Would Customers
Pay for Your Sales Calls?
by Scott Edinger
When I speak to audiences of sales
professionals and ask, "How many of you sell value versus price?"
everyone raises their hand. But my next question "So how do you do
that?" is frequently followed by an uncomfortable silence. Many consider
themselves to be value sellers but few are able to articulate what that really
means.
In the simple economics 101 definition,
value equals benefits minus cost: V=B-C. If you follow the logic of that
equation, then, selling value means creating some benefit through the sales
process beyond that provided by the product or service itself. My former boss
and sales guru Neil Rackhamhas a simple test for this: He asks, "Would your customer write you
a check for the sales call?" That is, did your salespeople do something on
the call valuable enough for your customers to pay you for?
If they didn't, the only way you can
profit from your sales operation is by reducing costs. That's why all my
efforts to make sales teams more effective have focused on increasing not just
the value of the offering but the value of the sales call itself. To do that I
encourage them to move down the continuum from transactional to consultative
relationships. Here's how:
Help clients see issues they hadn't
considered.
The best salespeople I've worked with
do an extraordinary job of this. And they don't do it simply by lecturing the
client about the problems they see. They do it through a process of mutual
diagnosis. In these instances, the seller leads a dialogue with the client
about her business, offering diagnoses as the conversation progresses.
Help clients examine issues they
thought were benign, but aren't.
When I
interview clients about their sales relationships, they frequently tell me that
they greatly value the ability of their reps to help them make a case for
change. They do that by helping clients see the effect of a problem on the
organization. A seller may help a client to see that a morale problem, for
instance, which right now is only causing modest employee turnover, is having a
tremendously negative impact on recruitment and productivity that will
eventually become highly problematic.
Again, this is not done through
lecturing, but rather through the course of conversations in which seller and
buyer explore the impact of a given situation together to determine the
implications for the business.
Help clients see opportunities they'd missed.
Help clients see opportunities they'd missed.
Sales-training
programs rightly focus on finding clients' "pain points." But great
salespeople also know there's value in pointing out successes waiting to be
exploited. Surely, creating value in the sales process is as much about raising
the bar as it is about solving problems.
In fact, untapped opportunity may be
even more important as organizations seek to grow in this perpetually tough
economic environment. Jointly discovering such opportunities through the course
of back-and-forth conversation makes it less likely that a client will react
defensively to something he perhaps should have already known and more likely
that he will embrace both the opportunities — and the messenger that helped to
uncover them.
Help clients address problems with solutions they hadn't considered.
Help clients address problems with solutions they hadn't considered.
Of
course, at some point your, products and services have to come into the
picture. When they do, the best sellers position them, not as a series of
features and benefits, but as solutions that address the expressed needs of the
client.
Positioning products and services as a solution is not a new idea by
any stretch, but the key to creating value is to do so in a way that the client
has not considered. I bought a new air-conditioning system last year.
I hadn't
considered upgrading the heat pump in my system. But with the help of the
representative, I came to realize that the new system wouldn't lower my winter
heating bills without one.
The power of the a-ha moment here can't be
understated when the client says, "I hadn't thought about it that
way!" Few clients will know everything your offering can do or all its
potential applications, so finding a way to uniquely address their expressed
need is a powerful thing indeed.
Help clients connect with additional
support resources.
As the old saying goes,
"When you sell hammers, every problem looks like a nail." But you
can't win 'em all; not every client will actually be a good match with what
you're offering right now. Still, that doesn't mean that you can't create
additional value for them.
Perhaps you can provide connections to others in
your organization that could help a client think through a complex issue, or
make referrals to outsiders who can get her what she truly needs. You'll still
get the credit for helping the client — and this can help both of you over
time.
At the end of the day, selling is about
improving the client's condition with your organization's products and
services. The sales professionals who understand how to do that — who help
buyers find real value through the selling process using these methods — sell
more and command a premium for their offerings.
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