Thursday, 09 February 2012
Advice on Questions
For More Sales Success,Ask the Right QuestionsTony Cole

Asking the right question is always key to getting the right information. According to WIKI HOW, sales people spend too much time "pitching" and not enough time asking questions. 
 
This practice also applies to real life.  Let me illustrate.  
 
My brother-in-law Mike and I spend some time together--fishing. We don't talk about his printing business or our business helping sales people achieve sales success.  We spend time fishing, although with little success.  
 
Mike called me recently and asked, "What does the 4th of July look like?" I replied, "It looks like the 5th, but a...Read More >>

The 12 Deadly Sins of Sales Questioning - Are you...Jim Domanski

Are you a good questioner? Most sales reps are not. Here is a list of the twelve most common "sins" made by tele-sales reps (or field reps for that matter) and what you can do about them. Are you guilty of any of these mistakes?

Deadly Sin #1:  Not Asking Questions at All

Still, after the millions of words that have been written about the importance and value of questioning, there are sales reps that continue to ignore the advice and simply pitch the product. Asking questions gets clients involved by getting THEM to tell YOU what they want or need...Read More >>

The Selling Power of The Provocative QuestionMichel Neray

 When you tell prospects and clients about what you can do for them, how much do you 'tell' your way through your story, and how much do you 'ask'?

If you're like most people, you try to tell as much as you can, as quickly as you can, in order to give your prospect as much information as possible in the hopes that something will trigger some interest. After all, you've got excellent credentials to describe, great case studies, impressive expertise and a gazillion years of experience, (especially if you combine all the experience of each of the partners of the...Read More >>

The Worst Question a Salesman Can AskMitchell Osak

Perhaps the most popular opener of many sales reps is the question: “What keeps you up at night?”  A recent article in the Harvard Business Review by the authors of a new book, The Challenger Sale:  Taking Control of the Customer Conversation says that this technique may prevent sales and reduce customer loyalty.  According to Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson and proven through our consulting experience, a better strategy would be to redesign the entire sales experience.

Conventional wisdom underscored by numerous sales training programs says that the above question is a good beginning to a sales conversation.  The objective is to identify a client’s burning needs so that the rep can promote his or her own solution aka help them sleep at night.  No doubt, this approach has worked with many clients.  However, it suffers from three important but habitually ignored flaws which limit its effectiveness:

1.    Diagnosing needs by a sales rep is a very difficult undertaking, especially in real time.  The more complex the product or problem, the tougher the process;

2.    We have seen this seemingly innocuous question be perceived as disingenuous or cliché when delivered crudely and;

3.    The question is based on an unproven assumption that companies including their agents will always understand or will admit to a stranger their true needs.

A new strategy

A better sales path would be to tell customers what they need to know.  In essence, the sales person educates customers on problems and solutions that they may not be aware of.   This isn’t your standard solution-selling approach, focused on open-ended needs diagnosis. Instead, this sales strategy emphasizes delivering valuable information to customers instead of extracting information from them. In effect, the sales rep assumes the role of a problem-solving, trusted advisor at the beginning of the conversation.

Customers benefit in many ways from this new approach.  They get fact-based insights and solutions from the outset; they feel that they are not being “sold to” and; they experience real empathy for their concerns.  These types of sales interactions will predictably improve closing rates, increase client satisfaction scores and enhance loyalty.  In our research, sales outcomes improve for a variety of reasons: 1)  a company or sales rep can more easily differentiate themselves, particularly in highly transactional or commodity markets;  2) delivering value up-front establishes an implicit obligation for the client to continue a conversation and;  3)  providing rich insights clearly demonstrates corporate capabilities and knowledge.

Research-based findings

Dealings such as these are core elements of a client-centered sales experience,...Read More >>