As most seasoned salespeople can tell you, the first issue is never the real issue.
When you learn to ask better questions, you get in touch with your genuine sense of curiosity. Your goal is to ask questions that will uncover valuable data AND not sound like every other salesperson's “stock” questions!
The answers you get are only going to be as good as the questions you ask.
I was in a sales call one time and this guy asked the client “What would you change if you had 30 days to make a difference and a magic wand you could wave over your business?” The look on the clients face was the famous “my wheels are turning because no one has asked me this before” look!
Now, you’ve left the realm of a routine sales call and you’ve embarked
on a real discussion on matters that matter to your prospect.
Here is a list of questions. Go through the list and ask your self- “have I ever asked these before?”
•What are the biggest challenges you are facing right now?
•What one thing would change your business dramatically if you could do it?
•What has been your biggest breakthrough in the last few years?
•What do you want your business to be known for?
•What is important to you?
•What are you looking for that you haven’t found?
One last comment: these are not the best possible questions for you to use.
Why?
Because the best possible questions for you to use will come from... YOU!
Part of my sale effectiveness seminars involve creating customized
questions – customized for your industry, your prospects, your
personality, your experience, your sales cycle, and your personal
preferences.
There is nothing worse than watching someone who leaves a sales
course, memorizes 10 questions that the trainer said were the “best”
questions to ask, and then watch that hapless salesperson get eaten
alive on their next sales call, simply because they’re faking their way
through someone else’s “system”!
So here is another formula to consider:
Q=D | D =T+
Questions create Dialogue and Dialogue creates increased Trust.
Trust is built not when you are talking but when they are talking.
Advanced questioning 101
You know you should ask open-ended questions to get prospects and
customers to tell you their problems. Now go beyond that sales-training
basic and ask engaging and productive questions with these advanced
questioning strategies.
If you want your customers to reveal things they haven't revealed to
your competitors, ask questions your competitors aren't asking.
Three-level questions contain a factual statement, a personal
observation and a focused question.
The factual statement should be something you've researched and be
attributable to an outside, credible third party. Industry trade
publications, business newspapers and trade associations are good
sources.
Here's an example of a three-level question in a radio advertising
salesperson's introductory meeting with a restaurateur. He prepares by
skimming Restaurant Business magazine. He finds a fact he feels might
show the need for advertising a dinner special on his station in the
afternoon rather than in the morning paper. Here's his three-level
question:
Factual Statement: According to Restaurant Business magazine, 75
percent of people who eat at a family restaurant decide where they'll
dine within two hours of eating. Personal Observation: I find myself
asking my wife, “Where do you want to go for dinner?” And she'll say,
“I don't know. Where do you want to go?” I thought I was unique, but it
seems 75 percent of people decide this way.
Focused Question: Are you open to exploring ways to get these late
decision makers to eat at your restaurant instead of a competitor's
place?
That question causes the prospect to consider the fact and the observation before answering.
Here's another example for a leasing agent at an upscale shopping
mall who wants to rent retail space to a cellular telephone company:
Factual Statement: According to the Cellular Telecommunications
Industry Association, in 1988 the average monthly bill was $100; it's
now $56.
Personal Observation: I know my cellular phone bill is much lower
than it was when I first purchased a cell phone five years ago.
Focused Question: Is your marketing strategy based on signing up a
huge volume of customers or finding customers who will generate
above-average phone bills and buy more sophisticated products?
It's that simple. Find a fact. Then tell a quick story about how the
fact affects you. Finally, ask a question that focuses on the factual
statement and the personal observation.
You want questions that cause customers to think about their
business. Customers hear from reps all day long about how great their
products are. Use this simple formula to plan penetrating, engaging
questions for your meetings.
Advanced questioning 201
I'm wondering if you are aware of imbedded questions.
The previous sentence contained an imbedded question! The question,
“Are you aware of imbedded questions?” is imbedded in the statement,
“I’m wondering if you are aware of imbedded questions.” There is no
question mark at the end of that sentence. Imbedded questions don't
contain the words who, what, when, where, why or how. Using imbedded
questions is something you do unconsciously in regular conversations
with friends. If you want your sales interviews to flow as naturally as
your conversation with friends, try imbedding questions in statements
instead of asking them outright.
