Sell Without Feeling Like A Used Car Salesman
by Julie Chance
Published on this site: April 19th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Many business owners and professionals are appalled at the thought
of having to sell their products or services. If you are going to
be successful though, regardless of your profession, you are also
going to be in the business of selling. But you don't have to don
a plaid jacket and adopt the sales techniques that have made the
used car salesman infamous.
If we are uncomfortable "selling" our services,
it is generally because we are trying to "sell"
before someone has reached the purchase stage of the buying
process. While selling may never be the favorite part of your
job, by implementing a systematic process you can move potential
clients into the purchase phase and increase your comfort
level and success with selling.
Imagine that you were in the market to purchase a big screen TV.
You had visited a couple of stores to see what was available, done
some research on the internet, talked with friends, and narrowed
the choice down to 3 models. Now you have a few questions you need
answered to help you make your decision. You go to the appliance
superstore, a salesperson approaches you as you enter the department
and asks if she can be of help. She asks you a few questions about
where you plan to put it, your budget, and what the primary use
will be. She answers your questions and helps you decide on the
model that is best for you. Not only are you not put off by the
salesperson, you would have been upset if there would not have been
a salesperson to help you.
Contrast this with a situation where you are visiting an appliance
superstore with a friend. You decide to go check out the big screen
TVs because you've been thinking about getting one. The same salesperson
approaches you and asks if she can help you. You say, "No thanks
I'm just browsing." As if she hadn't heard your reply, she
starts asking you the same questions as in the scenario above.
However, this time you find the questions annoying and the sales
person pushy.
The difference in these two scenarios is simply your position
in the buying process. How would it have been different if
instead of insisting on asking you a series of questions she
had simply given you an article re-print from Consumer Reports
and a list of 10 questions to consider before purchasing a
big screen TV with the store's name, her name and telephone
number at the bottom?
The process people go through in making a buying decision is:
Phase 1: Awareness and Knowledge
Phase 2: Liking and Preference
Phase 3: Conviction and Purchase
The only people you should try to sell your products or services
to are those people in the conviction and purchase phase. The problem
is many businesses do not implement the necessary steps to move
prospective clients to Phase 3 so they are constantly trying to
sell to prospects that are in Phase 1.
Think about it like this, you and your products or services are
standing at the edge of a chasm on Mount Everest. I call it the
Purchase Chasm. Your potential customers are on the other
side. Your job is to get those prospects to cross the chasm on a
flimsy aluminum ladder, one step at a time and ultimately purchase
your services. At this stage your objective is simply to get them
to take that first step out onto the ladder, followed by another
until they reach the ultimate decision to purchase. You don't push,
manipulate or cajole them into purchasing. You simply serve as a
guide providing information and assistance through the process.
So how can you begin to move your potential customers across the
Purchase Chasm?
- Step 1 - Awareness and Knowledge: Before someone
can purchase your product or service they must be aware
of it. They must also be able to picture in their minds
the problems the service will solve for them. And that picture
must be enticing enough to motivate them to take that first
step. At this phase your objective is to make your potential
customers aware of your services and give them knowledge
about the benefits they will gain from working with you.
This is generally done through activities where you can
reach a large number of people at one time. A major goal
at this stage is to collect contact information so you can
continue to provide information to help these prospective
clients move across the Purchase Chasm.
- Step 2 - Liking and Preference: Awareness alone
is not enough. Potential customers must also have a positive
disposition regarding your services. During this phase it
is important to maintain consistent contact. Consistency
builds credibility. You also want to let prospective clients
"sample" your service in order to minimize the
perceived risk of purchase. You can do this by sending out
a regular newsletter (e-mail or hardcopy); sending out a
monthly tip related to the service you provide; offering
free or low cost introductory trainings; participating in
selected networking events on a regular basis; and offering
teleclasses. The important thing is that you are consistently
in contact with these potential clients. After all, you
don't want to leave them out on the middle of the ladder
over a deep chasm without a guide.
- Step 3 - Conviction and Purchase: The final step
in the process is getting those potential customers who
have begun the journey across the chasm to actually make
the decision to purchase. Now it is time to sell. And if
you have developed a relationship with the potential client
throughout their journey, this step should be as simple
as reaching out to take their hand as they reach the end
of the ladder, reassuring them they have made the right
decision by embarking on the journey and asking when they
would like to get started. At this point, it is critical
that you ask them for their business. If you don't, they
will wonder why you had them take the journey. They'll feel
like the person in the appliance superstore who is ready
to make a purchase and can't find a salesperson.
It may take as many as five to 15 exposures to your product
or service for a potential client to move through the process
and cross the Purchase Chasm from lead to loyal customer.
The key is to build those exposures so each one matches the
level of the process where the potential customer currently
is (i.e. direct mass media activities to potential customers
in the awareness phase and use personal selling with prospects
in the conviction and purchase phase).
Writing, speaking and networking are activities that many coaches
and consultants enjoy. By systematically using these activities
as marketing tools you reduce the time you actually have to spend
selling, you focus your selling activities to people who are actually
ready to buy, and it becomes a natural ending to the relationship
building process.

Julie Chance is president of Strategies-by-Design,
a Dallas-based firm that helps businesses from independent
professionals to specialty retailers Map A Path to Success
by bridging the Purchase Chasm from Lead to Loyal Customer.
Strategies-by-Design provides a unique combination of consulting,
coaching and training to help clients improve the return on
their investment in marketing and promotional activities.
For more information or to sign-up for their marketing tips
newsletter, go to www.strategies-by-design.com
or call 972-701-9311.

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