Resonante Entretenimiento

Using STAT for Content Strategy Whiteboard Friday

Have you ever tried to close a sale, only to hear the disappointing news that the prospect chose to go elsewhere? You know your product and services are better than your competition. You know your organization is more stable and capable of a smooth implementation. But you can’t figure out what happened or why they didn’t take your offer.

It’s because you lacked influence. Here are the steps you should take to remedy that.

1. Become an influencer.

Some people believe that influence isn’t necessary in today’s business world, that it’s an outdated notion. Many sales professionals rely on the differentiation of their products, pricing or marketplace positioning to do the heavy lifting in their sales pitches. It doesn’t work. HubSpot recently reported that 42% of sales professionals believe that prospecting is the hardest part of their job. With influence, prospecting becomes easier.

Influence is more crucial today than ever before. It’s required for any organization to meet successfully – and beat – their sales expectations. It gives you a competitive advantage and comes from how others experience you day to day. Your consistent behavior establishes trust and credibility. When others perceive you as trustworthy, confident and authentic, they are likely to follow your recommendations. A recent study by Salesforce discovered that 79% of business buyers believe it’s critical to work with a salesperson they can trust.

If a prospective customer perceives your interactions as less than favorable, they’ll likely doubt what you have to say. If they see you as lacking confidence in your product or service, they probably won’t buy from you, no matter what anyone else says. If they doubt your trustworthiness because you fail to make eye contact, it’s doubtful they’ll accept your suggestions.

Perception is reality. Influence doesn’t come from your intentions but from how people experience you. Trust, credibility and authenticity move people to act. Those characteristics come from consistent behavior in every interaction. How you communicate either enhances your influence or takes away from it. If you want to earn more credibility and trust to close more sales, start with your communication skills.

2. Be self-aware.

We typically perceive ourselves differently than others do. When it comes to our communication skills, we don’t know what we don’t know. You’re probably unaware of how your prospects see and hear you. Self-awareness helps you understand what you need to change.

To gain awareness, seek feedback from someone you trust. A leader, co-worker, client or peer can shed light on areas of opportunity. Feedback will provide you a course of action.

3. Be consistent.

To earn trust, we must be consistent in two areas. First, your message and delivery must be in sync. Second, your communication must be consistent Monday to Monday, every day and in every interaction. When prospects learn what they can expect from you in every interaction, trust grows.

Record yourself practicing your sales pitch. Evaluate whether your words match your behavior. Consider your body language, and tune into your choice of words. Ensure how you deliver your message so it matches what you say.

4. Build your reputation.

Your reputation is what others can expect from you. It’s the one thing that precedes you and affects your influence before you ever say a single word. Your reputation comes from how others perceive your character. They are quick to share it, setting a baseline expectation for others who have yet to meet you. How they define you determines how much others will trust you.

Ask. This is another way feedback helps. Inquire with customers you’ve previously worked with. Better yet, have a conversation with a former prospect whose business you lost. Seek to understand their motivation and understand where you can improve.

5. Be flexible.

The ability to adapt your message to meet your listeners’ needs is crucial to your influence. Influence grows when you stop formulating your thoughts long enough to listen to what others have to say. When you hear your listeners’ needs, you can adapt your message in a way that benefits them. Trust builds as they see you place their needs ahead of your desire for a sale. 

Listen with intent. Do less talking and more listening. Tune into what your prospects have to say, what their concerns are and what they are seeking. This helps you understand how to fine-tune your message to better meet their needs.

Bottom line

When a connection is established on an emotional level, impact is made. It gives our message momentum and allows us to make an impact even when we aren’t physically there. This emotional connection matters because it moves the relationship from a transactional place to one of trust and credibility.

Impact comes from a genuine connection with others when we honor them by listening and prioritizing their needs. When we make our prospects’ needs more important than our sale, we create a connection that makes a lasting, trustworthy impact.

