Avoiding the Sales Talk Sledgehammers
There is a saying that when all you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The underlying idea is that given the choice of only one tool, you'll probably try to use it in inappropriate situations. On the surface of many sales pitches is an appeal that at first sounds persuasive, but may actually be counter-productive for the intended prospect. Many of these appeals have become clich', phrases repeated so often, that we don't look at the logic behind them. In fact, an accepted premise of much sales training is that 'people buy emotionally and justify logically.' However, this really doesn't describe the purchasing habits of the sophisticated buyer.
Sophisticated buyers are well-informed consumers, accustomed to reaching a decision only after research and deliberation. They are much less likely to succumb to the pseudo-logic found in many scripted sales pitches. Sophisticated buyers look behind the logic of these claims and what they find amounts to sales sledgehammers'blunt, heavy instruments not well-suited to the job at hand. Their first impulse is to get away from them by disengaging. If you want to be successful with this type of buyer, you'll need to avoid swinging the following sledgehammers.
'We have over 100 years combined experience in this area.' The 'combined experience' phrase is a dead giveaway you're stretching your credibility. Here are some ways the sophisticated buyer interprets combined experience. 'We have 20 people in the firm, each with about 5 year's experience. So we are spread extremely thin and not very deep.' 'The reason we don't have any one person with 20 year's experience is that no one wants to stay here that long.' Using this phrase in a relatively young field, such as technology, is downright silly. Besides, most people don't care about experience nearly as much as results.
Sales people often tell prospects 'That's a great question!' It's a decidedly clumsy attempt to compliment the prospect. Sophisticated buyers see through it immediately. Granted, some can use it with more finesse than others, but like most techniques, it is ineffective once recognized. If you insist on keeping it in your sales repertoire, here are three guidelines to use it more effectively. First, use it only once. By the third or fourth time people hear they've asked a great question, they become suspect. Second, don't use it in a group of people. When everyone is asking great questions, no one feels special. Third, don't plug it in automatically as part of a script. I've seen salespeople look for the opportunity to use this phrase, no matter how mundane the question.
'If you break the price of this down, it comes to the equivalent of one cup of caf'atte (or substitute your own) a day.' Many think caf'atte is overpriced in the first place and in the second place, some never drink it. This is a completely ineffective appeal to most. There is always the risk, that you will choose an example that someone is unfamiliar with. An even more important reason to avoid this tactic lies in the different nature of of the sophisticated buyer. They tend to be long-term thinkers. They want to know if they are receiving value for the price. They don't follow the monthly payment mentality of the credit card buyer. Amortizing cost on a daily basis simply isn't the way they think.
When I was shopping for a new vehicle, a phrase I heard repeatedly was 'What will it take to get your business today'' Again, some people used it with more finesse than others. Some people used it after 5 minutes, some used ......
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