As money gets tight, decision making authority gets moved higher. Past decision makers, the people who previously have given you orders, suddenly move from being decision makers to [albeit significant] decision influencers, the problem is they don't tell you - something stops them. So here is the acid test - are you dealing with the "budget holder" or the "budget caretaker", find out who REALLY owns the business problem, who REALLY holds the budget and THIS is your decision maker.
Showing posts with label key selling time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label key selling time. Show all posts
Monday, July 20, 2009
WINNING NEW CLIENTS - TIP OF THE WEEK No. 16
Can't get the deal closed, are you REALLY dealing with the decision maker?
Monday, March 23, 2009
WINNING NEW CLIENTS - TIP OF THE WEEK No. 10
IS YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH YOUR PROSPECT TOO GOOD?
The danger in “relationship selling” is that sometimes YOU do too good a job. If you have some deals stalling at the moment look out for this - you build such a good relationship with the prospect or client that they don't “have the heart” to tell you they are not going ahead. The sale just seems to drag on, with them putting up seemingly good reasons to stall, and you ending up in "continuation" mode. If you are feeling this is the case then politely tell them (don't ask them) that YOU are withdrawing your proposal as the time does not seem right for them to make a decision. A real prospect will say “hold on not so fast” and give you the real situation. A real prospect but where the timing genuinely is wrong will say “phew! would you, thanks I appreciate that” BUT they DO come back to you. The people you don't ask at all but you end up pestering – they are the ones where that good relationship eventually falters, even if they were going to buy they often don't. Never be afraid to offer to walk away!
The danger in “relationship selling” is that sometimes YOU do too good a job. If you have some deals stalling at the moment look out for this - you build such a good relationship with the prospect or client that they don't “have the heart” to tell you they are not going ahead. The sale just seems to drag on, with them putting up seemingly good reasons to stall, and you ending up in "continuation" mode. If you are feeling this is the case then politely tell them (don't ask them) that YOU are withdrawing your proposal as the time does not seem right for them to make a decision. A real prospect will say “hold on not so fast” and give you the real situation. A real prospect but where the timing genuinely is wrong will say “phew! would you, thanks I appreciate that” BUT they DO come back to you. The people you don't ask at all but you end up pestering – they are the ones where that good relationship eventually falters, even if they were going to buy they often don't. Never be afraid to offer to walk away!
Monday, March 2, 2009
WINNING NEW CLIENTS - TIP OF THE WEEK No. 8
ARE YOU MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR AVAILABLE SELLING TIME?
There is never enough time in a day and once the day has gone, its gone! Don't forget “Prime Time” – the time when prospects, clients and customers are most likely to be available and receptive. This will vary from industry to industry, market to market, job to job.
If you have a "sell / do" role - lawyers, CPAs, consultants, sales engineers - put time aside that is only for selling. Just because its the beginning of the month, don't fool yourself, watch out for the time bandits that steal your business development and sales time. You should NEVER be doing anything except pro-active sales activity in Prime Time.
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