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How To Use The Hapkido Sales Method
To Plan Your Sales Calls Better!

Planning. This is a word most salespeople avoid.

Many salespeople shoot from the hip based on their "experience in sales" or their "experience with the prospect."

Yet to sell more, you must plan more.

Many sales teams use the following two methods when preparing for a sale:

Planning based on personal experience. Using knowledge from your personal sales experience in other accounts limits your sales success with new accounts because it is based on the assumption that all prospects are the same. It also assumes that sales models of today are the same as they were 5 years ago.


Planning based on the client's past purchases or discussions. Like you, clients' business needs change. To plan an account based on a previous purchase they made or comments you heard them make last quarter assumes that their business model is not constantly changing or dynamic.
If you use both of these methods in your sales planning, you will limit your ability to sell senior management because these methods only focus on the client's immediate needs or your knowledge as the selling vendor.

As salespeople, we have a tendency to project our needs onto the client . . . instead of adapting to their needs.

But by using the Hapkido Sales Planning Method, you can dynamically adapt to selling cues from senior management.

What is Hapkido and how does it translate into sales planning?

Hapkido is an ancient martial art from Korea. It is classified by the Korean government as a combat martial art and is designed to adapt to physical engagement in a passive-aggressive way. The method's subtleties are very unique in that it allows the defender to dynamically be aggressive or passive depending on the engagement and the inbound cues being sent to them.

The aggression or passivity is totally reflective of the engagement at that moment.

The Hapkido approach is based on three concepts:

Dynamic Flowing - Never struggle with inbound force but instead adapt to it and penetrate based on actions, not words, of an opponent.


Dynamic Circling - Never cross into an aggressive or private area of an opponent, but instead redirect any aggressive action away from you.


Dynamic Harmony - Use all of your tools and prepare to completely take control; be prepared (practice).
So, how can these Hapkido techniques help plan your senior management contacts better?

Planning sales calls, like practicing Hapkido, requires to you understand that interaction is dynamic by nature and you must be prepared and adaptive to succeed.



6 Hapkido Sales Plan Actions

Decide what you are going to say. (Hapkido method - Dynamic Harmony.) Never call a prospect or meet with a senior executive because your CRM or contact manager system says it is time to do so. Have an objective.


Practice the action steps you are going to ask for. (Hapkido method- Dynamic Harmony.) When was the last time you went into the conference room in your office and practiced by yourself or role-played what you were going to say on the phone or in person?


Ask for an action step. (Hapkido method - Dynamic Flowing.) You are in sales. You must consistently ask the prospect to take an action step as you walk through the sales cycle. Verbal commitments are useless, so focus on their actions.


Know what their business needs are. (Hapkido method - Dynamic Harmony.) Senior executives don't care what you sell; they only care about how you can help them. The more you know about their issues, the easier it is to sell them. Don't shoot from the hip.


Qualify them over and over again based on actions. (Hapkido method - Dynamic Circling.) Prospects may tell you they are interested, but you must redirect their verbal communication into an action step. Never believe what they say, only what they do. Keep qualifying until you have a P.O. in your hand.


Prepare a written concession list. (Hapkido method - Dynamic Circling.) When you sell senior management, you are always negotiating new appointments, terms, and delivery dates, and milestones. Always prepare a premeditated concession list with throw-away variables to allow you to give and take (circle) with the executive.


Try the Hapkido process on your next prospect . . . and start planning more sales.

"He who every morning plans the transactions of the day, and follows out the plan, carries a thread that will guide him through the labyrinth of the most busy life."
- Victor Hugo
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