Archive for April, 2016
Plan Ahead To Smoothly Navigate Pricing Objections
Posted by Rick Pranitis in SALES BEST PRACTICES on April 25, 2016
“That price is too high.”
“Why is this so expensive?”
“I have a better offer. You’re going to have to lower your price.”
It’s the dreaded pricing objection. We’ve all had to deal with it at some point in our careers. Regardless of what form it takes, it can be one of the most frustrating challenges sales professionals have to face.
As part of a series of articles, we’ll be taking an in-depth look at what you can do to overcome this most difficult of client objections. We start today by tackling the question of how to prevent the pricing objection before your clients bring it up!
Address it from the start
If price always seems to become an issue for you, one of the most effective strategies is to preempt the question by dealing with it up front.
Don’t be afraid to talk about price. Train yourself to bring it up first and put it on the table as early as possible in the sales dialogue. Try telling your prospective client something like:
“I want to be up front that our product won’t be the cheapest available. You will always find someone who is less expensive than us, and you will always find someone who is more expensive than us. We are always competitive. Knowing that we are not the cheapest, does it make sense for us to go ahead?”
When you ask this question, one of two things will happen:
One: The buying cycle will end immediately because the client only wants the cheapest product and you don’t have it. Don’t be alarmed. This is good news. There’s no point wasting your valuable time with someone who has no intention of buying.
Or
Two: The client will say, “No problem, we’re not making our decision on the basis of price alone.” This will effectively eliminate the client’s ability to raise this objection later on, and allow you to move forward with a high degree of certainty that price will not become an issue.
Give a ballpark figure ahead of time
Another way to reduce the number of times you hear “your price is too high” is by literally telling your customers your price (or an estimate of your price) before you give it to them in writing. This will allow you to deal with any potential pricing concerns in person, before your client receives a formal proposal.
NOTE: The estimate I give is always about 20 percent higher than I think the real highest price will be. This helps ensure I have a little breathing room later on.
Be ready with alternatives
When you’re ready to talk price, have several options prepared beforehand to handle your client’s response, whatever it may be. This will enable you to retain some control and momentum regardless of whether their reaction is positive or negative.
If the client reacts negatively through body language — such as flinching, shrugging, rolling their eyes, or falling off their chair onto the floor — you can say:
“I sense I’ve missed the mark. What were you expecting to invest?”
Or
“You don’t seem comfortable with that price. Have you found something lower?”
Notice that both of these questions have two distinct parts. First, you acknowledge that the client appears to be uncomfortable. This will help build trust and get them on your side. Second, you ask a direct question. You can use this formula every time you are faced with an objection.
If the client verbally tells you that your price is too high, your first move is to take a breath and remain quiet for a full three seconds. Then ask them, “I guess you’re looking only for the cheapest price?”
They will either say yes or no. If they say no, you can ask, “Really? What else is there?”
If they answer yes, you can say, “Okay, knowing that we will not be the lowest price, does that mean we will never get the chance to do business together?”
Utilize the key word for managing objections
When it comes to handling sales objections, “never” is the most powerful word in the English language.
Most people hate it. Very few are willing to commit to it. As a result, the vast majority of prospects will respond to it by saying, “Well, no… Not never!”
In that case, your job is to simply ask, “Really? Why?” The client will then either tell you what it will take to do business with them or ask you for something that you can’t provide. Either way, this puts the control back in your hands by letting you choose between making the sale or turning down the deal and walking away.
If a client is dead set on getting the lowest price and you know you can’t offer it, then you may as well end the conversation right now and get to work on deals that have a better likelihood of closing. Spending time trying to sell to someone who is never going to buy from you is a bad decision — and a costly mistake.
Create and fine tune your best responses
The final step is to sit down (on your own or with your team) and brainstorm your best possible answers to every potential objection.
Practice your responses out loud until you’ve mastered them. Make them your own. Then review your work each quarter to make sure that everyone on your team knows which responses are working best.
Overall, if you can reduce the number of objections you receive, you will sell more. Period
This article was originally posted to the Eye on Sales Blog by Colleen Francis on April 7, 2016.
