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CHAPTER 4 USING COMMUNICATION PRINCIPLES TO BUILD RELATIONSHIPS Stephen B. Castleberry | John F. Tanner Jr. Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. LEARNING OBJECTIVES • What are the basic elements in the communication process? • Why are listening and questioning skills important? • How can salespeople develop listening skills to collect information about customers? 4-2 LEARNING OBJECTIVES • How do people communicate without using words? • What are some things to remember when communicating via technology like phones, e-mail, and social media? • How does a salesperson adjust for cultural differences? 4-3 TWO-WAY COMMUNICATION PROCESS • Encoding: Translation of thoughts into words • Decoding: Interpreting the meaning of the received message • Feedback: Reply to the message 4-4 EXHIBIT 4.1 - TWO-WAY FLOW OF INFORMATION 4-5 COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWNS • Encoding and decoding problems • Environment in which the communications occur • Noises: Sounds unrelated to messages being exchanged • Physical comfort • Buyers do not always follow this communication model perfectly 4-6 SENDING VERBAL MESSAGES EFFECTIVELY • Choice of words • Use short words and phrases to: • Demonstrate strength and force • Provide charm and grace • Avoid • Trite words • Phrases that sound overeager • Off-color language • Slang or foul language 4-7 SENDING VERBAL MESSAGES EFFECTIVELY • Draw on a set of words to best help present the features of a product or service • Do not use words that have become common and meaningless • Use culture specific words 4-8 SENDING VERBAL MESSAGES EFFECTIVELY • Voice characteristics • Rate of speech - Faster rate for simple messages • Slower rate for more difficult concepts • Loudness: Should be tailored to the communication situation • Inflection: Tone or pitch of speech • Articulation: Production of recognizable sounds 4-9 SENDING VERBAL MESSAGES EFFECTIVELY • Stories • Conflicts, trials, and crises • Help listener think through choices and outcomes of those decisions • Word picture: Graphic or vivid story designed to help the buyer easily visualize a point • Analogy: Speaker attempts to draw a parallel between one thing and another • Keep open lines of communication 4-10 ACTIVE LISTENING • 80-20 listening rule • Listening - 80 percent of the time • Talking - 20 percent or less of the time • Speaking-listening differential: Difference between the rate at which people speak and listen 4-11 EXHIBIT 4.3 - LEVELS OF LISTENING 4-12 ACTIVE LISTENING • Think about the conclusions toward which the speaker is building • Evaluate the evidence being presented • Sort out important facts from irrelevant ones • Attempt to draw out as much information as possible 4-13 SUGGESTIONS FOR ACTIVE LISTENING • Repeating information • To verify information being collected • Restating or rephrasing information • To verify a customer’s intent • Clarifying information • To verify a customer’s meaning 4-14 SUGGESTIONS FOR ACTIVE LISTENING • Summarizing the conversation • To get a quick review • Tolerating silences • To give customer time to think • Concentrating on the ideas being communicated • To avoid getting distracted 4-15 READING NONVERBAL MESSAGES FROM CUSTOMERS • Body language • Nonverbal communication: Body language, space, and appearance 4-16 READING NONVERBAL MESSAGES FROM CUSTOMERS Body angle Face Arms Hands Legs 4-17 EXHIBIT 4.4 - PATTERNS OF NONVERBAL REACTIONS TO PRESENTATION 4-18 BODY LANGUAGE PATTERNS • Signals that customers may be hiding their true feelings • Contradictions and verbal mistakes • Differences in two parts of a conversation • Contradictions between verbal and nonverbal messages • Nonverbal signals 4-19 SENDING MESSAGES WITH NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION • Using body language • Facial muscles - Involuntary, especially during stressful situations • Eye contact • Gestures and hand shaking • Posture and body movements 4-20 ROLE OF SPACE AND PHYSICAL CONTACT • Distance zones • Intimate zone: For a person’s closest relationships • Personal zone: For close friends and those who share special interests • Social zone: For business transactions and other impersonal relationships • Public zone: For speeches, teachers in classrooms, and passersby 4-21 EXHIBIT 4.6 - DISTANCE ZONES FOR INTERACTION 4-22 ROLE OF SPACE AND PHYSICAL CONTACT • Buyers fall into two touching groups • Contact - See noncontact people as cold and unfriendly • Noncontact - View contact people as overly friendly and obtrusive 4-23 APPEARANCE • Priorities in dressing for business are: • Getting customers to notice you in a positive way • Getting customers to trust you • Proper attire and grooming give salespeople additional poise and confidence 4-24 PRINCIPLES TO DRESS FOR SUCCESS Consider the geography • Temperature • Local cultural norms Consider customers • Their appearance • Their expectations of your appearance Consider corporate culture • Norms for your industry Consider aspirations • Top levels of your organization • Dress above your position Consider personal style • Wait until you have the halo effect • Be reasonable 4-25 COMMUNICATING VIA TECHNOLOGY • Salespeople communicate with customers by using different methods that vary in: • Interactivity of the communications • Ability to use verbal and nonverbal communication channels • Quantity of information that can be conveyed • Response time: Time between sending a message and getting a response to it 4-26 EXHIBIT 4.7 - COMPARISON OF VARIOUS METHODS OF SALESPERSON COMMUNICATIONS 4-27 TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONS • Decide what to say before calling • Be polite, enthusiastic, and an active listener • Take notes and restate the message • Encourage two-way communication with verbal cues • Give customer opportunity to ask questions 4-28 VOICE MAIL COMMUNICATIONS • When cold calling, set up an appointment, don’t leave a message • Leave a clear, concise message including a suggested time for a return call • Avoid wasting the prospect’s time and ask for a callback • Give name and phone number at the end of the message 4-29 E-MAIL COMMUNICATION Suggestions • Immediacy does not mean intimacy • Use meaningful subject lines • Put important information in the first few lines • Be careful of the tone or intent of e-mail • Learn customer preferences for email • Avoid techno overkill • Avoid sending long e-mail messages or large attachments • Use speed to impress customers • Do not deliver bad news via e-mail • Check for timing before sending an e-mail 4-30 SOCIAL NETWORKING • Use of Web tools that allow users to: • Share content • Interact • Develop communities around similar interests • Salespeople use it to communicate with customers and prospects 4-31 SOCIAL NETWORKING Suggestions • Fill out your profile completely to build trust and establish common bonds • Create contacts/friends lists • Follow all rules for the networking sites • Share articles and links to presentations and other information that might be helpful to prospects • Remember to post updates on your wall about your business • Combine your social media accounts • Respond quickly to posts and queries • Add your Facebook/LinkedIn URL to your e-mail signature 4-32 ADJUSTING FOR CULTURAL DIFFERENCES • Rules for using English in international selling • Use common English words • Use words that do not have multiple meanings • Avoid slang expressions peculiar to American culture • Use rules of grammar strictly • Use action-specific verbs • Never use vulgar expressions 4-33 ADJUSTING FOR CULTURAL DIFFERENCES • Considerations for international salespeople • Terms have different meanings in different cultures • Varying perceptions of time in general • Time it takes for business activities to occur in different countries • Level of eye contact to be used 4-34