March 4, 2010

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From Solution Selling to Business Consulting: Salesforce Expertise as Competitive Advantage by Ken Valla

 

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In a shrinking economy, sales leaders face a dilemma: customers still able to invest in new solutions are also demanding discounts and other concessions. At the same time, selling organizations are under great pressure to deliver both sales numbers and profitability to meet their own companys’ expectations.

In this situation, what can sales leaders count on to win? Typically, the sales organization does not control product or market strategy, and pricing and revenue goals are set elsewhere in the organization. Nevertheless, the sales executive has direct influence on a powerful source of competitive advantage: the salesforce and how it interacts with customers. Expert sales professionals can build customer relationships that generate profitable sales—as long as they are able to add real value to the customer’s business. Even in the hardest of times, companies need expertise and solutions that address business fundamentals such as productivity, efficiency, financial results, and return on investment (ROI). Salespeople who can respond to these needs can shut out the competition while increasing both the amount and profitability of their sales.

The Business Consultant Role

“Consultative selling”—the ability to understand and link solutions to a customer’s business priorities—is a critical skill, but it is no longer by itself is a differentiator. Most experienced salespeople know how to identify information about a customer’s products and market position, and how to ask questions to uncover business issues important to the customer. Furthermore, the consultative sales role is still, as the term suggests, a sales role. 

The real opportunity to stand out from the competition lies in becoming a true consultant to the business, asking a different set of questions focused on the customer’s core business processes. Once the salesperson thoroughly understands these processes—how they link to each other and what kinds of information is exchanged among them—it is possible to identify unique opportunities to improve key metrics such as inventory turn, labor costs, or time to market. 

Where to Look for Opportunities: The Customer Value Chain


Unlike information about a company’s financial performance, people, and products, business process information can only be gathered by talking to the right people in the right parts of the organization. Michael Porter’s Value Chain model is a useful tool for organizing a business process discovery effort. It provides a lens for looking at the business from the point of view of key functions. The model then serves as a guide for gaining access to owners of key functions.

 

 

Michael Porter depicts an organization’s critical business processes (at the top of the model above) as a “value chain” wherein each key production process or system adds a specific type of value to the final output of the enterprise. Support processes (at the bottom of the model) include such functions as general management, technology, human resources, and procurement or purchasing.

The salesperson seeking to understand these core processes should focus on gaining sponsorship from executives who own the key processes. Once connections are made to the people who have primary responsibility for identified processes, the salesperson can ask questions to understand what the value chain looks like for this customer. Then, the salesperson can begin to analyze how efficiently and effectively these processes are functioning and how well or poorly they work together as a productive and profitable system. 

Conducting a Process Conversation

Typically, companies divide naturally into silos or individual territories that function semi-independently, despite operational interdependence and efforts to foster cross functional communication and collaboration. A salesperson acting as a business consultant can provide great value to an executive sponsor or key contact by asking questions and identifying patterns that cross functional lines.

A successful conversation with a business process owner should include several key components:

  1. Preparation:  As with any call on a customer, it’s important to prepare by learning as much as possible about the function or department of the person you are calling on, and to consider what aspects of their process might be important. For example, if calling on the head of warehouse operations, it would be useful to learn something about managing inventory and in general, what metrics that are important in that process. By definition, what is most improtant to one functional head is bound to be different from that which is important to other functional heads.
  2. Establishing the purpose of the discussion.  Many of the people contacted may not have a very clear idea of why they should be talking with a salesperson.  The purpose of the conversation needs to be explained – namely, to understand their function and operations in order to identify possible ways to help improve overall effectiveness across functional lines.
  3. Asking Discovery Questions:  Drawing on preparatory information, the salesperson should plan a series of questions that will help guide the process of gathering the right information.  Three key questions should be discussed:


    What has to go right in your operation for you to be successful? 

    Which of those factors are currently the most effective?  Are there any that are not going as well as you would like?

    Which of the other functional areas in the company are the most important to you, in terms of receiving inputs to your operation, and which functions are the most affected by your success or lack of it?

  4. Following Up:  Clearly, for the conversation to be productive, it’s very important to ask follow up questions when a problem appears to surface.  For example, if inventory turn is unsatisfactory, follow up questions should clarify what the ideal goal would be, and what issues are affecting the ability to reach it, such as difficulty in moving products out to distribution, delays in shipping, or internal problems with the processes of picking and packing products for shipping.  Any of these issues might be something the salesperson can help solve directly, or may serve as a foundation for asking more questions about another process, such as shipping.

The opportunities for improvement may lie in creating stronger linkages or linkages where none currently exist, or in making improvements in a process that increases efficiency or efficacy. By asking the right questions of the right people, the salesperson may identify issues such as high rates of product returns, poor communication between customer service and order fulfillment, or bottlenecks in production, any of which could affect the organization’s ability to meet high-level strategic goals. By offering a solution to a concrete problem, the salesperson moves beyond consultative selling to a distinctive role as a true business consultant able to make a substantive contribution to the overall success of the business.

