Triangle Of Success
by Al Levi
August 1, 2010
Improving one area of your
business can yield additional benefits in others.
I’ve
always had a hunger for knowledge.
What I was not born with was a hunger to teach.
And as life seems to do, I soon got my head kicked in because learning for
myself isn’t even the half of it. The real power to transform my life and my
business is when I fell in love with teaching.
But it wasn’t without a struggle.
For me, it started years ago when I went to see my dad about being more than a
tech someday. He just smiled and said, “You don’t get to be chief until you
build new Indians.”
And in a second I could see that if I ever
wanted to get out of the truck full-time, I needed to make my replacements.
Unfortunately, I got no further instructions or direction on how to do this,
but I knew what I had to do.
I needed to train others to do what I
was doing if I ever planned to move up.
So, I began to make-believe there was someone riding along with me and I made
notes of what I would be teaching my imaginary trainee. This was actually how
the trade manuals that documented how we did our work came into existence.
For the first time, I began to look at apprentices as more than big, strong
helpers and more as people I had to envision as becoming techs or installers.
Right from the start, I was interviewing them as staff that could be trained by
me to work the right way and be effective on their own. Better yet, they could
be future leaders of their own team at my company.
I actually got excited!
That is until I had to go home and tell my wife, Natalie, that instead of
working the normal crazy hours that the business demanded, I’d be around two
less nights a week so I could run training. But, I had a plan. I told her, “I
will be running classes two nights a week, which will mean I’ll be home even
less, so you have a right to know why. It’s because I’m going to build the kind
of staff that I can count on. In a couple of years, I’ll actually be home more
often and when we go on vacation, the business will run
itself.”
She replied, “Start the classes today!”
And I did.
But first I knew I had to become a better
trainer. So, I signed up for and attended Dale Carnegie classes for 12 weeks in
a row. I also got a tip from a friend who was an experienced trainer in another
field that if I wanted to get better (and I did), I needed to watch myself
training others on video. Frankly, it was very painful at first to watch.
But, it was the best thing I ever did because I got much better at training and
at a faster rate.
OK, nice story. But what has this got to do with the “Triangle of
Success?”
Well, the funny thing is the better I got at training, the better I got at
selling when I was working like a tech and the better my sales got for the
big-ticket items when I was working as a salesperson. Here’s the neat thing: As
I got better at training and better at selling, I also got better at marketing!
And this was when I discovered the powerful “Triangle of
Success.”
How did training make me better at sales and marketing? It’s simply this. To become an effective trainer, I had to sell my
attendees my ideas and get them to buy into what I was teaching them. It took
salesmanship.
Once I learned to see things more from their point of view, sales just
naturally happened when I visited prospective customers. I was much better at
selling a concept and myself.
Finally, I got so good at seeing what it took to sell one customer that I began
to see who were my ideal customers, and this trained me to “speak” to them in
all my marketing as sales continued to grow.
Training, sales and marketing are a self-reinforcing and powerful triangle. The
better you get, the closer you’ll be to having both the staff and customers
you’ve always dreamed of.
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