Sometimes
I ask my seminar attendees, "How many people here are
in sales?" It's interesting to watch how people respond
to that question. There are always a few people who
will raise a hand at first, and then another hand goes
up, and then another, and soon perhaps half the people
in the room have a hand up, even though they may be
in fields such as management, administration, finance
and accounting.
I
then smile and ask again, "Now, how many people here
are really in sales?" At this point, virtually every
person in the room has raised a hand. We all smile at
the realization that each of us is in the business of
selling every single day.
From
the time you get up in the morning until the time you
go to bed at night, you are negotiating, communicating,
persuading, and influencing - trying to get people to
cooperate with you to accomplish the things that you
want them to accomplish. So the pivotal question with
regard to selling is not if you are doing it, but if
you are good at it.
All
top executives are excellent salespeople. All effective
parents are wonderful salespeople. All effective employees
use sales techniques to get their coworkers and bosses
to go along with them and to cooperate with them in
getting the job done. Everyone who is effective in virtually
any area of life that involves other people is an excellent
salesperson of some kind.
Unfortunately,
over the years, a stigma has grown up around the selling
profession. Many people feel that selling is a low-level
type of activity and they don't like to be associated
with it - even people who are in sales! Virtually no
colleges or universities have a "Department of Selling,"
even though almost 15 million Americans make their living
by selling something to someone. It is the largest single,
identifiable occupational group in the United States.
Salespeople
are the movers and shakers in every business and industry.
They are the key people who create the demand for all
the products and services that keep everyone employed
at every other occupation.
The
basis for all successful sales efforts is a discipline
called gap analysis. Gap analysis is clearly defining
what your idea, product, or service can do for a person
and then deciding how to demonstrate that in a compelling
way.
People
tend to buy based on how they anticipate feeling as
a result of owning and enjoying a particular product
or service. In fact, they make their decision based
on whether or not that feeling is more valuable to them
than the money they will have to part with.
In
selling or persuading anyone to do anything, there is
an "ABC theory of motivation" that is very powerful.
In it, "A" represents a state of "felt dissatisfaction."
This means that the individual is not satisfied with
his or her current situation or condition.
The
"C" represents a state of greater satisfaction.
If the individual can get to this state, the felt dissatisfaction
in his or her current situation will be relieved.
The
"B" in this ABC theory is the product, service,
idea, action, or activity that you are trying to persuade
the person to acquire or to engage in.
So,
to repeat, the "A" is the existing state of dissatisfaction.
The "C" is the future anticipated state of greater satisfaction
or relieved dissatisfaction. The "B" is what you are
offering as a means to that relief.
According
to this theory, getting people to do something that
they would not have done in the absence of your influence
is possible only when a gap exists between their current
situation and the ideal situation that they would like
to enjoy.
The
very best persuaders, communicators, and salespeople
are those who concentrate their attention on identifying
the exact gap that exists and determining how big it
is. They then focus on widening that gap in every possible
way, until the prospect begins to feel more and more
dissatisfied with his or her current situation and more
and more desirous of enjoying the preferable situation
that is achievable by the use of the product, service,
or idea.
Let
me give you an example. I was quite happy with my car
until recently. It was a nice car, it was paid off,
and it was running fine. Then I took it in to the dealership
for a regular checkup and service. The service manager
did an excellent job of analysis and came back to me
with the sad fact that the car required not only new
tires all around, but also a complete new set of brakes,
a wheel alignment, and a lot of other things. The total
cost would be about $3,000.
You
can imagine my reaction. I was shocked. I had no idea
that the car required that much service. Well, I thought,
what the heck, at least it's cheaper than buying a new
car. Then a salesman at the dealership pointed out to
me that the car would drop another $2,000 in value at
the turn of the model year, which was coming up in about
60 days. He told me that if I kept the car, and repaired
it, I would lose $5,000 off the total value of the car,
which I could never recover.
Suddenly,
I went from complacency about my car to dissatisfaction,
and then to great dissatisfaction and an intense desire
to improve my condition in some way. The salesman then
went on to explain that he could take my car as a down
payment on a brand new luxury automobile, with no cash
out of my pocket, and he could spread the payments over
three, four, or five years so that the cost to me would
be very reasonable.
At
that, all my resistance vanished. I started out satisfied
with my car, then became so dissatisfied with it that
I bought a brand new, expensive luxury car - and, surprisingly
enough, I drove away happy.
Here
are some of the key points in gap analysis that my salesman
applied. You can use these same techniques to persuade
people to move from where they are to where you want
them to be.
