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    The Many Uses of Shrink Wrap
    In the kitchen, shrink wrap keeps leftovers fresh and prevents spills in the microwave, but shrink wrap is also used in various industries to protect fragile items. Shrink wrap protects and groups pallets of items like glass and DVDs during shipment. Packaging shrink wrap is made from a plastic similar to the wrap used in kitchens, and it shrinks when it is heated. The heated shrink wrap makes a protected seal around the item. Shrink wrap systems vary in size, throughput rate, and level of automation, and films come in different thicknesses, stiffness, clarities and sizes.Industrial businesses use shrink wrap to protect ship goods while they are being shipped. Several varieties of shrink wrap packaging equipment are for sale. Smaller, often portable, systems start around $200, but larger, more elaborate systems can cost anywhere from $2,000 to $35,000. Smaller equipment is often used by artists or art dealers to protect their
    benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service rep

    How to Turn Your Marketing Into a Money-Making Machine - Setting The Stage For Successful Marketing
    Powerful Marketing has become elusive to many companies seeking strong sales results and overall growth. The sad truth is that Marketing comes across as a rather frustrating process. After all, how do you guarantee the outcome of a campaign when it is unclear what will work and what will not? As someone once said, 90% of Advertising doesn’t work—the question is, which 90%!If we could hone in on that 10% that does work, we would do more of it, right?The good news is that there is a way, and it is through a scientific approach to our Marketing efforts. But before we can expect to see any results, our mindset must be a focused one, and that requires being on the same page with others on our team, and having solid sources of information (and inspiration!) accessible to allow us to forge ahead in a new direction.Getting ThereThere is a place where ideas can happen, where our flowing creati
    Most companies train their customer service representatives to ask questions to solve problems. Cross-selling is extending those existing skills since selling is really nothing more than good problem-solving. At the same time, cross-selling skills can be unique and can be as foreign to customer service reps as another language.

    In order to effectively cross-sell through the service channel, start with an assessment of current abilities and comparing them to cross-selling competencies

    An employee skilled at cross-selling:

    • Views cross-selling as an extension of customer service and a way to solve customer problems.

    • While addressing the reason for the customer call, listens and identifies clues to additional customer needs.

    • Successfully addresses the customer’s original reason for the call before discussing additional products or services.

    • Uses checkbacks to ensure that issues have been addressed, messages understood, and actions agreed to appropriately throughout the call.

    • Throughout the call, listens for clues that may identify the caller’s predisposition for cross-selling (both in terms of product/service need AND in terms of receptivity).

    • Successfully transitions to cross-selling by asking questions to investigate and/or clarify additional customer needs identified during the call.

    • Matches appropriate products/services to meet specific customer needs.

    • Positions the customer benefits of these products/services in terms and tone that demonstrate helpfulness to the customer.

    • Ends discussion of additional products/services if the customer objects.

    • Recognizes buying signals.

    • Closes the sale by asking for confirmation by the customer.

    Training must provide demonstrations of these skills in action. Charlie Gargaly, customer service master trainer at Entelechy is adamant that the training show the skills being applied by THESE reps in THEIR environment: “Generic training doesn’t work here. Customer service reps need to see ‘one of their own’ successfully demonstrating the skills.” Gargaly recommends using video to capture vignettes of real reps demonstrating the specific skills; use the videos in training to demonstrate and discuss the skills.

    However, for training to be successful, two obstacles MUST first be addressed. We must address the predisposition some employees may have against sales. And we must ensure that the product information includes clear and specific benefits. Let’s look at these two obstacles.

    Predisposition Against Sales

    “I’d rather quit than sell.” “I was hired to help people, not manipulate them.”

    The feelings of many customer service reps towards sales are often more violent than those expressed by customers! Clearly, introducing cross-selling training to such an audience would fail quickly and unequivocally. Therefore, a critical initial step is to help customer service reps see cross-selling for what it is (or what it SHOULD be): an extension of providing the best and most complete service to the customer.

    Although presenting some of the research findings mentioned earlier might lower the defenses of many customer service reps, metamorphosis happens at two levels. The first is recognition that they themselves have happily purchased items that others suggested; in other words, the customer service reps themselves have benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service reps

    How To Conduct On-Line Due Diligence Before Entering Into Business Relationships
    Do you enter into business relationships, acquisitions, property investments, partnerships, or enter into a transaction without first verifying a companies identity, associates and affiliations?Most people do and your not alone. However most entrepreneurs still enter into business relationships with curiosity and unanswered questions they may have regarding a company or associate of a particular company. Wouldn’t it be beneficial to you and or your company to limit liability and risk by conducting due diligence before entering into business relationships?By limiting your risk and liability your business will have a far greater chance to succeed. By conducting simple due diligence and developing your own profile on any person or business you will have a much better understanding of a particular business and its associates which is vital to your business decisions. 90% of the information you need to know can be found on-l
    onal products or services.