The Importance of Understanding Buyer Needs
Posted by Rick Pranitis in SALES BEST PRACTICES on April 19, 2016
Virtually all companies claim to be “customer-centric,” but set many of their salespeople up for failure with the prodigious amount of product training they provide. Sellers’ comfort zones become talking about offerings rather than exploring business issues. While tolerated at low levels within organizations, it often shortens sales calls made on executives or abruptly ends them. Executives have neither the time nor the desire to be “educated” about offerings by salespeople.
Early in calls it’s important for executives to conclude sellers are sincere and competent (Steven Covey’s definition of being viewed as trustworthy). This conclusion is a prerequisite for executives to share their desired business outcomes or problems with salespeople. Buying cycles only begin when Key Players share desired business outcomes they’re willing to spend money to achieve.
As with many things in life, a seller may want to step back and realize there is work to do before Key
Players will be willing to share business goals. Sadly, many B and C players lack the patience to learn about buyer needs. Once a business outcome is shared they believe its permission to present their offerings and tell prospects how good it’s going to be. Some sellers have the audacity to begin product pitches with the words: Here’s what you need. In general, people don’t like to be told what they need to do, especially by salespeople. I believe sellers should earn the right to talk about their offerings by asking questions first.
Taking a step back, let’s look at it from an executive’s viewpoint:
- Executives are unaware of the reasons they can’t achieve business outcomes. In my mind the first step in learning buyer needs is asking questions in an attempt to uncover barriers to achieving goals that can be addressed by capabilities within a seller’s offering. If buyers knew the barriers to achieving desired outcomes, they’d try to address them without a seller’s help.
- Unless executives feel their needs are understood, they aren’t ready to have sellers tell them the solutions. Beyond that, unless sellers can quantify the cost of not achieving the desired outcome, prospects won’t understand the potential value of the offering being discussed.
- Without first asking questions, the solution will be the seller’s opinion. Given previous experiences with sellers, how much credibility does someone trying to make a sale have with a buyer? Sellers diving into product run the risk of wasting time by offering parts of their offering that aren’t relevant to the business issue being discussed. If sellers could be more patient in doing diagnoses first, they could shine a flashlight on buyer needs. Without doing so they blindly proceed.
- By asking questions first, sellers earn the right to talk about only those features that can allow the desired business outcome to be achieved. When done this way, sales can be viewed as a hurt (diagnose buyer needs) and rescue (offer relevant features based upon the way the buyer answers questions) exercise.
Executive buyers appreciate sellers that focus on business outcomes, help understand the barriers to achieving them and articulate the relevant capabilities that can be used to address them. Once compelling value has been established, buyers are incented to accelerate the decision process as they realize delays mean benefits are not being realized.
Simply said, the seller that best understands buyer needs is more likely to win the business.
This article was originally posted to the Sales Marketing Management Blog by Frank Visgatis on April 4, 2016.
Tell a Story Versus Pitch a Product
Posted by Rick Pranitis in SALES BEST PRACTICES on April 11, 2016
One of the most common traps in selling is talking too soon and talking much about your product.
Now, if you travel back in time there was good reason why many sales reps fall into the “product pitch” trap. They were constantly being taught the “101 tips for doing a perfect feature pitch.” They were just doing what they were taught.
Fortunately times have changed. Companies have completed the shift from a product-centric to a customer centric approach to selling. Lessons about great scripted product pitches are best viewed as historical tales to be told around the campfire.
So, if it is all about customer value, what is the substitute for the product pitch script? One answer to that question is – tell a story.
It is one thing to talk about a list of reasons why a customer should do business with you; it is another to be able to relate past success stories that bring that list to life. The latter is memorable and repeatable – the former is just another list of features.
So what are some tips for the art of storytelling in Sales?
- Make it personal. If you want someone to care about making sustained behavior change, you have to individualize the story. The more personal you can make the link between the story and the desired behavior change, the greater your chances of success.
- Keep it positive. A positive story narrative moves a customer along a path towards change. Interjecting negative outcomes that might result if the status quo is maintained are unlikely to be helpful.
- Probe why a customer would make a change. Learn early on why a customer would change from one product to another and why they won’t. Weave this information into the story.
- Stay on message. What is the primary goal that the customer wants to sustain over time? How can you craft the story so that it illustrates how working with you and your company can help them move closer to achieving their goal?
