SELLING
SPECIAL Re-Write Your Selling ABCs
A buyer
for a large manufacturing company shares five competitive responses she has
received to her request for a proposal. Each contains a variation of the common
sales claim, “We have the most experienced team in the industry.” She laughs at
the absurdity, “Sure, everyone is the best!” But she is deadly serious when she
says, “How do we make a decision when we have to wade through this marketing
fluff?”
Sales
people are obsessed with being the best. You beat the competition in every
respect: attention to detail, customer care, quality, and value. Unfortunately,
so does everyone else. And, in a world where the best has become meaningless,
buyers are sharing a consistent message: “When we receive three proposals that
look similar, which we frequently do, we’ll award the business to the second-
or third-best if that will save us money and help us get faster approval to
move forward.”
Translation:
customers worry more about making a good decision than making the best
decision. Being the best does not guarantee a win.
Partnered
with this craving to be the best is an addiction to demonstrating our
“uniqueness.” The unique value proposition is like the Holy Grail of selling,
and searching for it has sent sales organizations on lifelong quests. Frankly,
when I ask salespeople, even their leaders, to articulate a tight, clear,
unique value proposition, most can’t. Even if you are remarkable enough to
identify authentic uniqueness, it’s short lived. Before you have time to spell
“unique,” an astute competitor will replicate it and, on the heels of your
success, do it better and cheaper.
While
marketing and selling go hand in hand, never confuse the two. Claiming to be
the best and pitching your unique value may work as slick marketing to the
masses, but they are ineffective sales tools. While it’s easy to fill your
messages, proposals, and presentations with hot air, it takes effort to
articulate why, and how, you are right for this particular customer and her
situation.
Differentiation
in selling today is all about relevance. Buyers crave relevance. And they’re
not getting it because sellers are busy providing generic information
about their company, service, or solution, and they fail
to position the right attributes in context of what matters
most to the specific buyer. In short, they fail to make it relevant to the
customer.
Now
think about this: “What do your customers care about most?” They care about
themselves, their company, and their success. Their own interests and
priorities. Attention, time, and money flow to priorities. And I mean
priorities by the customer’s definition, not yours.
Bottom
line: Sellers need to spend less time seeking a Unique Value Proposition, and
more time developing Value Propositions Unique to each client.
How do
you do this? Re-write your selling ABCs.
1.
Always Be Contributing
Many
sellers have the same intent: Find a need and close the sale. Always Be
Closing.
It’s
this focus on closing that’s causing talented sales professionals to lengthen
the sales cycle and deliver desirable business opportunities to their
competitor’s front door.
Every
prospecting message, every call, presentation, proposal, and meeting must be
delivered with the intent of contribution. Simply put: If you’re not
contributing relevant value, you are simply adding cost, wasting time, and
making yourself indistinguishable.
Who
defines value? The receiver. Not the giver. In order to be relevant to me, you
must contribute value by the buyer’s definition, not yours.
Which requires you to execute the second of the selling ABCs.
2.
Always Be Curious
Curiosity
is not, as some would have you believe, the simple act of asking questions to
get the information necessary to make the sale. If you’ve been on the receiving
end of one of these mind-numbing fact-finding interrogations, you’ll understand
why buyers scurry for cover behind e-mail and the RFP (Request For Proposal)
process. Every seller is trained to ask questions to discover needs. This is
important, but it’s not enough. And it’s not curiosity.
Curiosity
is a genuine interest in people and business. It is neither manipulative nor
packed with hidden agendas. Curiosity is hearing something and wanting to learn
more, observing and wanting to understand why, reading and wanting to go
deeper. Curiosity delivers insights that enable you to communicate with
prospects in ways that are meaningful to them, and that are welcomed, not
ignored.
Curiosity
should not be packed away, like the best china, waiting for that important
client meeting. Curiosity should start before your first attempt to connect
with a new prospect and continue through the entire sales cycle and beyond to
ensure lasting relationships and future business growth.
So the
right kind of information is power, right? Wrong. Selling power comes from
having quality information and, more importantly, how you use this information
to position your offering to be the most relevant to this
specific customer. Enter the third of the triad of selling ABCs.
3.
Always Be Connecting
Technology
has forever shifted the way people and companies buy, and how and when they
choose to interact with salespeople. The internet has fast-forwarded us through
the information age into the quagmire of data overwhelm, leaving buyers bloated
with information and paralyzed by choice. Today’s buyers choose to research
potential purchases without supplier involvement. The last thing they need from
a sales person is more information. They can visit your company’s website,
Facebook page, LinkedIn page, YouTube channel, and myriad other online and
offline resources to get what they need. So why are so many sales messages,
proposals, e-mails, and presentations nothing more than a series of information
dumps?
Today’s
buyer expects you to bring three things to every interaction:
1. An
understanding of his or her world.
2. Relevant
expertise.
3. The
ability to connect the two.
Simply
put: I need you to connect your information to me and my world
in ways that contribute to my success, as I define it. Otherwise good luck
getting my attention. And my business.
We
assume buyers make the connection between our offering and their companies’
needs. They don’t. That’s our job. We presume that our promises of saving
money, increasing revenue, or driving more leads to their business will have
every buyer salivating. They don’t. Your ability to stand out in the fog of
information has nothing to do with your features, benefits, expertise, or
brand. It has everything to do with how you position these attributes in the
context of what’s important to the buyer. Make the shift from
pitching to positioning. Position your information in context of what matters
most from your customer’s perspective. Do it by mastering the execution of a
new set of selling ABCs: Always Be Contributing. Always Be Curious.
Always Be Connecting.
Good
selling!
·
Posted
by: Jill Harrington
http://www.actionablebooks.com/en-ca/blog/re-write-your-selling-abcs/?inf_contact_key=1349c696beb4769951cc02e15c4bc96b812b5ec311ebaac478cf8bf4cfba8d59
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