Start by acknowledging your own limits, and have the courage to evaluate your current behavior. Once you realize the importance of influence in your sales process, you can work to improve yours. Anyone can be influential if they are willing to do the work.

Tips For Achieving Financial Security

Have you ever tried to close a sale, only to hear the disappointing news that the prospect chose to go elsewhere? You know your product and services are better than your competition. You know your organization is more stable and capable of a smooth implementation. But you can’t figure out what happened or why they didn’t take your offer.

It’s because you lacked influence. Here are the steps you should take to remedy that.

1. Become an influencer.

Some people believe that influence isn’t necessary in today’s business world, that it’s an outdated notion. Many sales professionals rely on the differentiation of their products, pricing or marketplace positioning to do the heavy lifting in their sales pitches. It doesn’t work. HubSpot recently reported that 42% of sales professionals believe that prospecting is the hardest part of their job. With influence, prospecting becomes easier.

Influence is more crucial today than ever before. It’s required for any organization to meet successfully – and beat – their sales expectations. It gives you a competitive advantage and comes from how others experience you day to day. Your consistent behavior establishes trust and credibility. When others perceive you as trustworthy, confident and authentic, they are likely to follow your recommendations. A recent study by Salesforce discovered that 79% of business buyers believe it’s critical to work with a salesperson they can trust.

If a prospective customer perceives your interactions as less than favorable, they’ll likely doubt what you have to say. If they see you as lacking confidence in your product or service, they probably won’t buy from you, no matter what anyone else says. If they doubt your trustworthiness because you fail to make eye contact, it’s doubtful they’ll accept your suggestions.

Perception is reality. Influence doesn’t come from your intentions but from how people experience you. Trust, credibility and authenticity move people to act. Those characteristics come from consistent behavior in every interaction. How you communicate either enhances your influence or takes away from it. If you want to earn more credibility and trust to close more sales, start with your communication skills.

2. Be self-aware.

We typically perceive ourselves differently than others do. When it comes to our communication skills, we don’t know what we don’t know. You’re probably unaware of how your prospects see and hear you. Self-awareness helps you understand what you need to change.

To gain awareness, seek feedback from someone you trust. A leader, co-worker, client or peer can shed light on areas of opportunity. Feedback will provide you a course of action.

3. Be consistent.

To earn trust, we must be consistent in two areas. First, your message and delivery must be in sync. Second, your communication must be consistent Monday to Monday, every day and in every interaction. When prospects learn what they can expect from you in every interaction, trust grows.

Record yourself practicing your sales pitch. Evaluate whether your words match your behavior. Consider your body language, and tune into your choice of words. Ensure how you deliver your message so it matches what you say.

4. Build your reputation.

Your reputation is what others can expect from you. It’s the one thing that precedes you and affects your influence before you ever say a single word. Your reputation comes from how others perceive your character. They are quick to share it, setting a baseline expectation for others who have yet to meet you. How they define you determines how much others will trust you.

Ask. This is another way feedback helps. Inquire with customers you’ve previously worked with. Better yet, have a conversation with a former prospect whose business you lost. Seek to understand their motivation and understand where you can improve.

5. Be flexible.

The ability to adapt your message to meet your listeners’ needs is crucial to your influence. Influence grows when you stop formulating your thoughts long enough to listen to what others have to say. When you hear your listeners’ needs, you can adapt your message in a way that benefits them. Trust builds as they see you place their needs ahead of your desire for a sale. 

Listen with intent. Do less talking and more listening. Tune into what your prospects have to say, what their concerns are and what they are seeking. This helps you understand how to fine-tune your message to better meet their needs.

Bottom line

When a connection is established on an emotional level, impact is made. It gives our message momentum and allows us to make an impact even when we aren’t physically there. This emotional connection matters because it moves the relationship from a transactional place to one of trust and credibility.

Impact comes from a genuine connection with others when we honor them by listening and prioritizing their needs. When we make our prospects’ needs more important than our sale, we create a connection that makes a lasting, trustworthy impact.