Storytelling allows you to translate your sales message from a feature pitch to a positive customer experience with business outcomes. It is worth noting that great stories are not usually created on the spot. Like most things that have high impact, they take time to develop and they require practice and feedback.
Here it is important to note that individual reps should not be the ones that have sole responsibility for creating the stories. Marketing needs to help for a whole bunch of reasons. This help is particularly important in companies where a lot of new reps are being hired.
This article was originally posted to the Sales Training Connection Blog by Janet Spirer on March 15, 2016.
How to Keep Your Clients Through Writing
Posted by Rick Pranitis in SALES BEST PRACTICES on April 1, 2016
It is a wonderful thing that you keep obtaining more and more clients for your business. You have a large number of clients. The question is whether you can keep those clients. Considering that you are probably using your content as a powerful tool to attract clients, you should also be using it to retain them indefinitely.
Learning to retain your clients
Of course, you must be well aware of the fact that your content is critical to your professional success. There are many different reasons why your content must be written and presented in a certain way in order for it to have the most impact on your clients and prospective clients.
The content gets the other people to start thinking about what you and your business can do for them. It is very important at this point to remember that no matter how wonderful you and your business are, the only thing that really matters is that you are able to solve the other person’s problem(s). With that in mind, it is essential that you write as effectively as you possibly can. After all, it is extremely important for you to keep your eye on the prize. That prize is being able to retain your clients forever (or whatever forever means to you and to your business).
What should your writing approach be?
First of all, it is important to choose quality over quantity. However, it is also very important that you don’t lose sight of each person with whom you are trying to establish a relationship. It is also important to understand that the value of a relationship to one person (or to two people) may not be the same for other people. Each connection that is established is slightly different. Not only is that true but if we don’t maintain the relationship and really keep it alive, even if the relationship was originally established for very good reasons, those reasons may not be enough to sustain the relationship. If you want to become much more successful than you are at this moment, you will need to step up and bring your business to the next level. So, how do you plan on accomplishing that?
There are two aspects of your content approach that you must consider. First of all, you need to make sure that the quality of your content is up to snuff. Second, you have to make sure that you content positively affects the people who are reading it. In other words, you need to understand why you are writing and sharing that particular content.
Before you start to write anything at all, you should have certain concepts in your mind.
- Getting your clients to pay attention: First and foremost, you are going to need to get your readers to stand up and pay attention to what you want to share with them. In order to do that, you need write your content in a certain way. You want to attract the right type of people, not just anyone. Remember, quality over quantity.
- Establish a connection with your clients: There are many different ways that you can establish a connection with your readers; however, one of the way is critical to your relationship with your readers and, therefore, with your success. That is the emotional connection. Without the emotional connection, you will have no common ground with your readers.
- Get your clients to buy into who you are and what you represent: As a business owner, there are some things that are extremely important to you. One of those things is passion for what you are doing. Another thing that is extremely important for you is; really believing in what you are doing. The reality is that the more they buy into what you are doing, the more likely they will be to sing your praises to other people.
- Your approach to selling your products and/or services: The reason that you write content, which you will not share until it is perfect in your eyes, is to ultimately sell your products and/or services to other people. Your content is the ultimate tool to selling your offerings. However, it is very important to remember that your selling approach must be soft. Otherwise, you will probably not succeed at selling anything. Always use the soft-sell approach.
- Figuring out how to keep your clients: You need to figure out a way to keep your clients coming back for more through your content. Not only do you want your clients to want to stay with you but you need to write content that makes them want to deepen the relationship that they share with you. That is the only way to ensure that the relationship will progress in a healthy manner.
Conclusion
If you are going to succeed at writing content that allows you to keep your clients, that means that you consider their needs above your own each and every time you write content that you intend to share with them. Of course, before anything else, you need to have a proper strategy in place. Part of that strategy must be to empathize with them and to be sensitive to how they feel and how they think. The truth is that you are going to have to keep working at keeping your clients. It may be challenging at times but it will become easier over time and it is certainly well worth the effort.
This article was originally posted to the Business 2 Community blog by Carolyn Cohn on March 13, 2016.