Think Twice Before Selling ROI
by Paul Johnson
Published on this site: April 13th, 2005 - See
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When we're selling to business people, our value proposition
has to show a good return. Solid, credible Return On Investment
(ROI) calculations are supposed to prove this for us. But
if we don't think twice, calculating ROI can sabotage our
sale.
Lots has been written about various ROI methods -- return
on assets, net present value, months to break even -- and
I'm not knocking any of them here. Use the one that serves
your customer and your purposes best. Create the financial
model that shows your offering is indeed a good investment,
far exceeding your prospect's hurdle rate. But don't stop
there.
If your prospect decides your figures are believable and
accepts your argument as valid, that may or may not be good
news for you. Here's the rub; the effort and energy you have
expanded to extract relevant figures, analyze them, put them
into a presentation, and then "sell" them to your
prospect may have helped your competitor more than you!
Once your prospect accepts your ROI arguments, their conclusion
is not what you might think. You may be assuming they will
now feel justified in buying your offering. In reality, their
conclusion is that several solutions like yours probably all
make financial sense. They are now ready to buy - as soon
as they know they are getting a fair price. Now that you've
done all the hard work and convinced them to buy something,
it's time for them to compare your offer to the competition's.
You better think twice before you induce them to do that!
Here is how you can "think twice" and resolve the vulnerability
you have created for yourself.
Think first about preparing an ROI presentation based on
common, generic aspects associated with your category of solution.
Get the prospect to understand the financial benefits of investing
in a solution like yours. As before, use convincing, relevant,
proven data so they can fully accept the financial benefits
as real and attainable.
Now it's time to "think twice." Consider each of
your competitive advantages and build separate ROI models
to quantify the advantages of each. This is your chance to
attach a figure to your differential advantage.
A software company used this approach to justify the perceived
expense of their system to business executives. Their presentation
on common benefits demonstrated a solid ROI that would get
the executives' attention. Next, the salesperson would present
additional ROI calculations that quantified the value of their
seven unique system attributes. This second ROI layer improved
financial returns by almost 30 percent. Their software package
was far from the cheapest, but nowhere near 30% more than
any of their competitors. As a result, buyers rarely found
reason to shop around.
Thinking twice can earn you higher margins and a shorter
sales cycle. You will avoid pushing prospects into the arms
of your competitors. Plus, you will finally be able to quantify
and capture the value in your differential advantage.
Give your ROI presentation a second effort, and you'll jump from
sabotaging your sale to securing it.

Paul Johnson of Panache and Systems LLC consults
and speaks on business strategy for systematically boosting
sales performance using Shortcuts to Yes. Check out
more salesforce development tips at
http://panache-yes.com/tips.html.
Call Paul direct in Atlanta, Georgia, USA at (770) 271-7719.

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