Customers buy to satisfy needs, not features and benefits.  It’s a simple concept, but hard to practice sometimes.

When I train sales professionals, I have to make sure that I highlight this fact each time I start the training.  We as sales professionals need to stop launching right into a sales pitch too early. 

Too many sales people get through the introductions and then jump into pitching their products or service.  They use the shotgun blast approach and hope somethings sticks to where the customer will leap towards them with a hug saying thank you for answering all my worries.  Unfortunately, the customer is actually put off by this practice of selling.   Then the customers immediately decide they are not going to buy from this salesperson. 

Meanwhile the salesperson is still shooting off more and more benefits and features while the customer is thinking…“How do I get out of here?”

Most customers will wait for the presentation to end and then thank the sales person for their time before making a way to the exit as fast as possible.  People want to feel heard and understood.  Too many times sales people leap into action and sell something because we are looking for that next kill.  Most sales people think of sales just like hunting for something. 

I started selling like this, but quickly learned that sales is actually like farming.  We start small and grow our influence with the customer over time.  We as sales professionals are not all knowing and understanding of the customer’s needs.  We need to stop ourselves and ask questions, a great deal of questions.  This starts building influence with the customer because we are showing that we care.  We need the customer to buy off on us before they will ever think about buying our product or service.  Here’s another point that I need to make, the larger the sale, the longer it takes to understand the customer’s needs.

I have structured multi-million, multi-year contracts and every one of these deals took years to come together.  Not one of these customers has ever stopped on my doorstep and said please help me, I need you to sell me your product without growing the influence with them first.  I had to grow influence before they would look at me as an option to help them with their larger investments.  They gave me opportunities for smaller deals and then as they grew to trust me and trust that I understood them well enough they gave me larger opportunities.  Apple has done a great job of getting people to line up for their new products, but back when they started, hardly anyone wanted their products.  It took years of the correct leadership, marketing, and sales strategies to get to where they are today.

Each day there are new strategies on how to sell to a new sophisticated type of customer, but most of these new sales strategies are trying to do the same drill of growing influence with the customer.  Shortcuts may work for the short term, but long term they fizzle out and influence erodes.  I have used the same process for well over a decade to sell to different industries, and in different parts of the world.  It’s a simple process and it helps the sales professionals walk through the customer’s five buying decisions that they must answer before they will purchase our products or services. 

We have to meet the customer’s needs and then we will be rewarded with their business and grow influence with them.

Have a great weekend.

Sincerely,

Kevin Sidebottom

“Businesses wonder why the majority of their sales teams struggle at winning profitable business.  I teach your sales team to walk with the customer through the five buying decisions, and in the correct order to generate more sales with high margins!”

www.kevinsidebottom.com

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