It is important for salespeople to know how to research a company and ask questions to verify critical business issues, but if a sales professional wants to take the next step toward becoming a real business consultant, it takes more. Using the Value Chain as a starting point, the sales professional/business consultant can identify the most critical functional processes in the customer’s organization. By building a network of internal functional experts, the salesperson can identify potential issues and problems that may be new news to the executive process owner.  This information in itself has high value and provides credibility that is impossible for a competitor to replicate.  When the salesperson/consultant is able to offer information about and solutions to these substantive business problems that are affecting the customer’s business fundamentals, then consulting expertise becomes a powerful competitive advantage.  


About the Author:
Ken Valla, Regional Vice President of Sales, Wilson Learning Corporation, is responsible for driving sales strategies to increase revenue, profitability, and market share in North America. With over 15 years of experience in sales and sales management, Ken has consistently produced results exceeding annual objectives. Ken specializes in the complex sale that encompasses multiple buyers at various levels, often in global accounts and typically requiring executive involvement. His experience allows him to help his clients go-to-market more strategically and address their unique requirements. As an experienced sales executive, he understands what is required for sales people to succeed in today’s highly complex environment.

To learn more about the concepts shared within this article and how Wilson Learning can assist you in addressing these issues, contact Wilson Learning at 1.800.328.7937 or visit www.wilsonlearning.com.

How To Overcome The “I Need to Think About It / Need To Wait Until Next Week/Month / I'll Get Back to You” Objection by Mike Brooks

 

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One of the oldest and most used smokescreens in the book is the, "I need to think about it" objection. So many sales reps struggle with this one because they think the prospect isn't saying no, and so they don't know how to respond to it.

Unfortunately, what many of you have found out is that your prospect actually is saying no - they're just saying it in a way that makes it difficult for you to handle it. Well that will end for you today. By using the scripts below, you'll see if you're prospect really does need to think about it, or if he/she is blowing you off. Believe me, you want to know now so you can save yourself weeks of chasing and begging a deal that will never close.

The following scripts were taken from my Brand New Book of Phone Scripts due out in about 6 weeks. These are seven out of ten in the book (there are 20+ NEW scripts on how to handle the money objection alone! You'll want to pick up a copy as soon as it's released, so stand by...)

In the meantime, enjoy these and send me an email and let me know how they work for you!!

Response #1:
"_________, whenever I tell someone I need to think about it, I usually mean one of three things: 1 - I'm not going to be a deal for whatever reason and I just want to get them off the phone, 2 - I kind of like the idea but I'm going to have to find the money or talk to my partner, or something else is holding me back, and 3 - I really like the idea and I just have to move something around before I say yes.

Be honest with me; which one of those things is it for you right now?"

Response #2:
"__________, I may have given you too much information on the warranty (or pick another part of your product or service here), is that what you need to think about?"
(Now use your mute button and let them tell you what they are going to really think about)

Response #3:
"You know _________, if this isn't for you, I'd rather have a no right now
- believe me, you won't hurt my feelings. Is that where you're leaning right now?
(It is always better to get this objection out of them early.)

Response #4:
"__________, let's face it - you've already been thinking about this for a long time. You know you have to make a change or nothing else will change with (your operating system, your results, etc.). Thinking about it more won't fix things for you - only making a decision will. You like this; you've already told me it would work for you. So let's do this - go ahead and put me/this solution to work for you now and if you change your mind later you will still get the benefit that you've acknowledged you need.

Here's what we need to do to get you started..."

Response #5:
"__________, the only thing more costly than making a bad decision is not making one at all. If you don't change things then things won't get better for you. Now, you've already admitted that this has the best chance to make a positive impact in your production, right?

Then do what my other clients do and put me and my company to work for you. Once you see the positive results we both know are possible here, you'll be back to expand our coverage for you. And that's going to be a win/win for us both, isn't it?

Then here's what we need to do..."

Response #6:
"___________, since we both agree this has a great chance to work for you, let me do this. While we're on the phone right now, I'm going to email you three customer testimonials - companies just like yours who were hesitant as well - and when you read about how successful they were with us, I'll put together an introductory offer that you won't be able to pass up. Once you see for yourself how this works, then we can talk about further involvement, is that fair?"

Response #7:
"__________, what I'm hearing from you is essentially a no - and that's alright. As a sales rep, I hear that all the time and it doesn't bother me. It just means I haven't yet explained the value proposition right.

Tell me, what would it take to convince you that this would be a good idea to move forward with - and please be honest with me."

About The Author:

Want more scripts like this?  Invest in Mike’s Ebook: “The Complete Book of Phone Scripts,” which is packed with word for word scripts and techniques that you can begin using today to make more appointments and more sales.  You can read about it by clicking here:
http://www.mrinsidesales.com/scripts.htm

Mike Brooks, Mr. Inside Sales, works with business owners and inside sales reps nationwide teaching them the skills, strategies and techniques of top 20% performance.  If you’re looking to catapult your sales, or create a sales team that actually makes their monthly revenues, then learn how by
visiting: http://www.MrInsideSales.com

 

 

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