You’re excited! Your
company has just given you a product or service to sell that every one of your customers needs. Medical sales people wait months, or even years for these products or services to be released. This should be a slam-dunk, or as many product managers like to tell the field sales force, “We have given you a license to kill!” Before you start “gunning for bear,” make sure you consider your prospect’s perspective first. Remember, in the medical sales world, the little voice in your prospect’s head is probably asking two questions. The first, of course, is WIIFM (what’s in it for me) or WIIFMP (what’s in it for my patient). The next question is, “Why should I buy from you?” Sales people walk around trying to sell their products the same way that their competitors sell, and then become upset when their prospects treat that product or service as a commodity. What are you doing to make it less of a commodity and more of a unique solution to one of your prospect’s problems? Here is a simple test for when you are practicing your sales presentations (you do practice your sales presentations before actually giving them, right?). Every time you make a statement about your product or service in your sales presentation, give it the “so what” test. The “so what” test is simple. Just ask yourself, can the prospect, when he or she is comparing your offering to what he or she already has, say “so what?” “So what” implies that what they are using already has that feature, or every company’s product has that feature, or should have that feature. Another way to look at the test, is to be able to nullify the “so what” if they should say it. Let’s say that your product comes in 8 different sizes. So what! Everybody who makes your product makes at least 8 different sizes. But what if you make 8 different sizes and each of these sizes are completely interchangeable with the other components in your product line – something your competitors cannot state. You now have a way to pass the so what test! What it comes down to quite simply, is “what reasons are you giving your prospect to buy from you?” If you can present your product in a way that positions it as unique, then you have a shot at a sale. But if the customer perceives it as just a “me too” product, then you are probably just wasting both your time and his. Try the “so what” test the next time you prepare a presentation. Chances are, you will create a more compelling argument for why your prospects should buy from you.
| Mace Horoff - | 
| Mace Horoff is a professional speaker and medical device sales trainer. He as a successful, award-winning sales representative in the medical device industry for over 22 years. Mace is founder and president of Sales Pilot Consulting, a company dedicated to training medical device representatives for success. He can be reached at (561)333-8080 or
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For information on having Mace speak for your group or to learn more about Sales Pilot training programs, visit www.MedicalSalesTraining.com Read More >> | |
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