Start by acknowledging your own limits, and have the courage to evaluate your current behavior. Once you realize the importance of influence in your sales process, you can work to improve yours. Anyone can be influential if they are willing to do the work.

Strategic and commercial approach with issues

Have you ever tried to close a sale, only to hear the disappointing news that the prospect chose to go elsewhere? You know your product and services are better than your competition. You know your organization is more stable and capable of a smooth implementation. But you can’t figure out what happened or why they didn’t take your offer.

It’s because you lacked influence. Here are the steps you should take to remedy that.

1. Become an influencer.

Some people believe that influence isn’t necessary in today’s business world, that it’s an outdated notion. Many sales professionals rely on the differentiation of their products, pricing or marketplace positioning to do the heavy lifting in their sales pitches. It doesn’t work. HubSpot recently reported that 42% of sales professionals believe that prospecting is the hardest part of their job. With influence, prospecting becomes easier.

Influence is more crucial today than ever before. It’s required for any organization to meet successfully – and beat – their sales expectations. It gives you a competitive advantage and comes from how others experience you day to day. Your consistent behavior establishes trust and credibility. When others perceive you as trustworthy, confident and authentic, they are likely to follow your recommendations. A recent study by Salesforce discovered that 79% of business buyers believe it’s critical to work with a salesperson they can trust.

If a prospective customer perceives your interactions as less than favorable, they’ll likely doubt what you have to say. If they see you as lacking confidence in your product or service, they probably won’t buy from you, no matter what anyone else says. If they doubt your trustworthiness because you fail to make eye contact, it’s doubtful they’ll accept your suggestions.

Perception is reality. Influence doesn’t come from your intentions but from how people experience you. Trust, credibility and authenticity move people to act. Those characteristics come from consistent behavior in every interaction. How you communicate either enhances your influence or takes away from it. If you want to earn more credibility and trust to close more sales, start with your communication skills.

2. Be self-aware.

We typically perceive ourselves differently than others do. When it comes to our communication skills, we don’t know what we don’t know. You’re probably unaware of how your prospects see and hear you. Self-awareness helps you understand what you need to change.

To gain awareness, seek feedback from someone you trust. A leader, co-worker, client or peer can shed light on areas of opportunity. Feedback will provide you a course of action.

3. Be consistent.

To earn trust, we must be consistent in two areas. First, your message and delivery must be in sync. Second, your communication must be consistent Monday to Monday, every day and in every interaction. When prospects learn what they can expect from you in every interaction, trust grows.

Record yourself practicing your sales pitch. Evaluate whether your words match your behavior. Consider your body language, and tune into your choice of words. Ensure how you deliver your message so it matches what you say.

4. Build your reputation.

Your reputation is what others can expect from you. It’s the one thing that precedes you and affects your influence before you ever say a single word. Your reputation comes from how others perceive your character. They are quick to share it, setting a baseline expectation for others who have yet to meet you. How they define you determines how much others will trust you.

Ask. This is another way feedback helps. Inquire with customers you’ve previously worked with. Better yet, have a conversation with a former prospect whose business you lost. Seek to understand their motivation and understand where you can improve.

5. Be flexible.

The ability to adapt your message to meet your listeners’ needs is crucial to your influence. Influence grows when you stop formulating your thoughts long enough to listen to what others have to say. When you hear your listeners’ needs, you can adapt your message in a way that benefits them. Trust builds as they see you place their needs ahead of your desire for a sale. 

Listen with intent. Do less talking and more listening. Tune into what your prospects have to say, what their concerns are and what they are seeking. This helps you understand how to fine-tune your message to better meet their needs.

Bottom line

When a connection is established on an emotional level, impact is made. It gives our message momentum and allows us to make an impact even when we aren’t physically there. This emotional connection matters because it moves the relationship from a transactional place to one of trust and credibility.

