Sales Process The Secret to Closing More Sales
by Alan Rigg
Published on this site: November 7th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Most sales training programs that teach salespeople how to
sell specific products or services do not mention business
problems. This is an unfortunate oversight, as qualifying
and quantifying business problems is the secret to closing
more sales!
What is a Business Problem?
A business problem is any activity or outcome that negatively
impacts a business. Examples of negative impacts include reductions
in revenue, profits, customer satisfaction, employee productivity,
job satisfaction, etc.
Here is an example of a business problem description:
"Many mission-critical software applications (e-business,
manufacturing, point-of-sale, etc.) need to access relational
databases in order to function. If a database has problems
(goes down or suffers data loss or corruption), application
downtime can cost companies tens of thousands of dollars per
minute in lost sales, lost customers, and lost opportunities."
In the above example, the business problem is a database
that is not functioning properly. What is the relationship
between this business problem and the features and benefits
of a product or service?
Features are what actually solve business problems. benefits
are what customers enjoy when the business problem has been
solved.
The only features prospects actually care about are the ones
that will solve their own specific business problems. If we
randomly spew long lists of features and benefits at prospects,
in effect we are hoping they are already aware of their business
problems, and they will somehow figure out which of our (product
or service) features will solve their business problems. This
is a very inefficient way to sell. Plus, we run the risk that
our prospects will not figure out which features will solve
their business problems. or, they may become bored and "switch
off" before we mention features that may actually be of interest
to them!
If you are going to talk about features and benefits, discuss
only those features that will solve your prospect's specific
business problems! of course, you need to identify your prospect's
business problems if you want to have this kind of highly
targeted discussion.
If your employer's product or service training programs do
not specifically address business problems, you will need
to do some digging to uncover them. Ask the question, "What
problems does this product or service solve?" Another
way to ask this question is, "What would motivate a prospect
to make the investment required to buy this product/service?" Then, once you
have made a list of the most important business problems,
ask, "What questions can I ask that will help me figure
out whether a prospect has any of these business problems?"
When you become an expert in business problems and related
qualifying questions, your education will not be complete.
You also need to learn the questions you can ask to quantify
the impact of each business problem.
What is a Quantified Impact?
Quantified impacts are dollar values or percentages with
associated time frames that can be assigned to specific business
problems. In the earlier business problem description, the
quantified impact was "tens of thousands of dollars per
minute".
Quantified impacts are an invaluable aid to closing sales.
How? If the quantified impact of a business problem exceeds
the investment required to fix the problem, a buying decision
is easy to justify. The larger the difference between the
quantified impact and the required investment, the easier
it becomes to close the sale. If the quantified impact is
a multiple of the required investment (for example, a quantified
impact of millions of dollars versus a required investment
of thousands of dollars), the buying decision becomes "a
no-brainer".
Important Note: In order for a quantified impact to
add value to the sales process, your prospects must be the
source of the numbers. Why? In general, prospects don't trust
salespeople. Many have dealt with salespeople who were more
interested in making sales than they were in providing value.
Plus, rospects recognize that salespeople have a vested interest
in creating a compelling business case that can be used to
support a buying decision. This causes prospects to discount
any quantified impact information that salespeople provide.
However, if the prospect is the source of the quantified impact
information, they perceive it as unquestioned truth. This
makes learning how to ask quantifying questions a valuable skill indeed!
If you want to close more sales, invest some time and effort
in identifying the business problems that can be solved by
your products and services. If you become an expert in business
problems and the questions you can ask to 1) determine whether
a prospect has specific business problems, and 2) quantify
the impact of those business problems, you will close more
sales faster and with less effort.

Sales performance expert Alan Rigg is the author of
How to Beat the 80/20 Rule in Selling: Why Most Salespeople
Don't Perform and What to Do About It. His company, 80/20
Sales Performance, helps business owners, executives, and
managers double sales by implementing The Right Formula
for building top-performing sales teams. For more information
and more free sales and sales management tips, visit http://www.8020salesperformance.com

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