Take Control of Your Sale, Take Control of Your Life

You answer the phone—and a person you don’t know starts bossing you around.

You know the drill; a potential prospect is telling you that he and/or his selection committee are close to making a decision on their product purchase.  They need you and your entire team on-site for a demonstration next Tuesday.  And it’s already Thursday of the week before.  Oh yeah, and if you can’t make it on that day, don’t bother coming at all.

In response to his request, you describe the the elaborate and time-consuming process that you’ll have to go through to prepare his demonstration. 

 He says that he doesn’t care.  It’s next Tuesday, or never.

First off, it’s important to understand that in probably half these situations, you’ve already lost this deal.  Generally, the “selection committee” has already done all the selecting it intends to do—and your participation (such as it is), is merely window dressing.  Better stated it’s “Due Diligence.”  Every public-sector organization, and the vast majority of private enterprises have certain purchasing rules that they must follow.  And usually that includes obtaining information and pricing from a variety of vendors.

Most of us intuitively know these facts—but we’re not sure how to proceed or how to uncover the truth.  Here’s a novel idea; ask the person.

You’ll be amazed at the amount of (mostly) truthful information that you can elicit with simple, direct questions.  One reason that people will answer you honestly is because you have the element of surprise.  People just aren’t accustomed to a straightforward, authoritative question. It’s like when cops pull people over and ask, “Have you been drinking??” 85% of the people who have been drinking will say, “Yes!”

Meanwhile, your competitor is probably saying something like, “Has there been a long range planning session to determine the optimal value factors that impact the final decision as pertains to our involvement in the process?”

Please.  Just ask the questions to which you really need immediate answers.  They are as follows:

       1. What is driving your rapid deadline?

      2. Which other vendors are involved in the process?

      3. Is there a preferred vendor at this time?

      4. Why did you select us to participate?

You’ll find that some folks will refuse to answer the first three—and possibly all four questions.  Why?  Is there some sort of national security issue involved?  

As far as I’m concerned, the only reason they won’t answer you is because they have something to hide.  And almost always, the thing they are hiding is that a decision has already been made, and you are simply along for the ride.

If the prospect asks, let him know why you need answers to these questions. 

The answer to question number one is particularly important.  Is their timeframe so tightly compressed because they (or their bosses) were simply poor planners?  Is it because they are facing an unforeseen crisis that needs to be immediately resolved?  Did one vendor drop out, and they need a replacement quickly?

The answer to that question will be extremely useful to you.  If they’re simply poor planners—and they don’t care about any inconvenience or craziness that they cause you, is this really an organization with which you want to do business?  If, on the other hand, they are facing an emergency, you may be just the person to help.

When you know the answer to the second question (“Which other vendors are involved?”), you may be able to tell him that one of those other providers is in fact a better fit for him.  I’ve been in a number of situations where I’ve directed prospects to other firms.  I know that our product is either too expensive, or too complex, or too…whatever for them.  Even if they selected us they would fail at implementation.

The answer to the third question (“Is there a preferred vendor?”) lets me know if there’s any running room at all.  If the preferred vendor is clearly not the right fit for them, you can ask additional probing questions to determine why they think it is.  If they like that firm because it’s owned by the guy’s brother-in-law, you also have all the information that you need.

To the final question (“Why did you select us to participate?”), I will sometimes append a further question; “Did you include us mostly because you needed to fill out the roster—or was there something uniquely interesting about our company?  This will show you whether they even know anything about your company in the first place.  If they don’t, you can be pretty sure that you are simply filler.

If it seems either implicitly or explicitly clear to you that the person (he’s no longer a prospect) is just using you to complete his due diligence, your best bet is to offer the same thing that you offer everyone—which is to help him.  Let him know that you’ll be happy to point him to promotional materials and white papers. You'll conduct a 30-minute discovery call. You may even provide him with a generic pricing template.  That way you both get what you want.  He gets to add another company to his file, and you get to go about your business.

 Some might ask, “Why would I spend 10 cents on this guy, when I know that he’s not a prospect?”  The answer is simple; would you rather spend ten bucks on him—or $6,000 for airfare, hotels, and rental cars for you and your entire team?  Would you rather that he consider you (and, of course, by extension your company) to be total jerks—or would you rather generate the good will that comes from cooperating with him and helping him to achieve his goals?  ‘Nuff said.

If you’ve read Tim Feris’, Four-Hour-Work-Week (http://www.fourhourworkweek.com/), you’ll remember how he “fired” his most unproductive and abusive clients.  This strategy is similar.  You can also “fire” a prospect who isn’t really a prospect—while still sowing the seeds of good will and collaboration for the next time you may meet. Oh, and every once in a while, they may be so impressed with the way you conduct yourself, you will actually get the business!

Selling Yourself Matters Too...

My old boss used to say, “Never take a job that has both the words “Sales” and “Marketing” in the title.”  Ah yes, those were the good old days.

Or were they?  His opinion reflected the long-standing notion that these activities were very distinct silos.  Sales was for Willy Loman.  It was polishing your shoes, gargling with Listerine, and asking for business.  Marketing was the strategic and repetitive placement of your people and your ideas in places where you expected (or at least hoped) that your prospects would be.  And PR was…well, it was issuing press releases.

But today, things have changed quite radically.

Sales, Marketing and PR are converging to the point where it’s sometimes hard to know where one ends and the other begins.  And if you aren’t using this phenomenon to your advantage, you’re already behind the curve. 

As with the results of all technological innovation, this convergence does mean more work for you—and there’s really no way around that.  But there is an upside as well—which is the democratization of the sales process.  Quality work is still rewarded—but it can now be rewarded more quickly than ever before

Here’s some practical advice for the use of “Convergence” in selling your company, your products…and yourself.

1. Prospecting the old way is dead (or at least dying): Of course cold calls, direct mail, and waiting for responses from your Website may still work to some degree.  But if you’re not physically and virtually in front of your prospects, you are losing the race.

2. Are you on social media?  If not, you need to be.  “Even if I’m just “Joe Salesguy” working for MegaCorp,” you ask?  Yes, you do.  Do not rely upon your company to provide all the canned outreach to your potential client base.  Be a resource.  Be an expert.  I don’t care if only six people follow your blog or read your LinkedIn posts.  You can point potential clients to your content so they can get to know you and have some of their basic questions answered.  If the other guy is prolific - and relevant - on social media , and you are not, who looks like the expert?  Who looks engaged?  Who looks like he cares?  Remember, Willy Loman didn’t have a Website.

3. Make it viral.  I know that you have satisfied customers and friends in the industry.  So why not channel their energy and enthusiasm into more business?  Start a Facebook or LinkedIn group. Get people participating and offering advice and info on your product, your company and your industry.  Create a forum for your clients (that’s YOUR clients—not every client that your company has), and make sure they know you are paying attention by making quality contributions of your own.

4. Find the experts and niche networks.  Quote and re-tweet the sage advice of others in your industry.  Ask to contribute content to their sites and newsletters.  Be involved in on-line discussions.  It’s all about establishing yourself as a go-to guy or gal when the chips are down.

I think this last point gets to the heart of the matter.  As a sales person, you are no longer simply a cog in your company’s wheel.  You now have to have your own brand.  You’ve always known that prospects buy the salesperson along with the product.  If your competitors are doing a much better job of selling themselves, you’re only operating at 50% capacity.  OK?  Now get crackin’!