Impact comes from a genuine connection with others when we honor them by listening and prioritizing their needs. When we make our prospects’ needs more important than our sale, we create a connection that makes a lasting, trustworthy impact.

Start by acknowledging your own limits, and have the courage to evaluate your current behavior. Once you realize the importance of influence in your sales process, you can work to improve yours. Anyone can be influential if they are willing to do the work.

Financial Planners, One Philosophy

Have you ever tried to close a sale, only to hear the disappointing news that the prospect chose to go elsewhere? You know your product and services are better than your competition. You know your organization is more stable and capable of a smooth implementation. But you can’t figure out what happened or why they didn’t take your offer.

It’s because you lacked influence. Here are the steps you should take to remedy that.

1. Become an influencer.

Some people believe that influence isn’t necessary in today’s business world, that it’s an outdated notion. Many sales professionals rely on the differentiation of their products, pricing or marketplace positioning to do the heavy lifting in their sales pitches. It doesn’t work. HubSpot recently reported that 42% of sales professionals believe that prospecting is the hardest part of their job. With influence, prospecting becomes easier.

Influence is more crucial today than ever before. It’s required for any organization to meet successfully – and beat – their sales expectations. It gives you a competitive advantage and comes from how others experience you day to day. Your consistent behavior establishes trust and credibility. When others perceive you as trustworthy, confident and authentic, they are likely to follow your recommendations. A recent study by Salesforce discovered that 79% of business buyers believe it’s critical to work with a salesperson they can trust.

If a prospective customer perceives your interactions as less than favorable, they’ll likely doubt what you have to say. If they see you as lacking confidence in your product or service, they probably won’t buy from you, no matter what anyone else says. If they doubt your trustworthiness because you fail to make eye contact, it’s doubtful they’ll accept your suggestions.

Perception is reality. Influence doesn’t come from your intentions but from how people experience you. Trust, credibility and authenticity move people to act. Those characteristics come from consistent behavior in every interaction. How you communicate either enhances your influence or takes away from it. If you want to earn more credibility and trust to close more sales, start with your communication skills.

2. Be self-aware.

We typically perceive ourselves differently than others do. When it comes to our communication skills, we don’t know what we don’t know. You’re probably unaware of how your prospects see and hear you. Self-awareness helps you understand what you need to change.

To gain awareness, seek feedback from someone you trust. A leader, co-worker, client or peer can shed light on areas of opportunity. Feedback will provide you a course of action.

3. Be consistent.

To earn trust, we must be consistent in two areas. First, your message and delivery must be in sync. Second, your communication must be consistent Monday to Monday, every day and in every interaction. When prospects learn what they can expect from you in every interaction, trust grows.

Record yourself practicing your sales pitch. Evaluate whether your words match your behavior. Consider your body language, and tune into your choice of words. Ensure how you deliver your message so it matches what you say.

4. Build your reputation.

Your reputation is what others can expect from you. It’s the one thing that precedes you and affects your influence before you ever say a single word. Your reputation comes from how others perceive your character. They are quick to share it, setting a baseline expectation for others who have yet to meet you. How they define you determines how much others will trust you.

Ask. This is another way feedback helps. Inquire with customers you’ve previously worked with. Better yet, have a conversation with a former prospect whose business you lost. Seek to understand their motivation and understand where you can improve.

5. Be flexible.

The ability to adapt your message to meet your listeners’ needs is crucial to your influence. Influence grows when you stop formulating your thoughts long enough to listen to what others have to say. When you hear your listeners’ needs, you can adapt your message in a way that benefits them. Trust builds as they see you place their needs ahead of your desire for a sale. 

Listen with intent. Do less talking and more listening. Tune into what your prospects have to say, what their concerns are and what they are seeking. This helps you understand how to fine-tune your message to better meet their needs.

Bottom line

When a connection is established on an emotional level, impact is made. It gives our message momentum and allows us to make an impact even when we aren’t physically there. This emotional connection matters because it moves the relationship from a transactional place to one of trust and credibility.

