Consultative
Sales Training Workshop
One
of the most important tools for success in consultative sales
is the ability to identify the unique needs of different types
of personalities. In order to truly understand your customer’s
needs, you must begin by understanding how he views himself
and the world around him. To some degree, most people can
be associated with one of four major personality categories,
each with an entirely different set of assumptions and priorities
when it comes to such things as decision making and communication
styles. In our Consultative Sales Training workshop, you will
learn how to identify each one and discover the best ways
to work with all types of people.
Follow
this advice if customers aren't jumping at the chance to purchase
your product or service.
You've
just invested the last 30 minutes of your day with someone
who truly needs your product or service. You feel like you're
on a roll—that your product is truly good for them and
that they can afford it.
It began when they explained what they were looking for when
you first met. They answered all your questions about their
more specific needs. They listened intently to your explanations,
watched your demonstration carefully, handled the product
and selected the colors or sizes that would work for them.
Basically, they seemed very involved and moving toward the
purchase. Then the brakes went on. They just stopped. Then
they started hedging, asking questions you had already answered
and physically backing away either by sitting back in their
chair, crossing their arms or literally leaning or stepping
slightly backwards.
What
happened? Something perfectly normal.
Few
people get so excited about a product or service that they
just whip out their checkbooks or credit cards and say, "Let
me have it!" Yes, it does happen at times and with certain
products that are prone to impulse sales. However, it's not
the typical situation you'll encounter.
When
people get excited about owning something new, little voices
start talking in their heads. I don't mean that they have
any kind of mental issues. They're just typical. They've been
told ever since they were little to "think twice before
making decisions" and "never sign on the dotted
line unless you're absolutely sure of what you're getting
into." They might even flash back to a bad past experience
when they made a poor buying decision and lost either money
or face. When that happens, they have nasty old Mr. Fear creep
into their psyches and cause them to freeze like deer in the
headlights, not knowing what to do or where to go.
Their
hesitation might turn into an outright objection to the product.
This may seem irrational to you since they were so excited
about it a moment ago. But now we're getting close to the
real answer. Rational vs. irrational. Emotion vs. logic. Buying
is not done logically. It's an emotional decision that's made,
then rationalized. When the brakes come on, rationalization
hasn't happened. It's your job to help them rationalize any
buying decision.
The
rationalization is that the amount of money you're asking
for your product or service equals or outweighs the discomfort
they're feeling by not owning it. In other words, they have
to come to terms with feeling better with the product than
having the money in their bank accounts. People are very emotionally
tied to their money. It may be the strongest bond other than
the deep emotional bond between spouses or parents and children.
Rather
than psychologically prying the money out of their hands,
you must learn to nudge, prod and lead them to the decision
that you and they truly believe is good for them. Try these
two simple lines: "Obviously, you have a reason for hesitating.
Would you mind sharing it with me?" If you deliver these
two sentences warmly and with sincerity, they'll tell you
exactly why they're hesitant, and you'll have something to
move forward with. It could be a number of things. Usually,
it's the money. Sometimes, it's an issue with color or measurements
or time. They might start thinking they don't have to make
the decision today now that they know the right source for
the product they want. The point is you can't address the
cause of the hesitation until you know what it is. And that
little question will lead you to the answer.
Tom
Hopkins

"Consulting Sales - Buying is an Emotion
Decision"
Sales
Training Quote
"A market is never saturated with a good product,
but it is very quickly saturated with a bad one."
Henry Ford
Suggested
Reading:
Getting Started in Sales Consulting
by Herman Holtz
How to Establish a Unique Brand in the Consulting
Profession: Powerful Techniques for the Successful Practitioner
by Alan Weiss, Alan Weiss
Hope Is Not a Strategy: The 6 Keys to Winning
the Complex Sale
by Rick Page
Sales Process Engineering: A Personal Workshop
by Paul H. Selden
John Wolfe's Workshop for Sales Professionals:
America's Top Sales Trainer Shows You How to Boost Sales at
Least 80%
by John Wolfe
The Ultimate Training Workshop Handbook: A Comprehensive
Guide to Leading Successful Workshops and Training Programs
by Bruce Klatt
The Big Book of Sales Games (Big Book of Business
Games)
by Peggy Carlaw, Vasudha K. Deming
Proactive Selling: Control the Process-Win the
Sale
by William ""Skip" Miller
Killing The Sale : The 10 Fatal Mistakes Salespeople
Make & How To Avoid Them
by Todd M. Duncan, Todd Duncan
High-Powered Sales Training Activities
by Garry Lennon
Sales Training Handbook: A Guide to Developing
Sale Performance
by Robert Craig, Leslie Kelly
The sales manager as a trainer
by National Society of Sales Training Executives |