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If you're in sales, you've probably encountered this scenario. You're trying to convince a potential customer that your great product and service will solve his most pressing problem. To prove the point, you explain precisely how your solution will work. Mr. Potential Customer listens carefully, asks lots of questions and takes copious notes. Everything seems to be going well. The customer nods and says all the right things and you leave convinced that the sale is in the bag. The problem is, when you call to close the sale, Mr. PC is nowhere to be found. Later, you hear that he has decided to buy from your top (and less expensive) competitor. Frustrated, you find yourself asking, "Where did I go wrong? Why didn't I see it coming?" You've fallen prey to an all-too-common trap: unpaid consulting. Unpaid consulting starts when we cross the line between diagnosing the problem and explaining the solution. When we start designing solutions, we start acting as unpaid consultants. In past decades, this was not a monumental issue. Generally, there was limited competition in complex sales. If you figured out the problem and designed a unique and competent solution for a customer, the sale was almost guaranteed and the salesperson was rewarded for his consulting effort. Today, there is an ever-increasing proliferation of competitors in complex sales, and once a solution is designed, the customer can easily shop it to the competition. Why the change? you may be wondering. It is the outcome of the technology explosion our world has experienced in the past decade or so. Simply put, no matter how sophisticated your product is, chances are there are numerous competitors offering the same thing. And because geographic location is no longer a critical factor, thanks in large part to the advent of the Internet, a New York manufacturer can access a supplier in Los Angeles (or in China for that matter) just as easily as it can the one across the street. So, what's a sales professional to do? Not surprisingly, in such a complex world there are no simple "band-aid" solutions. I advocate a system called Diagnostic Business Development, or "the Prime Process," that provides a navigable path from the first step of identifying potential customers through the sale itself and onto expanding and retaining profitable customer relationships. These are the four phases in this system: Discover The sales professional researches and prepares and sets the stage for a compelling engagement and a continuing relationship based on trust and respect. Diagnose An in-depth determination of the existence, extent and financial impact of the customer's current situation is pursued. Diagnosis is meant to maximize the customer's objective awareness of their dissatisfaction and determine whether or not that dissatisfaction supports the salesperson's offerings. Design The goal is to get the sales professional and customer working together to identify the optimal solution to the problems that were uncovered and quantified in the Diagnose phase, even if it involves alternative solutions offered by competitors. This phase is the "dress rehearsal" before the final presentation is made. It is here that many salespeople make the mistake of becoming an unpaid consultant. Deliver This phase begins with the presentation of a formal proposal and the customer's subsequent formal acceptance of the solution. Implementation and support of the solution are next, followed by maintaining and growing of the relationship with the customer. The process is a 180o turn from conventional selling. To avoid the pitfalls of using outdated methods, pitfalls that include but are not limited to the unpaid consulting trap, consider the following suggestions:
Clearly, the role of the salesperson has changed dramatically. For a company to succeed in today's business world, its sales team must understand and live by the new rules of the marketplace. The often ignored reality is that customers need outside expertise to help them understand the problems they face, to design optimal solutions to those problems and to implement the solutions. It is up to you to provide the help your customers need. See yourself as a project manager for your customer's decision. That is the secret behind succeeding at the complex sale. Jeff Thull is CEO/President of Prime Resource Group. You can visit his website at www.primekeynotespeaker.com.
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