TRUST
According to Charles Green's "Trust-based Selling," in order to build loyal customers for life, you must value the relationship over the transaction. And, we agree. Especially if you are selling complex products or intangible services.
As Green points out, and our own experience shows, most sales and marketing people either ignore the trust factor altogether, or simply believe the act of building trust is telling their prospective customer all about their expertise, experience, reputation, etc. While this does build credibility, it does not build trust. And with all things seeming equal, the buyer will always choose trust.
So, what's the acid test for "selling from trust?"
It's simple. Would you ever be willing to recommend a key competitor
to a significant client? Be honest. This is not the time to live in
denial. If you answer no, you are not selling from trust.
In "Trust-Based Selling," Green identifies four values that a trust-based seller must hold and act from consistently:
1. True customer focus, which means treating customers as ends, not as
means, and cultivating a habit of noticing and paying attention.
2. A collaborative style and willingness to involve the buyer in the
sales process, going way beyond customer satisfaction surveys or client
dinners.
3. A medium-to-long term perspective, which involves focusing on
multiple transactions and interactions over time, as opposed to the
particular sale at hand.
4. A habit of transparency, the best guarantor that motive will be
understood. Secrets break down trust, while being transparent means
being willing to let the client into the seller's business by sharing
information that sellers might normally consider proprietary.
There are a lot of great nuggets in "Trust-Based Selling," but the
biggest take-away is self awareness. Ask yourself, "do I really have my
customer's best interests at heart?" Did you pass the acid test?
Source: Go To Marketing Strategies - http://www.gtms-inc.com/
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