Remember
that people buy solutions to their problems, not products
or services. In fact, as a salesperson, you need to
be more of a problem finder than a vendor. The more
you focus on the problem, or the gap that exists between
the real and the ideal in the customer situation, the
faster you will find a place where your product or service
can plug the gap.
The
bigger the problem that the customer or prospect has,
the bigger the potential sale. One of the most powerful
questions you can ask a person is, "How much is that
problem costing you?" Help him to identify not only
the obvious, direct costs, but also the not-so-obvious,
indirect costs.
Ask
the prospect, "What are the implications? What is the
meaning of that problem to you? What other things does
it affect in your work or personal life?"
The
most astute salespeople are those who are capable of
finding a small gap and then expanding it into a wide
gap. They are capable of discovering a small problem
or dissatisfaction in the mind of the prospect and then,
by questioning and commenting, increase it until the
prospect develops an intense desire for the solution
they are offering.
If
you are selling to companies, you have to ask what the
decision makers in the organization want to accomplish.
What is the gap between where they are and where they
want to be? How is the decision maker rewarded, and
for what? What does the decision maker have to do to
earn the respect, esteem, and support of his or her
superiors and coworkers?
One
of the deepest subconscious needs of all people is the
need for self-esteem, for feeling valuable, important,
and worthwhile. If you can ascertain what people need
to do to increase their self-esteem and their perceived
value in their organization, and then show them that
by using your product or service, they can earn the
approval and appreciation of the people around them
and above them, they will often be very motivated to
buy what you are selling.
When
you meet prospects for the first time, you will find
that they are usually unaware that a gap exists between
where they are and where they could be. They will often
say things like, "I'm not interested," or "I can't afford
it," or "We're quite happy with our current situation."
These are normal and natural responses.
No
one likes to change. Your job is to describe a state
of even greater satisfaction that they could enjoy if
they did something different. Virtually all advertising
is aimed at showing people how much better off they
could be with a product or service that they have not
yet acquired.
Gap
analysis is based on asking good questions – questions
focused on discovering problems that might be troubling
the prospect. There is a direct correlation between
the use of good questioning techniques and sales success.
The
more and better questions you ask aimed at finding a
problem or uncovering a dissatisfaction, the more interest
the prospect will have and the more sales you will make.
The person who asks questions has control.
Good
salespeople always plan the wording of their questions,
rewriting them and practicing them before they get face-to-face
with a prospect. Poor salespeople, on the other hand,
make up their questions as they go along.
Here
are some great questions for gap analysis.
The
first question is an application of the "magic-wand
technique." Imagine that you have a magic wand that
you can wave over the prospect's situation and you ask
this question: "Mr. [or Ms.] Prospect, if this situation
were absolutely perfect in every respect, what would
it look like? Then remain completely silent.
When
the prospect begins to describe that perfect situation,
you'll uncover the gaps you can fill to create his or
her ideal future. When you explain how your product
or service can bridge those gaps, you will greatly enhance
your chances of making a sale.
A
great set of questions begins with the words What if?
For example, you can ask, "What if we could achieve
this particular result for you; what effect would that
have on your current operations?"
Good
questions that grab the prospect's attention will start
him or her visualizing and imagining an ideal future
state, exactly the state that your product or service
is meant to achieve.
A
final key to effective selling through gap analysis
is to share some of the experiences of people who have
previously purchased your product or service. Use third-party
references, testimonials, and anecdotes. Say something
like, "I have a very good customer who had a similar
situation to yours not long ago." Then go on to explain
how your customer was able to rectify that situation
in a cost-effective way by accepting your recommendation.
To
be truly persuasive in the selling process, use gap
analysis. Instead of trying to overwhelm your prospects
with reasons and rationales for doing what you want
them to do, ask questions aimed at uncovering their
current problems, needs, and dissatisfactions. Listen
carefully to the answers they give you, and ask additional
questions to help them expand on their situation.
Take
a few moments to feed their answers back to them, to
show that you were really listening and that you really
understand their needs. Then position yourself to influence
and persuade your prospects by showing them how your
product or service just happens to be the ideal way
to solve their problem, satisfy their need, or achieve
their goal.
When
you take this low-pressure approach to getting people
to do what you want them to do, they will buy from you
with pleasure, and they will recommend you to their
friends. They will feel they are being helped to improve
their lives rather than being pressured into buying
something that they may not want or need.
The
wonderful thing about selling is that it is a learned
skill. No matter what level of selling ability you possess
today, by continued practice, you can become better
and more persuasive. And the more effective you are
at selling, the more successful you will be in every
area of your life.
To
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