eNewsletter Mar 2015: Selling to Your Customer's Customer
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Hi!
It's now
March, and I suppose you are re-starting your
engines to grow your business and achieve
better results now.
While the
economic outlook may not look very optimistic
this year, perhaps it is thus the time to
beef-up your sales force, either to develop
new business opportunities, OR
capture your
competitor's key accounts.
Hence, this month's
topics:
-
Selling to Your
Customer's Customer; and
-
Service Standards
for Industrial Products and Services
This
issue's main article is on "Selling
to Your Customer's Customer", and
we would like to address a specific sales
issue whereby your customer would like to buy
a higher-quality product (at a higher price)
from you, BUT their customer is not willing to
pay more for better quality.
In brief:
-
Since time is perhaps the
most precious resource a sales
person can have, it is essential
that sales people spend time on
well-qualified prospects. It
is sometimes worthwhile to take the
next step of qualifying the
customer's customer, before
committing too much time and
resources on that customer;
-
To sell to your
customer's customer, sales people
would have to work with various functions
within the customer's
organisation, including R&D
and Sales & Marketing.
Influencing your customer's Sales
& Marketing team could be a
good way of winning their
customers
-
At
some point, sales people might
even have to help their
customer's sales people to
create and justify the value
that they can jointly create
for the customer's
customer. Failing to do
so may result in loss of sales
after months of effort trying
to win the sale. Read
on... ...
To read the rest of this
newsletter, pls.
click
here (http://www.psycheselling.com/page4.html).
Selling to Your
Customer's Customer
by c.j. Ng
David is one of
the more experienced sales
managers that know that
approaching procurement/
purchasing managers to
sell his high-end, high
quality industrial
products and solutions
would be futile.
Instead, he works
closely with the
Research &
Development (R&D)
departments of his
customers to
help
them jointly create
revolutionary new
products for the
customer's customer.
The
R&D people in David's
customers' organisations lap
up the offer enthusiastically,
even proactively asking David
to provide more technical
support so that the new
products could be developed
quickly.
Unfortunately, when David's
customer presented the new,
revolutionary product to the
customer's customer, the
latter responded with "It's
great, but we need to make
this cheaper." This same
feedback was then passed on to
David, who was then asked by
his customer to reduce his
price significantly.
However,
after spending lots of time
and resources working with the
customer's R&D to jointly
create this new product for
the customer, David's company
could not reduce price as they
would have to recover the
costs of this initial
investments. Besides,
what David is providing for
the customer is already a
high-end, revolutionary
technology, that is not and
should not be given away at
cheap prices.
Now David is frustrated and
devastated.
After spending months to
help the customer,
ultimately he could not make
the sale, with price being
the main reason. Now,
David is contemplating if he
should go and sell cheaper
products and solutions
instead.
Qualifying
Your Customer's
Customer
Perhaps
one of the most precious
resources that a sales
person can have is
time. A salesperson
typically spends at most
30% of the average work
day meeting with customers
face-to-face. The
rest of the time is either
spent on travelling,
internal meetings or doing
admin work.
What this means is that
sales people can waste
their precious time on
poor prospects who are
unlikely to buy, or they
can focus their energies
on qualified prospects who
could eventually become
paying customers.
At the same time,
experienced sales people
are acutely aware that
they should spend more
time with non-Purchasing
or non-Procurement people
in the customers'
organisations, such as
R&D or Engineering or
Production so that they
can get deeper insights
about the customers'
needs, and even help
identify hidden needs
where the sales people
could add value.
However,
not
all customers are worth
the while to spend
quality time with.
Some customers are not
targeted or qualified
ones, whom essentially
would not be buying
eventually. This
could be due to mismatches
in terms of needs,
technology, price or even
market segment.
Instead of trying to win
over the so-called tough
customer, sales people
might be better off by
focusing on customers
whose needs and profile
matches more of what the
sales people can offer,
and could add value to.
While a
growing number of sales
people are working closely
with the customer's R&D
department to jointly create
the next-generation product
for the customer's customer,
these new products
eventually got rejected by
the customer's customer,
citing the
high price as
the main objection.
Although
some of the customer's
customer's
objections can be
resolved in different
ways, perhaps
sales people would need to
take the initial step of
qualifying the customer's
customer. If the sales
person is proposing a
revolutionary
next-generation product, and
the customer's customer is
really focusing on the
low-end market, then perhaps
that might not be a good
match.
However, IF
the customer's customer who
was focusing on the low-end
market, would like to
re-position his business to
cater for the
mid-to-high-end market, then
perhaps there's a chance to
create value, IF he
then needs a revolutionary
next-generation product to
do so.
Influencing
Your
Customer's
Customer
There are times when the
reason the customer buys
from a supplier is solely
because the customer's
customer had specifically
appointed that supplier to
be the upstream
supplier. Many sales
people understand the
significance of the
customer's customer.