    • Uses checkbacks to ensure that issues have been addressed, messages understood, and actions agreed to appropriately throughout the call.

    • Throughout the call, listens for clues that may identify the caller’s predisposition for cross-selling (both in terms of product/service need AND in terms of receptivity).

    • Successfully transitions to cross-selling by asking questions to investigate and/or clarify additional customer needs identified during the call.

    • Matches appropriate products/services to meet specific customer needs.

    • Positions the customer benefits of these products/services in terms and tone that demonstrate helpfulness to the customer.

    • Ends discussion of additional products/services if the customer objects.

    • Recognizes buying signals.

    • Closes the sale by asking for confirmation by the customer.

    Training must provide demonstrations of these skills in action. Charlie Gargaly, customer service master trainer at Entelechy is adamant that the training show the skills being applied by THESE reps in THEIR environment: “Generic training doesn’t work here. Customer service reps need to see ‘one of their own’ successfully demonstrating the skills.” Gargaly recommends using video to capture vignettes of real reps demonstrating the specific skills; use the videos in training to demonstrate and discuss the skills.

    However, for training to be successful, two obstacles MUST first be addressed. We must address the predisposition some employees may have against sales. And we must ensure that the product information includes clear and specific benefits. Let’s look at these two obstacles.

    Predisposition Against Sales

    “I’d rather quit than sell.” “I was hired to help people, not manipulate them.”

    The feelings of many customer service reps towards sales are often more violent than those expressed by customers! Clearly, introducing cross-selling training to such an audience would fail quickly and unequivocally. Therefore, a critical initial step is to help customer service reps see cross-selling for what it is (or what it SHOULD be): an extension of providing the best and most complete service to the customer.

    Although presenting some of the research findings mentioned earlier might lower the defenses of many customer service reps, metamorphosis happens at two levels. The first is recognition that they themselves have happily purchased items that others suggested; in other words, the customer service reps themselves have benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service rep

    Employee Incentives - Promotional Polo Shirts and Other Apparel
    It’s more than handing out promotional polo shirts. Many companies have discovered the value of employee incentive programs. Employees and staff who feel appreciated and recognized are more loyal and more hardworking. They produce higher quality efforts and can be your best ambassadors and publicity. Your employees will recognize a half-hearted incentive program, though. In order to be effective, though, an employee incentive program must meet three criteria: It must reward real accomplishments. It must be applied consistently. It must offer tangible rewards as well as recognition. Those “tangible rewards” can often take the form of “company swag” – hats, t-shirts and polo shirts embroidered or printed with your company’s logo are a great way of reinforcing the team spirit and the pride in being a member of the team. Keep in mind, though, that the rewards should be commensurate with t
    king for confirmation by the customer.

    Training must provide demonstrations of these skills in action. Charlie Gargaly, customer service master trainer at Entelechy is adamant that the training show the skills being applied by THESE reps in THEIR environment: “Generic training doesn’t work here. Customer service reps need to see ‘one of their own’ successfully demonstrating the skills.” Gargaly recommends using video to capture vignettes of real reps demonstrating the specific skills; use the videos in training to demonstrate and discuss the skills.

    However, for training to be successful, two obstacles MUST first be addressed. We must address the predisposition some employees may have against sales. And we must ensure that the product information includes clear and specific benefits. Let’s look at these two obstacles.

    Predisposition Against Sales

    “I’d rather quit than sell.” “I was hired to help people, not manipulate them.”

    The feelings of many customer service reps towards sales are often more violent than those expressed by customers! Clearly, introducing cross-selling training to such an audience would fail quickly and unequivocally. Therefore, a critical initial step is to help customer service reps see cross-selling for what it is (or what it SHOULD be): an extension of providing the best and most complete service to the customer.

    Although presenting some of the research findings mentioned earlier might lower the defenses of many customer service reps, metamorphosis happens at two levels. The first is recognition that they themselves have happily purchased items that others suggested; in other words, the customer service reps themselves have benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service rep

    Compassion: Bringing Your Humanity to Work
    Compassion is one of five principles of the Skilled Facilitator approach. (It's also one of the four core values of the approach.) I have already written about the other four principles: curiosity, commitment, accountability, and transparency.Compassion means temporarily suspending judgment so that you can appreciate others' perspectives or situations when they are different from your own. To be compassionate you need to be genuinely concerned about the other person or people's needs. You need to think about and feel it from their perspective.Here's a simple example. When I'm teaching facilitators to work with groups, sometimes they get really frustrated by the group. The group members don't stay on task or they don't keep commitments. When the facilitators get frustrated they wonder why I can seem so "patient." My answer is that I have compassion for the group. The team members are trying to change (which is why we're
    position Against Sales

    “I’d rather quit than sell.” “I was hired to help people, not manipulate them.”