Here are five examples:
1. I would be interested in your views of the business environment in this market.
2. In order for me to make an intelligent presentation, I need to know your budget.
3. I was wondering if you've considered the cost savings a just-in-time inventory program could give you.
4. Tell me about the competitive pressure you’re facing this year that you weren’t facing last year.
5. I always like to find out how people got into the business they’re in.
Three-level questions and imbedded questions take you beyond the
world of open- and closed-ended questions taught in basic sales
courses.
Tip: Write down your questions
Lawyers do it. Even David Letterman uses cue cards. In the heat of
the moment, it's easy to forget the questions you were going to ask.
Every meeting is an opportunity to gain more information about your
prospects and their problems. By planning your questions and writing
them down, you're much more likely to have a productive meeting.
The chemistry of involvement
Before the first appointment, ask the prospect to prepare. During the appointment, ask the prospect for involvement.
Preparation can mean asking the prospect to prepare a list of some
kind, or review their records on similar purchases, or do some simple
calculations about their usage or buying patterns of your product or
service.
For example, a cell phone sales rep might create a simple
pre-meeting questionnaire that asks the prospect to jot down how many
phones they have now, check off what services they use (voicemail, call
forwarding, direct connect, internet features), what their monthly
usage has been for the past two billing cycles, how many minutes they
use company-wide, etc.
This helps the prospect understand that the salesperson is
interested in doing it WITH them and not TO them. It shows shared
accountability and a partnership mindset.
It also shows equal status – the message is “you prepare and I’ll
prepare and then we’ll compare notes and see if it makes sense for us
to talk further about doing business.”
One warning: you can’t just go in and start asking questions and
eagerly start taking notes! Let the prospect know why you want to ask
questions and why it is important for you to ask them. You could say
something like, “Ms. Customer, I would like to first ask you some
questions. My goal is to really learn about your specific needs so we
can customize something just for you. That sound OK?”
This seems silly, but most sales people assume that the prospect
understands why the questions are being asked and that isn’t always the
case.
I was working with a salesperson in the field after a brief
introduction, he started asking a million questions. The prospect
answered about 15 questions and then finally sighed and said “You’re
kind of nosy aren’t you?” It was true classic sales moment. Point made?
Involvement is equally straightforward. When you go on appointments,
bring forms, checklists, samples, or other interactive tools where
future customers can start writing, showing, or helping fill in the
blanks.
Both preparation and involvement need to be more than gimmicks: they
prove your commitment to customization, and they’re the first step to a
collaborative and lasting business relationship.
Want another easy way to get involved in your customer’s operation? Always ask for the tour.
Whether it’s a current customer or someone new, a tour is a good way
to see their operation firsthand, get your blood circulating with a
brisk walk, and have a more casual level of conversation with your new
business friend than what is possible with a big old desk between the
two of you. Here is a secret… it both lowers their defences and makes
you more comfortable and REAL.
Want some other ways to boost involvement?
•Ask better, deeper questions
•Show them samples, pictures, products – make your pitch as hands-on as possible
•Ask them about their background and history (people love to talk about
themselves – hey, why do you think we wrote this book?!?)
•If you have a brochure, walk them through it – don’t just hand it to them
•Use PowerPoint sparingly, and make it much MORE visual (a LOT more pictures) and much LESS verbal (a LOT fewer words).
Stop the presses – let’s back up a few lines. Here is a thought:
DEATH to POWERPOINT presentations!
I have almost never seen a salesperson use a PowerPoint presentation
like the one described above. If you can do it, great – but it is rare.
You may be better off scrapping it all together. It lessens involvement
and reduces your product or service to a series of bullets. People
don’t buy bullets.
I have salespeople who tell me, “but we’re required to use the
official company 37 page PowerPoint.” Well shame on your sales managers
and their bosses because they are killing involvement and you are
boring the prospect to death!
These may seem like simple changes to make. And they are. Look, nothing we advocate in this book is rocket science.
In fact, the only thing remarkable about it is that more salespeople
don’t DO IT!!! That’s exactly why it’s so powerful and effective.
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