Services Are Not Widgets The quality of services you receive—and give—are not the same when you...
The Doctor of DISC, Dr. Tony Alessandra
Read your prospects to sell how they want to buy
Stream below or right-click here to download the episode.
DISC Personality Tips you'll learn in The Sales Podcast...
- DISC and many other assessments
- Four basic patterns of behavior
- Dominant
- Interacting / Influencing
- Steady / Amiable / Relator
- Conscientiousness / Cautious / More of a thinker or analytical type
- Personal development, team building, leadership development, sales effectiveness, selection of job hires/new-hire candidates, etc.
- DISC Fitness System at Assessments 24x7
- Benchmark:
- The job
- The ideal candidate
- What you're shooting for in a new hire
- Match candidates against the benchmark
- Benchmark:
- There is a simplicity and practicality in DISC
- Other tools like MBTI are great for internal assessments, but they can be confusing and often needs an expert to interpret them
- DISC gives you two basic scores
- Personal
- Adapted: how I behave when I'm with others and have to change my pattern to reduce conflict
- In Carl Yung 1927 wrote "Psychological Types"
- "The Emotions of Normal People"
- "Professor Marston and the Wonder Women"
- Look at characters in the public domain to understand how to identify and anchor the concept of DISC profiles in sales
- "The Odd Couple" was a classic with only two characters who clashed between "I" and "C"
- "Seinfeld"
- Jerry - "S"
- Elaine - "D" and some "I"
- Famous people can fall out of favor, so he doesn't use them any longer in his books and training
- So use historical characters who are dead with no baggage
- In sales, get the customer talking more than you with open-ended questions
- Make two either-or decisions as they talk
- Are they more open or guarded?
- Are they more direct or indirect?
- Direct but guarded = D
- Direct but open = I
- Indirect and open = S
- Indirect and guarded = C
- If they're open then start with more chit-chat
- If they're guarded then get to the point
- If they're direct, then move faster
- If they're indirect, then move slower
- Make two either-or decisions as they talk
- He sold door-to-door during the summers in New Jersey while in college
- He had a 3-ring binder and flipped through it
- He wouldn't pick up the hint when people wanted to slow down or speed up
- How to handle a High D
- It's a bit difficult
- They want to run the show
- If you butt heads, it could be the end
- How to handle High S's and C's (indirect and slower-paced)
- Information-driven (C more so)
- The S likes to get others involved, while the C may make the decision on their own
- Go in prepared
- Understand their needs
- Give them options
- Give them data and documentation
- The "Cs" want to sleep on it
- Clarify with them, "Do you have all the information you need to make a decision?"
- Have an agenda and cover it with them upfront
- Don't wing it
- Admit when you don't know
- Task-oriented: D & C
- C's are slower and like data more
- D's are risk-takers
- C's want all the options
- D's want a couple of options
- Relation-oriented: I & S
- S vs C
- Both procrastinate
- S's procrastinate getting started
- C's procrastinate finishing
- The three V's
- Verbal
- Vocal
- Visual
- Take his Sales IQ assessment—48 questions
Listen To Previous Episodes of The Sales Podcast
Links Mentioned In The Sales Podcast
- Master online assessments here
- Visit Dr. Tony Alessandra's home on the web
- Follow Dr. Tony Alessandra on X
- Connect with Dr. Tony Alessandra on Facebook

