Believe it or not, no one actually buys your service. No one buys coaching. No one buys consulting. No one buys financial planning. So what do people buy? Well, there are, in fact, two things people buy.
The first thing people buy is a solution to a problem.
People buy a service only because they believe it will solve certain problems and give them certain results. They are not buying the "how" of a service. Your service is simply the "how" you do it. Your service is the tool or method you use to solve problems and deliver results.
Do you buy a hammer because you just want a hammer? Do you buy a car
because you just want a car? Do you go to the dentist because you
happen to feel like being drilled? These examples show you that you are
buying a solution to a problem; you are buying a result. You would not
buy a hammer, a car or go to the dentist unless they all solved
problems and delivered results.
Just suppose you focus on telling someone all about "how" your coaching
and consulting service works and what it is. At the end of the
conversation (if they are still listening), they will have a good
understanding of your "how" but they'll be left wondering what problems
you will solve for them and what results you will deliver.
If people do not know what problems you will solve for them and the
results you will deliver, it is highly unlikely that they will buy your
service. If however you focus on understanding their problems and the
results they will get, you will be focussing on what people are buying
and your chances of success will be dramatically increased.
The second thing people buy is YOU
Once someone has decided they have a problem they want solved, they
then make a decision as to who will solve it for them. If you have
focused the conversation on telling them all about your "how" and what
your service is, they will feel that you are focussed on yourself and
your needs. When the focus is on you, people get the sense that you
have your own best interest at heart and don't really care about them.
They will start to think you are simply trying to sell them something,
and all sorts of sales resistance will surface.
If you have been focussing the conversation on understanding their
problems, they will feel that you have their best interests at heart.
They will start to trust you and open up to you. They will naturally
decide you are the person to solve their problems (assuming of course
there are problems to be solved, etc).
So in summary, don't focus on selling your services. Instead, have
conversations where you focus on understanding problems and then people
will assume you know "how" to deliver results. The more you focus on
understanding their problems, the more they will trust that you are the
one they should be working with.
(c) Tessa Stowe, Sales Conversation, 2006.
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