In the past couple of months, I have had the opportunity to interact with sales leaders in India, China, Singapore and Australia. One thing that everyone agrees is that selling, and more importantly, B2B selling is getting more and more challenging.
Buyers are getting more and more intelligent as they are able to do all the research even before inviting any sales teams in for discussion. This also means that most of the interaction tend to lean towards order fulfilment or what I call “Selling to Specs”. This is a zero sum game with no clear winners at all.
- The customers tend to believe that they know what they are doing due to all the research they did before connecting with the sales teams.
- The sales teams are hard pressed to show value in every interaction with their customers despite not knowing the real challenge that they are trying to help with.
- Train ourselves to be curious and inquisitive, ie, re-learn to be child like.
- Learn and practice the art of observation. We need to learn to observe not only our customer in action, but their customers in action, their competitors, their substitutes, try and delve deeper to understand the reason behind the specs that the customers have given us.
- Learn the difference between information and insight and keep looking until he/she uncovers new insights.
There are different techniques that employ the same process albeit in a little more polished way. One such methodology is “Challenger Selling” or applying the principles of “Design Thinking” in the sales process.
One approach that i have found very useful in this scenario is to look at our customers business and their interaction with their ecosystem (including customers, employees, partners, suppliers,etc). If I am able to understand their interaction with their ecosystem and some of the challenges that these members of the ecosystem have with our customer, it provides a very interesting perspective and has immense possibilities for new insights to emerge, which potentially could provide a good discussion point and create a totally different discussion than the one that the customer intended in the first place.
This is exactly what you want as a sales executive. This again puts you in the driving seat and instead of matching specs, you are now in a position to define the challenges along with your customer and pitch in how you could play a part in solving these challenges.
In most cases, some of these challenges can be addressed by your product/services. The other part of the challenge that you are unable to solve, you could either suggest someone who could be of help or allow your customer to figure this out.
Irrespective of which methodology you use, the ultimate aim should be for the sales teams to learn to uncover insights that their customers are unaware of about their own business/process/challenge and use these insights to drive their sales process and continue to remain relevant and in control.
Do you agree with my views. Share your views and opinions as comments and we can continue our conversation.
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2 thoughts on “How Can Children help Sales Executives Regain Control On their Sales Process (B2B)”
Completely agree! My only comment is that Challenger Selling is not aimed at doing discovery on a customer-by-customer basis, which is not what you said, but what readers might think. It is aimed at doing careful analysis up front, preferably based on proprietary data you have acquired from all your customers, to gain unique insights which your customers (and your competitors, for that matter) don’t have (yet, nothing lasts forever ;o). You then develop these insights into a “commercial teaching pitch”, which actually teaches (yes, teaches!) the customer about a problem they either underestimated or didn’t know they had at all (and one that, surprisingly, only your solution can address ;o).
But this was blog wasn’t about Challenger Selling. It was about how to gain valuable insights, and I fully agree that this is the way to do it!
I completely agree with your comment here about the challenger sales model .. I did write a post earlier where I reviewed this model as well. you can find the post at http://rmukeshgupta.wordpress.com/2013/01/03/the-challenger-sales-model-its-relevance-in-the-selling-models-of-the-future/.
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