Prospect's Needs
Prior to your meeting with the customer, do your homework to find out as
much as you can about his business. Read relevant trade journals, do a
periodicals search for articles about his product or industry at the
library, read the Wall Street Journal. Find out who your customer's
competitors are, what changes are coming in his business and what his
chief concerns are likely to be. But always keep in mind that you will
gain the most valuable information and insight into your customer's
business concerns by talking directly with him.
How to Learn Your Prospect's Needs
Before you can sell anything to anyone, you must first understand what
it is they need. Here are some ways to do that:
Do your homework
Prior to your meeting with the customer, do your homework to find out as
much as you can about his business. Read relevant trade journals, do a
periodicals search for articles about his product or industry at the
library, read the Wall Street Journal. Find out who your customer's
competitors are, what changes are coming in his business and what his
chief concerns are likely to be. But always keep in mind that you will
gain the most valuable information and insight into your customer's
business concerns by talking directly with him.
Open your mind, not your sample case
Don't walk into a customer meeting with a pre-conceived idea of what
you're going to sell them and how you will sell it. You'll sell more in
the long run by finding out what aspect of the transaction matters most
to your customer. For example, even if you and your competitors are each
selling the same widget at the same price, your customer may be most
concerned about payment terms, another might be focused on the
reliability of shipments, while yet another may care most about product
warranties. If you walk in and flip open your widget case before you
find any of this out, you'll have missed an opportunity to distinguish
yourself from your competitors.
Listen closely
When you're on a sales call, you're there to gather at least as much
information as you communicate. This means asking questions and then
keeping quiet until your customer has finished with his answers. Don't
start answering objections before your prospect has finished talking.
The more you can get your customers to talk, the better you will
understand what matters to them. Once you know that, you can make sure
your presentation addresses their concerns -- and eventually get their
business.
Ask questions that provoke dialogue
Avoid asking closed ended questions that will get you "yes" or "no"
answers. Such questions typically start with words like "Is," "Do,"
"Are". Instead, try to ask questions that begin "what" "when" "where"
"how" "tell me" and "why," because they almost force the person to
elaborate. You will get replies that start conversations. For example,
"Do you have problems with vendors?" won't get you as far as "Tell me
what you would like your vendors to do better." Your goal is to get your
prospect talking about his problems and concerns so that you can
determine ways your business can solve them.
Beware of questions that will slam the door shut
Instead, ask questions that will solicit key information. If you ask a
customer "Can I give you a proposal on that project?" you'll get a "yes"
or "no" answer and that's that. But if you start the process by saying
"Tell me the criteria you look for in a proposal..." you are learning
critical information instead of ending the discussion.
Survey your customers and prospects
Use written questionnaires or telephone surveys to learn more about your
customers and prospects. Solicit comments from current customers about
their level of satisfaction with your product or service. Or you might
design a survey that will educate you about your prospects' business
needs. When a customer or a prospect takes the trouble to complete a
questionnaire, you've achieved something more than just learning from
the responses. The fact that he's made even the minimal effort tells you
something about his level of interest in your product or service. You
now have a qualified lead to follow up. |