Impact comes from a genuine connection with others when we honor them by listening and prioritizing their needs. When we make our prospects’ needs more important than our sale, we create a connection that makes a lasting, trustworthy impact.

Start by acknowledging your own limits, and have the courage to evaluate your current behavior. Once you realize the importance of influence in your sales process, you can work to improve yours. Anyone can be influential if they are willing to do the work.

Lowtempo Headlines Meadows Music and Arts Festival

Mustache gentrify chicharrones street art, art party taxidermy DIY umami hammock bitters four loko bushwick pitchfork kombucha shabby chic. Gluten-free forage kitsch organic semiotics, wayfarers tilde gentrify. Vice next level raclette forage. Ramps pabst fashion axe vape copper mug raw denim. Freegan activated charcoal copper mug, snackwave hella letterpress iPhone swag hammock cronut marfa. Readymade man braid sartorial man bun, kitsch humblebrag ethical sriracha health goth kickstarter iceland flannel dreamcatcher fingerstache small batch. Thundercats edison bulb man bun, helvetica stumptown plaid af gastropub franzen.
 

STUDIO – Breakdance – TV Brand Spot from Brian Neong San on Vimeo.

Magnetic Magazine Premiere: NØISE (Lowtempo Mix)

I’ve been a die–hard music fan since my youth, but I began to understand the structure of music when I learned to DJ 12 years ago. After a few years of DJing with vinyl, a program called Serato was introduced that allowed me to DJ using MP3’s with the same control I had with vinyl. As a bonus though, unlike vinyl, MP3’s can be edited and remixed. My first production endeavors were simple re-edits of songs for improved mixing. My friend John Goff, a lifelong analog and electronic musician, would help me with these re-edits and indulged me as I became more ambitious with my arrangements. John suggested that we build some original music together. We put some instrumental compositions together, and then serendipitously met Merritt Lear and her former bandmate Joe Cassidy. Merritt added incredible vocals and melody ideas, and Joe added guitar and production/arrangement. We completed two songs, decided to name our project NØISE, and to rush produce a 7 inch for release at my 50 Shades of Black art show. I worked up some art for a screen-printed cover, and we cut and glued 500 sleeves to complete the NØISE “Little Lions” 45 RPM 7 inch. Additionally, all 500 are signed and numbered but will still be priced at $10… with no added “Art Tax” in sight. You can listen to the music on the turntables provided in the Subliminal Projects gallery, or buy it for the art. To be clear though, this is not an art project with music included, it is a music project with art included. We’ll release some stuff digitally eventually, but it’s vinyl only for now. Get the NØISE “Little Lions” 7 inch  at 50 Shades of Black.

Additional North American Dates Announced

DJ Lowtempo is pleased to announce additional dates to the 2017 North American tour!
Spicy jalapeno bacon ipsum dolor amet quis sunt beef ribs t-bone shankle, sint ut labore nulla eiusmod aliquip. Excepteur velit commodo leberkas. Sint in jowl jerky, spare ribs t-bone veniam tri-tip nulla aliqua cupim swine andouille. Prosciutto landjaeger in, cillum leberkas hamburger pork chop pariatur ball tip cupim strip steak drumstick alcatra ut anim. Ribeye pork belly nisi in labore anim.
 

New Album by Lowtempo Coming Soon!

Following an already impressive catalog that includes last year’s “Primus EP”on NBGS, “High Key” is LowTempo’s first full-length album on Croma. Crunchy guitar licks, intricate solos and occasional improvisations are the order of the day, combined with hip hop beats, skillfully chopped vocals and tight synth lines to devastating effect.
We’re now exactly one week away from the release date. To make the wait a little smoother, the fatigued one was totally down to the idea of previewing a track for y’all before the album drops. So without wasting too much time, here is the opening track from “High Key”:
“Cherry Bopper” | http://bit.ly/1pOVCo8
Album is out on May 6th!