However, reaching out and
influencing that
customer's customer is
usually more
complex.
It is unusual and at
times, strange, for the sales
person to reach out
directly to the
customer's customer.
It is thus more likely
that the sales person
reaches out to the
customer's sales people to
understand more about
their customer's needs and
concerns.
Hence, while it is
commendable and at times
essential that sales people
reach
out to the customer's
R&D and Engineering
departments to influence
them to buy
the revolutionary
next-generation product, it
is another thing altogether
if such added value could be
accepted by the customer's
customer at the
price that all parties
are agreeable to.
To
make sure that the supplier
does not commit too much
resources for the customer's
R&D when there is no
real need from the
customer's customer, the
sales person would need to
involve such discussions
with the customer's sales
& marketing people from
time to time.
Coaching
the Customer's Sales
People
There are many a time when
the sales person is much
well-trained than the
customer's sales force,
especially in the areas of
guiding and educating the
end customer. In other
words, if the customer's
customer voice out a price
objection of which the
customer's sales person is
unable to handle
effectively, then the sales
person might just lose the
sale. This is
especially the case if the
customer is a much smaller
company than the customer's
customer.
As such, the sales
person might need to do the
following:
-
Conduct
joint sales calls
with the customer's
sales people; and
-
Coach
the customer's sales
people on
how they could in turn
handle their customers
Would
doing so be extremely
time-consuming for the sales
person? Definitely!
However, as mentioned
earlier, the sales person
would have to qualify the
customer and the customer's
customer to make sure that
it's all worthwhile before
making such huge time and
resources commitment.
It is also just as important
for the sales person to have
frequent sanity checks along
the way so that what the
sales person is selling
through to the customer's
customer is relevant to
their needs.
Need
help in getting
your sales
people selling
through to the
customer's
custoomer?
Simply e-mail info@directions-consulting.com or call +86-136 7190 2505 or Skype: cyd001 and arrange to
buy me a mocha.
All information
shall be kept in
confidence.
Power
Breakfast
Hour: 25
Mar 2015
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to Conduct
Sales
Trainings that
Drive
Performance
-
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goals to your
training
objectives and
plans;
-
How do you identify the behaviours that need to
be improved
through
training or
coaching;
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effectiveness
in practical
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DATE:
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TIME:
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PRICE:
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Pls. check
out our web sites www.directions-consulting.com
and
www.psycheselling.com/page4.html
for more inspiration.
Tips for
Customer Service
Professionals:
Service Standards
for Industrial
Products and
Services
by c.j.
Ng
Let's
face it.
Service
standards for
industrial and
consumer
products are
completely
different.
While consumer
products could
be well-concerned
about issues
such as
delighting the
customer and
brand loyalty,
industrial
customers
focus on
matters that
are rather
different
In
essence, the
factors that
industrial customers
are more
concerned
about can be
summed up in
the following
categories:
-
Reliability. Whether you,
as the seller
or service
provider, can
deliver your
promises in
ALL aspects
ranging from
product
quality,
delivery lead
times,
maintenance
schedules etc.
-
Relationship. In
essence,
building
mutual trust
between the
seller and
buyer.
-
Responsiveness. Not just
responsiveness
to customer's
request, but
also taking
the initiative
to respond to
the customer's
needs BEFORE
they even asks
for it
-
Resourcefulness. How external
and internal
resources can
be contracted
and packaged
to the
customer
Consumer
customers tend
to be much more
fickle and are
more likely to
switch to
different brands.
Industrial
customers, on the
other hand, prefer to
deal with the
tried-and-proven,
and are much
less likely to
switch to
different suppliers.
However, they
might still switch
to a different
supplier (even
partially) if
one of the
following
happens:
- The
current
supplier made
a huge mistake
and caused the
customer
significant
losses or
customer
complaints;
- The
customer has a
need that the
current
supplier is
unable to
fulfil; OR
-
The customer placed a huge order that the current supplier could not fulfil the entire volume on time
Hence,
while on one
hand industrial
service
providers could
be
less concerned
about customers
switching to competitors
right away,
they would
still have to
manage these
customers'
expectations
and deliver
the appropriate
service
standards.
For competitors
will
definitely be
trying to
lure
your customers
away, and buy
from them
instead!
To find out how
you can implement
great service
for industrial
products and
services,
you can e-mail info@directions-consulting.com
or call +86-136
7190 2505 or
Skype: cydj001
Directions
Management Consulting
Directions
Management Consulting LeadershipIQ
in China and Asia. LeadershipIQ
helps more than
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every year through
the facts drawn from
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ongoing leadership
studies ever
conducted is used to
help companies apply
resources where the
best possible
results be achieved.
In
addition, Directions
Management
Consulting is a
leading provider of
sales performance,
innovation and
experiential
learning solutions
in China and many
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Using the Belbin Team Role
Profiling,
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and leadership at
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is the
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specialising in
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etc.
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