentally prepared so that you make contingency plans.
  • Stop feelings of panic and loss from interrupting your focus, by concentrating on what you can learn from the loss. If you’re surrounded by positive, resilient people, they’ll also help you to retain your focus.
  • Rebuild your self-esteem through your inner dialogue. Tell yourself that you can win the next one… don’t let your subconscious get in the way of your success.

Rigour

The final element of the virtual selling mindset is Rigour; the drive to go the extra mile to achieve your goals.

As a salesperson or sales leader, you are always competing against something, whether that be the status quo, another use for budget or competitors.

If your level of skill and effort falls below a certain threshold, more often than not you lose. Above that threshold, more often than not you win.

Dave Brailsford, the coach behind the highly successful British cycling team, put it this way: “If you break down everything you could think of that goes into riding a bike, and then improve it by 1 percent, you will get a significant increase when you put them all together.”  This can be described as ‘the aggregation of marginal gains’

There is a sharp jump in the performance of virtual selling (and commission) as your skills and effort pass that threshold. And during the pandemic and its economic fallout, the threshold of skill and effort you have to pass in order to succeed has been significantly higher.

The threshold varies from industry to industry, and even from situation to situation, but going the extra mile – and being rigorous – can have a dramatic effect on your outcomes.

In sales, as in so many aspects of life, you make much of your own luck.

Be curious, be persistent and always go the extra mile.

Our advice:

  • Encourage the extra mile in yourself and those supporting your virtual engagement.
  • Understand what Rigour means for you. It could be working hard, not taking things for granted, following the process, applying the tools or checking the presentation one more time.
  • Make time to prepare and practice. Focus on the aggregation of marginal gains.

This article has been adapted from Imparta’s Mastering Virtual Presence Training Curriculum, and scratches the surface of the behavioural science, research and leading techniques we deliver to our clients.

If you are looking to take the next step in virtual selling and get first-hand experience of Imparta’s training programme, get in touch today.

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