Amateurish behavior is when you display no skill
or tact in a particular area. It means you're clumsy and inept.
As a salesperson, you never want to be considered amateurish by
your colleagues or prospects. It lowers your credibility and
authority and kills your chances of closing a deal.
Sales leaders and businesses are paying a hefty
price for not developing the selling skills of their people.
They’re not only selling less than they could be, they’re also
being forced to sell at lower prices than they should be!
There are so few in sales who are truly
professional sellers. It’s salespeople’s own approach,
attitude, and behavior that is shooting their sales effort in the
foot while causing buyers to perceive them as nothing more than
vendors and commodity sellers rather than the professional
problem solvers and value creators we so badly want them to be.
1. Living in Reactive Mode
Probably the most common and damaging driver of
salespeople being perceived and treated simply as vendors is
being late to a sales opportunity. Sales leaders allow their
teams to spend way too much time operating in reactive mode.
Sellers are waiting for leads, waiting for customers to raise
their hands, waiting for beautifully teed-up opportunities.
Reactive sellers are often slow arriving to a new
sales opportunity. By the time they’re involved, the buyer is far
down the path. Buying criteria have been established. Even
worse, these reactive sellers end up way at the back of the
line.
Often, they find themselves playing catch-up to their
more proactive competitors’ salespeople, who got there first, who
were building relationships before the buyer started shopping,
who were in what I call “Position A”: Sitting in the consultant’s
seat, bringing value, sharing insights, and helping define the
buyer’s requirements.
Can you see why being late to the opportunity
often relegates your salesperson to vendor status? How hard is it
to be seen as a value creator and consultant to the prospective
customer who is already far down the path? Very hard.
It’s no fun selling from behind, eating the dust
of your competitor who already has a relationship and earned a
seat at the table because he was in the opportunity early. In
fact, it might very well be that your competitor actually created
the opportunity by proactively targeting the customer.
Unless your solution is so radically different
from and superior to the competition’s, which I hate to tell you
is rarely the case, it is very hard to come across as a
consultative, value-creating salesperson when you’re tardy.
Typically, from that position, it takes a very low
price to earn the buyer’s attention. And that’s a game we
certainly don’t want to play.
2. Leading with Product
Adding insult to injury, after they’re slow to get
involved in a potential sales opportunity, many salespeople
further reduce their effectiveness by leading with their product
or solution. Again, it’s untrained or poorly trained sellers who
don’t know any better.
They put their product out front and make it the
focus of the conversation when meeting with potential customers.
What are the consequences of making the offering the hero of the
story?
That approach communicates -- loud and clear -- to
the customer that the salesperson is self-focused, more concerned
with what he’s selling than with the customer’s issues, needs,
and desires. Think about it. It’s a truly horrible message to
send.
When salespeople lead with their product or
service, it is impossible to be perceived as consultants or
trusted advisors. It makes it as clear as day that the
salesperson believes the relationship and sale are centered on
his offering, not the customer and its needs.
It’s as if the salesperson is begging the customer
to put his offering’s features and price on a spreadsheet to be
compared against every competitors’ features and price.
The salesperson might as well show up wearing a
company logo golf shirt embroidered with these words: WE ARE ALL
ABOUT OUR PRODUCTS!
Hear me clearly: When you live by the product then
you die by the product. Salespeople who lead with their offering
are admitting that they bring zero value to the equation, and
they’re essentially telling customers to commoditize the purchase
decision.
3. Ineffective Sales Calling
Who’s teaching salespeople how to plan and conduct
sales calls? If what I’m seeing is any indication, nobody is. So
much sales training today is focused on macro theories.
Popular sales blogs and LinkedIn posts are filled
with articles espousing the virtues of macro sales theories like
social selling and insight selling. But there are few sales
experts writing about how to better execute the day-to-day
basics, the fundamentals.
Talking about sales call structure may not be sexy,
but it has never been more needed, especially as sales managers
are spending less time in the field coaching people.
Here are some of the most common sales call sins:
- The
salesperson doesn’t establish herself as a professional or
assert control by setting up the meeting, sharing her
agenda, and getting buy-in from the customer.
- Sellers
approach the sales call already in presentation mode and are
too quick to jump to a demo or presentation.