    The feelings of many customer service reps towards sales are often more violent than those expressed by customers! Clearly, introducing cross-selling training to such an audience would fail quickly and unequivocally. Therefore, a critical initial step is to help customer service reps see cross-selling for what it is (or what it SHOULD be): an extension of providing the best and most complete service to the customer.

    Although presenting some of the research findings mentioned earlier might lower the defenses of many customer service reps, metamorphosis happens at two levels. The first is recognition that they themselves have happily purchased items that others suggested; in other words, the customer service reps themselves have benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service rep

    Rich Jerk Reviewed
    I read through the copy on The Rich Jerk site, and found it a little entertaining that this character was employing a strategy of insulting potential customers and affiliates. And it looks like it's working.I guess, being a foul mouthed tout is lucrative, for This Rich Jerk. His e-book on Click Bank is ranked #1 in the Money and Employment category. And they are willing to impart their hard gained knowledge to you if you buy The Rich Jerk e-book for $9.95 (I just noticed the price drop 01-23-2007). If you ask me it was probably the best money I spent, but it's not that easy. Especially when you start combing the web for money making opportunities, you'll probably end up like most other marketers, looking for that easy button. That isn't there.Pick out one of the techniques "that's in his e-book"How to make affiliate websites that sell like crazyPay per click stra
    benefited from a relevant and timely recommendation made by someone else. The second is the realization that THEY as customer service reps are sometimes the ONLY people who are in a position to provide this helpful information to customers.

    It is important for customer service reps to see that positioning products and services that will benefit the customer IS customer service! Of course, if the customer is satisfied and does not need anything else, the rep should close the call without even mentioning any other products or services. However, if the customer service rep could provide the customer better service by matching a product or service to an expressed need, then missing that opportunity is incomplete customer service.

    A significant amount of Entelechy’s initial customer service training focuses on helping customer service reps see themselves as the customer’s advocate, someone who has insights and information that will help that particular customer. Through small and large-group discussion, we extend that “customer advocacy” to include an obligation to position relevant and beneficial products and services thereby gradually reducing and eliminating the biases that customer service reps have against sales.

    Product Knowledge

    Product knowledge is perhaps the most misunderstood element in the cross-selling equation. Companies spend time on product features and functions, yet we all know that customers don’t really care much about those things. They care about benefits. And actually, they really only care about benefits to THEM personally.

    For cross-selling efforts to work, customer service reps need training and support (in the form of job aids) that provide easy-to-access product information. Most importantly, the customer benefits of these products need to be specified at the granular level. If a product is going to save time, it needs to be clear WHO is going to save HOW much time. For example, a personal video recorder (PVR) such as TiVo® allows someone who hates commercials (the WHO) to skip 12 minutes of commercials every hour (the BENEFIT).

    Customer service reps need to be receptive to potential buyers of a product so when they are listening to the customer on the call, they can pick up specific clues that would lead to specific products. If, during a call, the caller complains that “there seems to be getting more and more commercials on TV” the customer service rep can position TiVo as a product that the customer may find useful.

    Another caller may talk about how they’re missing an important part of the game because the video signal is out. After addressing the problem, the customer service rep may position TiVo as a tool to ensure that the customer can replay parts of the game that he missed.

    The product training must focus on targeted potential buyers and the specific benefits they would get from the product or service. General marketing messages (i.e., save time, lower costs) and product functions and features do NOT make for effective product training.

    Product training without teaching skills – or teaching skills independent of product knowledge – is ineffective. Training that combines product and skills training is the solution.

    Conclusions

    Cross-selling is rapidly becoming the primary way of increasing revenue for many customers. Done effectively, cross-selling can also increase customer satisfaction and retention. Done ineffectively and you risk losing your only source of revenue. Cross-selling training needs to combine both product information AND skills practice. If your customer service reps ask questions and position products in the mode of solving customer problems, they’ll make the customer feel taken care of and appreciated. When done right, cross-selling will do more than sell products; it can increase customer satisfaction and retention.

    Download your free copy of Effectively Using Cross-Selling and Up-Selling to Increase Revenue AND Customer Service at http://unlockit.com/TS-HPCS.htm and increase the effectiveness of your cross selling efforts.

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