Retailers have tried everything it seems to get employees to sell more.
Instead of trying a one-size-fits-all approach, if you leverage their personality styles, you can leverage their innate abilities and help them sell more.
Once you understand the four personality styles, you can train your retail employees to cut out the fluff and connect with customers quickly after they learn how to identify the dominant personality styles.
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There’s the Driver, like Gordon Ramsay, where it is all about them being the best, smartest, and known as a decision-maker. Think of them as the fighter pilots in "Top Gun." It's all about them quickly coming to a decision.
The downside is they can be seen as inflexible and always trying to close. Any villain you see in a movie is usually a Driver.
There’s the Analytical, like Spock on "Star Trek," who is logical and has a detailed system to process information. Surgeons, CPAs, and most craftspeople usually have an Analytical personality.
Where the Driver is the fighter pilot, and the Analytical is the bomber pilot staying on course until they reach their objective. Their Achilles’ heel is that they can come off as cold and uncaring.
Discover: How to create your best retail sales strategy with this comprehensive primer
The Expressive is like Jack in the movie "Titanic" who tries many things, is easily bored, and has unbridled enthusiasm.
They are the best ones to excite customers about all the possibilities you offer, yet are also the least likely to be found in retail. Why? Because on a beautiful day, they’ll probably call in sick.
The Amiable is the most common personality you’ll find in stores.
Amiables strongly desire to be liked and learn about others without sharing details of their own lives. They are more interested in finding out what you did on the weekend than in telling you what they did.
The downside is that they don’t stand out or make demands. It takes a lot to make them visibly upset, so you never know when they are considering quitting.
Those salespeople who master personality styles can have meaningful conversations that value both the customer and the salesperson. And that leads to higher sales.
But first, you need to leverage their innate abilities to get them all to sell.
If your employee is predominantly a Driver, their goal is to get something finished or close the sale and get the credit. You need to help them round off those gruff edges, invest more time and reduce the chance they can come off as arrogant.
If your employee is predominantly Analytical, you need to train with a clear system of A to B to C so engaging a customer isn’t scary and it makes sense. Be prepared to answer each of their many questions as they come up.
If your employee is predominantly Expressive, you want to harness their fun. You would not want to try to train them like an Analytical and rain on their parade. Use their easily distracted interests and enthusiasm for new items as a spark plug to help you reach your goal with the rest of your crew.
If your employee is predominantly Amiable, they’ll want to get along without conflict. Teaching them how the other three personalities operate can show them how to avoid frustration and speak up.
Understand that they are the least likely to be natural-born salespeople and most afraid of engaging strangers—so be patient.
We all have elements of each personality. And while the Driver and Expressive have the highest risk tolerance, it does not mean they are the only ones who can sell.
That’s because customers feel comfortable with people who can talk to them how they like to be talked to.
So an Amiable selling to an Amiable, with proper training, can sell just as much as a Driver – sometimes more.
However, without proper retail sales training:
It's a training mistake not to take the employee's personality in mind, correcting your approach.
Each requires specific feedback on how to use their own personality to help customers and ultimately sell more.
By understanding the unique motivators of the Driver, Analytical, Expressive, and Amiable personality styles, you can better manage your retail sales and customer service employees and train your crew for retail success.
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