If today’s customers want salespeople to collaborate with them, why is the foundation of most sales activities still designed to sell at them?
As long as sales has existed, so has the sales cycle, a collection of four, five, six or more phases of actions that a salesperson drives a buyer through as that buyer “progresses” from cold lead to closed deal.
By using this cycle, it is universally understood when you are in the lead development, requirements identification, value demonstration, proposal or negotiations phase (or something similar to this group of actions). We manage to it, train and forecast to it, buy systems to automate it, and untold numbers of companies have been founded to help us manage it more effectively. The trouble is, significant changes in the buying environment mean most buyers can no longer be dragged through a sales cycle, but rather manoeuvre themselves through their own cycles with dynamics that change regularly. The significance of this reality can’t be understated; it means that at the heart of nearly every sales activity in nearly every organization today, there lies a fatal flaw.
No Thanks, I'll Drive
The fundamental change that has taken place between buyer and seller
over the last five years or so has much to do with the control and flow
of information. Information used to be a precious commodity; it was
held closely by the salesperson and shared only when it was needed to
move the sale forward. This is why using an inward-focused tool like
the sales cycle worked so well; the salesperson really did know when a
buyer advanced in the process with some degree of precision. Now, with
the knowledge of the wide range of information available to them,
buyers decide which information needs must be filled before their
comfort level has been met.
Adding to the mix is the rise of group, or influencer-based decision
making. This trend has become more pronounced due to a growing
requirement for cross-functional purchasing in today’s corporations, as
well as a general aversion on the part of individual buyers to bear all
the risk of a purchase. Thus, even in organizations where your
salespeople had to identify and sell to multiple groups, additional
levels of complexity and influence likely have been added.
These factors – and many others – have combined to mean that
salespeople must realize that their prospects are the ones who in the
end establish the process and the pace by which a purchasing decision
will be made. Salespeople influence the process by collecting and
providing information when it is needed; marshalling other resources to
satisfy the various players in the buying cycle; creating different
types of value (solution- or business-based); and focusing more time on
building trust.
Breakdown In Logic
A perfect example of a sales task that has declined significantly in
terms of effectiveness due to an unflinching reliance on the sales
cycle is forecasting. A sales forecast seeks to predict which prospects
are closest to purchase, when they will buy and how much they are
likely to spend, usually by placing these prospects into the sales
cycle and advancing them when a salesperson determines he or she has
ticked off the “typical” tasks within a cycle phase.
There are any number of reasons why this approach is doomed to failure.
Take the issuance of a proposal to a prospect, which using traditional
means would seem to indicate a deal on the verge of occurring. In
reality, it could be that the salesperson issued a proposal much too
early, or did so merely as a way to get a reaction from a stalled
prospect. The forecast indicates a buyer who is much more advanced in
the process than he or she actually is, which opens the organization up
to an enormous margin of error.
If we truly want to be able to create forecasts that predict
prospect behavior, these forecasts must be based around a buying
process, not a selling process. As an example, we have generalized this
“customer buying cycle” into six stages (below). For each stage, there
is a “checklist” of requirements that on the average, a prospect within
a vertical must satisfy to move out of the stage. These requirements
are incumbent on your sales force to agree on based on their experience
(and potentially some help from a piece of prospect/customer research).
Requirements will vary from vertical to vertical, and change over time;
you should revisit them every 12 months at a minimum.
It is with this customer buying cycle in hand that effective
forecasting can begin. A salesperson and his or her manager will have a
much clearer picture of where an opportunity truly is based on the
behaviors exhibited, or not yet exhibited as the case may be. As the
prospect graduates from phase to phase, greater probability is placed
on the opportunity, probability that is not based on opinion, but fact.
The ancillary benefits of this strategy are numerous. You will likely
see fewer advanced opportunities wind up in non-decisions, as fewer
prospects will leak into the later stages because they haven’t truly
satisfied phases one and two (when they aren’t achieved, non-decision
has a much higher chance of occurring). Your sales team will also spend
less time in the wrong area of the cycle; for example, if a customer
already has gone through the first two phases before running across
your organization as a potential solution, sales won’t waste time
trying to preach to the converted. Finally, making salespeople forecast
based on deep knowledge of their prospects decision process is a
tremendous impetus to keep in closer touch with their buying base.
Decide to Collaborate
We have used forecasting as an example of how looking at an aspect
of sales through an entirely different lens can make a significant
difference, but the story only begins here. Those who sell manage those
who sell and design tools and training for both parties must change the
way they do business based around a world where we no longer inflict a
list of tasks on an opponent, but collaborate with an educated buyer
who expects much more. This is no easy task to be certain, but one that
will be demonstrated by the organizations that are considered true
leaders and dominant forces in their field.
SiriusDecisions Customer Buying Cycle
• One: Loosening of the Status Quo. The prevailing
emotion of a prospect – unless they are an early adopter – is to keep
plodding on with things the way they are. To graduate from this phase,
the prospect must have developed enough curiosity about a potential
alternative; this begins with significant education on the part of the
prospect who must be able to gain access to information.
• Two: Committing to Change.
Deals stall all the time because while a prospect may like your idea in
theory, he or she doesn’t have enough pain to believe that a solution
is required. By the end of this phase, the prospect must be provided
with enough evidence to believe that something needs to be done about
the problem. It’s important to note that 75 percent or more of
prospects who make it through this phase will buy some sort of
solution; the question is what, and from whom.
• Three: Exploring Possible Solutions.
The third phase is where active buying begins. Prospects will begin to
scope out what they would like their solution to achieve, and then
launch into a process of trying to become educated about different
types of vendors who have their own ideas and methods about how to
provide the solution.
• Four: Committing to a Solution.
Here, the prospect and the rest of the team that will drive/influence
the decision chooses the best general solution method; because of
internal regulations that require multiple vendors to be considered,
more players may get involved (this is where RFPs generally go out).
• Five: Justifying the Decision.
Vendors are eliminated as this phase unfolds, with a “vendor of choice”
emerging by the end. A variety of decision makers and influencers will
enter and leave the stage in order to whittle down the players, each
with their own requirements and needs.
• Six: Making the Selection.
The buying cycle winds down with a final phase that includes term
negotiation, program plan refinement and satisfaction of any final
concerns or hesitations that may occur.
|