I did a project a few years back with a company selling door to door. Their top sales people were outselling the rest by 3:1. My job was to find out what they were doing differently and then transfer the skills to the average sales people.
I am not sure if this will apply to you are so, as others have said, you will have to test but....
1. They were upbeat and friendly
100% i used to walk up to doors excited that I was about to do a deal, this gives you the upbeat and friendly intro, the person answering reflects your enthusiasm.
2. They made a decision within seconds of whether the person answering was friendly or not and if not they would do a very short pitch and be on their way. They ended up knocking on more doors and its a numbers game etc etc
True, but it is fun to turn people, but in general this is spot on, walk away from those that just want to shoot the shit, you pick up the buying questions v being polite pretty fast if you pay attention
3. They found it easier selling to women or couples (test this one!!)
Women are easy to sell to, my theory is, to be successful at this you have to be a confident, witty and self assured guy, this is probably a refreshing change, I have always found women to be a doddle to sell to
4. They found that certain property types and certain roads were easier than others (this comes from keeping records)
Good knock was the term we used, comes from knowing who your buyer is
5. They got themselves mentally prepared for each new door (average people got ground down by the Nos and abuse)
This can be trained in, but some people are naturally more resilient, I would say if you can push past the nos and get to success you will feel damn good that you got it done.
6. They found that doors with signs saying "No cold callers" were the easiest sales of all!!
Beware of the dog works better than beware of the sticker! I would tell them, dogs scare me stickers dont (This is not true, I have 2 dogs but anyway)
You can listen to an interview I did with one of the top regional managers about
handling rejection here:
Best wishes and hope this helps
Richard