|
By Guest Columnist
Brad Helmer
Managing Partner
Top Line Impact, Inc.
The link between expert coaching and high performance is well
established in the competitive worlds of politics, sports and military
engagement. Few athletes, politicians or generals would consider
competing without the analysis and insight of one or more
coaches/advisors.
Although not widely recognized as essential for high performance in
selling, a similar coaching/performance link exists in sales,
particularly large account sales. While making the case for sales
coaching is a worthwhile topic for another time, I'd like here to share
some coaching insights from working with large account sellers.
Although it's impossible to eliminate all of the things that lose big
deals, several reoccurring themes surface consistently in loss reviews,
and the good news is they are all preventable.
1. Watch for low buying motivation, the silent killer
It's not sexy but "the status quo" is the strongest competitive force
large account sellers must overcome. Examine the sales pipelines of
large account sales organizations and they are littered with projects
designated as "on hold," "delayed" or "pending." One organization we
worked with had upwards of 35% of their total pipeline designated as
"pending," and any experienced seller knows the vast majority of those
deals are dead.
(Article continues below.)
"Pending" deals are so prevalent because many sellers confuse buyer
interest for motivation. Buying motivation comes from an awareness that
specific consequences will occur if no action is taken. Buying
motivation is normally a two sided coin, with both a business and
personal side. No buyer will commit to a solution until the consequences
(business and/or personal) of inaction eclipse barriers like budget,
time and resource constraints.
As a coach, you can help sellers in two ways here. First, restrain
your team from positioning solutions until they have validated a solid
buying motivation.
Questions to explore include:
- What will happen to this prospect if they do nothing in this
situation?
- How wide spread are the consequences for inaction, and who will be
impacted most?
- What barriers are preventing this prospect from moving forward?
In addition, the best sellers not only identify buying motivation,
they elevate it. Arm your sellers with simple follow-up questions to use
in discovery dialogue like, "what issues has that created?" and "what
impact is that having?" By responding to questions like these, a
prospect's buying motivation is naturally elevated.
2. Don't drown in the details, find the strategy link
Decision process studies(1) conducted over the last fifteen years
have surfaced two principles that every large account seller should
consider.
1. Organizations go through a predictable series of steps when making
major purchase decisions.
2. Major purchasing decisions originate with senior management at the
top of the organization.
Translation, no matter what a prospect is purchasing, their decision
can ultimately be traced back to senior management at the top of the
organization. Consequently, all purchases are in some way strategic.
Many sellers get bogged down in detailed technical requirements and
never uncover how a purchase links to their account's strategic
priorities. Without demonstrating this linkage, sellers are easily
out-maneuvered by more enlightened competitors or labeled
"non-essential" by decision-makers.
On the flip side, making the strategy link can be very powerful
competitive advantage. One of our clients was asked to bid on a
multi-million dollar project. After reviewing the RFP, they concluded
their competitor was in a much better position to meet the prospect's
stated requirements.
|
Brad
Helmer is founder and Managing Partner of Top Line Impact
Inc., a sales strategy facilitation and training firm based in
Marlton,
New Jersey.
|
|
However, in meetings with the company's senior managers, they
uncovered a strong desire to tap an emerging market. In their RFP
response, they focused less on stated requirements and more on helping
the prospect penetrate the emerging market. This approach was effective
in positioning them as a more strategic choice and earned them the
business.
3. Don't compete on multiple fronts, frame the debate
In their book, Twelve Secrets from the War Room, political
pundits, James Carville and Paul Begala outline a critical competitive
principle for large account sellers. Many sellers attempt to persuade
prospects by presenting a laundry list of their company's/solution's
advantages. This menu approach is a poor way to create differentiation
and leads to many lost sales.
Instead, Carville and Begala recommend what they call "framing the
debate." In sales, framing the debate entails selecting one core reason
the prospect should buy from you and making that reason the theme of
your solution message.
Uncomfortable with choosing a single solution theme, many sellers
default to no theme at all. To help avoid this trap, coaches need to
help sellers consider the following aspects of the sales situation and
reduce them to their essence:
- The prospect's key requirements
- The seller's area(s) of advantage
- The competitor's area(s) of weakness
By refining and integrating these elements, normally the one theme
that best frames the debate in the seller's favor emerges. Do you
remember, "It's the economy, stupid?"
Endnote:
1 Creating Value Business with Business, A Decade of Insight, © 2000,
by Randall Murphy, Acclivus Corporation.
(c) 2006--Brad Helmer
As CEO of
ES Research Group, Inc., Dave Stein features sales consultants,
authors and practitioners in this e-Zine.
To send reactions or comments, please e-mail
editor@ESResearch.com
|