- Salespeople
talk way too much and listen way too little. It’s very hard
to come across as a professional problem solver when you
don’t discover the customer’s real issues. As I’m fond of
repeating: Discovery precedes presentation -- always!
- Salespeople
give off the vibe that they are there to “pitch at” the
prospect, which creates an awkward, adversarial dynamic and
often provokes a guarded, even cynical, posture from the
customer.
-
Take some time now to replay in your mind the last
dozen or so of your people’s sales calls that you observed. Were
the salespeople coming across as consultative professionals or
product pushers? Did they do more talking or listening? Was their
objective to learn as much as possible as to improve the
customer’s condition, or to launch into presentation mode as
quickly as possible?
And, most important, if you were the customer, how
would you view the salesperson -- simply as a self-interested
vendor or as a true value creator, advisor, and trustworthy
business partner?
Amateurish approaches doom the salesperson to
vendor and product-pitcher status. You don’t earn a seat as the
expert or consultant at the customer’s table when you’re viewed
as a pitchman better suited to doing infomercials than to helping
your customer address business challenges.
4. Avoiding Objections
Some salespeople bury their head in the sand
whenever they sense their prospects have reservations or
concerns. Newsflash: Refusing to discuss these anxieties doesn't
make them go away. On the contrary, doing so means reps
completely lose the opportunity to resolve them.
If a prospect seems less than enthusiastic about a
specific feature or detail, ask probing questions. You might
say, “What are your thoughts on [feature]?” or “What
challenges or difficulties do you foresee around [aspect of
deal]?”
It's also helpful to ask, “Are there any
reasons you wouldn't buy?”
There are only two potential responses to this
question. The buyer will say, “Yes, I'm concerned about X,
Y, and Z,” -- in which case you've successfully brought hidden
objections out into the open -- or they'll reply, “No, I
think we're ready to move forward.”
Either way, the outcome is positive.
5. Doing Whatever the Customer Requests
When the customer or prospect tells a salesperson
to jump, a majority respond with the traditional “How
high?” and typically do so with great excitement. They
think, what could be better?
The customer wants me to do something and I will
show him that I’m the best, I’m the fastest, I’m the most
compliant, I have the best attitude, I follow instructions better
than anyone, I’m likable, I present better than anyone, and I’ll
provide the most creative and in-depth proposal.
The harsh reality is that when the seller does
whatever the customer asks and is more concerned with being liked
than respected, it often lowers instead of raises the perception
of the salesperson in the buyer’s eyes. Sure, that sounds
counterintuitive, but it’s true.
In no way am I declaring that responsiveness is
unimportant. It’s hugely important. And I’m not advocating that
salespeople behave like obstinate unlikable jerks. Not at all.
But I am strenuously making the case that in
today’s sales environment, where value is the yardstick by which
all potential providers are measured, it is imperative that we
think hard about how sellers are perceived by buyers.
Too often, the very likable, highly relational,
super-responsive, overly accommodating salesperson gets blown out
of the water when going up against a true sales killer who owns
his sales process and isn’t afraid to push back against the
buyer.
How do your people respond when a potential client
they haven’t been working summons them to come in for a
presentation or demo, or announces that he’s gathering his team
together and wants their best dog and pony show? Do they get all
lathered up,
enthusiastically preparing for their big moment in
the spotlight? Or do they raise one eyebrow, pause to think, and
begin to wonder what prompted this prospect’s request? Do they
run headfirst and blind into this premature presentation, or do they
assert control of the situation and begin an important dialogue
with customer?
Put bluntly, are they yes men (order takers)
willing to do whatever a customer wants hoping to earn obedience
points on the way to a sale? Or are they confident enough to push
back on the request, professionally and respectfully informing
the prospect that they’d loved to come in and present, but only
at the right time, after having had the opportunity to meet
various stakeholders, better understand what prompted the request,
and learn more about the situation so they can then craft a
relevant presentation?
Let me close this post where we began.
Ill-equipped salespeople are hurting sales and profit performance
because they are consistently perceived by customers as nothing
more than vendors.
Contrary to what many weak salespeople believe,
customers are not looking for subservient order takers; they are
seeking help and value. And it’s just about impossible to come
across as a value creator when you’re late to an opportunity,
leading with product, pitching instead of probing, and presenting
and proposing prematurely.
(Source: Sales Management.
Simplified. by Mike Weinberg)
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