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Measuring Your Sales Strategy I.Q.
Selling is a "Zero Sum Game."
Someone wins and someone loses.
When developing your sales process (as a corporation or as a quota
carrying salesperson), you need to decide if you are going to use a premeditated
(proactive) sales process or a reactive sales process to manage your zero
sum game outcomes.
A "premeditated sales process" is characterized by:
- knowing which targeted accounts are sought by name or
demographic profile;
- understanding why they will buy; and
- using a written sales process.
A "reactive sales process" is characterized by:
- waiting for inbound leads;
- trying to sell everybody you talk to;
- not knowing why prospects buy from your firm; and
- having no documented sales model
process that takes clients through action steps.
Which is your firm’s selling process?
Premeditated or Reactive?
In a sales survey by BDM News, 83% of salespeople surveyed (almost
2,000 respondents) indicated they did NOT believe their firm used a market
study or market research to calculate their sales quota based on demand.
Without identified sales territory market potential,
the lack of business research forces quota carrying salespeople
and VP’s
of Sales into a "Reactive Sales Process" unless they take corrective
actions and prepare to manage their sales quota.
To sell more, you must plan more.
To sell more, use a technique of Value Forward Selling called "Risk
Management".
Key accounts, SMB prospects and targeted buyers always seek to minimize
their risk when buying products and professional services. Risk management
should then become a premeditated sales process tool to use
when you sell.
On the first pass, most prospects (at the management level)
are skeptical. They just don’t believe you or any other
salesperson. It’s nothing
personal. There are just too many salespeople.
So, help them manage their perception of buying from you.
8 Prospect Risk Management Techniques
Here are some guidelines to prepare for prospect risk management:
- When competing against big companies, manage the risk by focusing
on your strengths. Use the "bus analogy" when competing
against them, "Large firms bus in and out their lead team and usually
have no practice manager continuity, while our team remains
the same throughout the relationship."
- Never wait for a prospect
to ask about your firm's background. Always supply details in
advance. If the following variables
are positive, you will want to provide corporate information
including the
number of employees,
years in business, clients' names and annual revenue. If these
variables are negative (i.e., losing money, no installations,
customers hate you),
then don't bring it up and focus on the other methods listed.
- The
greater the competition, the more risk management information
you must deploy to balance perceived fear. Do not be passive
when competing against established players - go after their largeness
as a weakness.
Never
negatively sell; instead, communicate your value aggressively.
- Never
have your CEO or VP of Sales go on a first sales call. It makes
your firm look small. CEO's and VP’s of Sales are big guns
held in reserve to be used when needed, not on the first sales
call. Having CEO's go to your first client meeting only works
when your firm is a Fortune
500 and you are meeting a Fortune 50 C-level executive.
- If
you are VC-funded and have new product or service, name-drop your VC's
relationships.
- If you are a small or startup firm and have
Fortune 1000 C-level executives on your board of directors, say
"our team includes . . ." and
name-drop their positions and the company names with which they
are associated.
- To manage the prospect's fear of buying something
other than what was shown in a demo, it is always a good idea
to have a
client feature/service sign-off sheet for any demonstration.
This protects
the salesperson
from the client's demo amnesia and protects the client from
being oversold.
- Never represent your firm as a generalist. Always be a specialist. Generalist firms are always perceived
to be large and slow.
Specialist firms are perceived to be more customer centric.
Selling is a premeditated sport. Don't
shoot from the hip. Help your prospects purchase by managing
their fear of risk.
If you manage the client's needs, you will manage
the sale in a premeditated sales manner and you will sell more.
If you ignore the client's risk issues,
you will lose the deal.
Remember, the client's perceived risk is your sales
risk.
Writers Resource Box
| Paul DiModica is the author of the best-selling
books: Value Forward Selling, Value Forward Marketing, and Sales Management Power Strategies.
He is founder of Value Forward Group and addresses
thousands of executives each year on the subjects
of sales, marketing and strategy, including
executives and staff of Wells Fargo, Lanier Corporate, Adobe, IBM, Tyco/American Dynamics, Navitaire and many others. His content-rich
workshops and strategy sessions on leadership, sales, management
and marketing bring about immediate changes
and long-term results. For more information, visit http://www.valueforward.com |
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