Progressive company's understand the power of cross-selling and recognize it as a critical component for promoting both customer retention and revenue growth.
What is cross-selling? Cross-selling is nothing more than team- selling with other specialists within your company, all working in partnership on behalf of the customer's best interest. It's a proactive, ongoing sales process designed to provide your existing customers with a full range of your company's products and services.
The good news is, cross-selling is one of the most profitable and least risky endeavors a company can undertake. The bad news is, if your cross-selling program is not properly administered and monitored you run the risk of losing customers and creating conflict within your sales team.
Not surprisingly, two of the key elements that make cross-selling work
are trust and convenience. Your customers already possess a degree of
trust in your company, and this can be converted into additional sales
that are not directly related to their existing products. Some might
suggest that customers are irritated by cross-selling and perceive it
as an aggressive sales approach.
Interestingly enough, consumer research indicates that the reverse is
actually true. Most customers prefer a full spectrum of products and
services and appreciate the convenience that is provided through a
comprehensive cross-selling approach.
Would You Like Fries With That?
While you may not have recognized it was happening, the last time
you ordered from a fast food restaurant there's a good chance you
experienced cross-selling. Cross-selling is a well-established and
highly effective marketing practice utilized by a wide variety of
industries, ranging from financial institutions to fast-food
restaurants. When you cross-sell related products and services to your
existing customers, you are making a smart decision.
Developing a systematic approach to cross-selling brings in additional
revenue with relatively low expense and effort. Marketers wrack their
brains and develop expensive advertising campaigns solely designed to
get prospects to focus on their offers. When you cross-sell to existing
customers, you don't have to compete for their attention. In addition
to generating new sales, cross-selling promotes customer loyalty and as
a result, keeps competitors at arms length and your business on the
books.
What Makes Cross-Selling Work?
Cross-selling begins with uncovering your customer's needs and laying
the groundwork for other specialists to assist you in the selling
process. The best place to introduce your customer to the concept of
cross-selling is during your initial needs analysis meeting. It's
important that you inform your customer early in the needs analysis
process that you do not work alone, but represent one aspect of a team
of specialists all working to help them achieve their goals. When you
cross-sell you don't claim to be the expert, you're more of a partner
in the process, guiding your customer toward another qualified
specialist within your company. You are responsible for setting the
tone and preparing your customer for a smooth transfer to an additional
specialist.
Unfortunately, many salespeople fail to do a thorough “needs analysis”
and as a result, frequently do not identify potential products and
services that fall outside of their area of expertise.
Ask questions and take good notes. Ask about their goals and what
concerns them. When you discover an area of potential need, be certain
to ask your customer what steps they have taken, if any, to address the
concern. This collaborative approach also helps you view yourself as a
planning partner. Effective cross-selling is all about guided
self-discovery. Through a series of thought provoking, open-ended
questions, successful salespeople assist their customers to uncover
potential needs.
During the needs analysis interview, I highly recommend the use of a
checklist that incorporates all of your company's products and
services. Relying on your memory alone is a poor business decision, so
take the time to jot down key information. The integration of customer
information and behind the scenes paperwork is essential to facilitate
a seamless handoff.
Keys to Achieving Cross-Selling Success
When developing a cross-selling program, it is critically important
that everyone in the organization buys into the philosophy and fully
participates in the program. The foundation of every successful
cross-selling program is rooted in a strong incentive system based on
personal recognition and financial reward.
Because of the complexity, there also needs to be a standardized
software tracking system in place to monitor compliance and coordinate
cross-selling activities between specialists. The true value of any
sales program can only be measured through the customer's eyes. Steps
should be taken to actively survey customer satisfaction throughout the
process. Once a company links specialists, business processes and data
they make it easy for their salespeople to act on behalf of their
customers.
Companies that fail to implement an effective cross-selling program
actually do a disservice to their customers and in effect, leave the
backdoor open to their competitors!
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