Selling And Sales Management
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Explain how customer oriented behaviour can be managed in order to develop successful relationships within selling.
How to interact with customers and prospect
Quality-driven organization build customer database that provide salespeople information on all kinds of transactions with customers. (e.g., billing, what is on order contacts, previous revenues, average order quantities, and so forth)
Documenting all the steps required, for instance, from taking an order from a customer to delivering it means that you have to understand how order are taken
Possible sales force quality-related processed: Ventes possibles forcer liées à la qualité de traitement.
Prospect identification
Customer feedback
Skills development
Telephones
Supplier’s relations
Quotas and measurements
Complaints
Competitive analysis
Compensation
Order processing
Delivery pricing
Sales and planning
Market segmentation
Product liability
Service quality
Steps of the selling process
Interaction phase:
Relating
Need discovery
Advocating
Closing
Post Interaction phase:
Supporting
Implementing
Dealing with dissatisfaction
Enhancing the relationship
Basic types of selling approach
Stimulus response:
With a stimulus-response presentation, a series of statements are constructed about an offering, so as to stimulate a positive response by the customers. This is often referred to as benefitizing an offering.
it means translating features of a product into benefits believed to be a value to the customers
Need-satisfaction:
Discovering and meeting customers’ needs asking questions that elicit a customer’s buying needs. (sales skills are necessary because customers may become irritated by the questions or find them intrusive)
The processus to discover needs take place early in the selling cycle
Problem-solution:
Same than need-satisfaction method but there are differences
1: selling process is based on more formal studies of the customer’s operations. The first objectives isn’t to discover the customer’s needs but get the permission to conduct a formal study, the objectives is to submit a written proposal based on the study. Suite page 79
Building relationship
“Having a superior product is not good enough” “Customers want and expect more, especially trust and responsiveness” Doyle and Engemann, “How to teach”, p.41
Objectives:
Ensure a stream of purchases
Upgrading of the equipment each client purchases over time
Wich way:
Cement a professional relationship by adding value
Meeting expectations
Developing trust .
Having a willimgness to bargain
Growing relationship evolve through five general stages
1. Awareness:
Recognition that a supplier may be able to satisfy an important need
Gain customer’s attention; demonstrate how the product can satisfy a need
This stage refers to recognition by the client that the seller is a viable source to a product or service, Commitments at this stage are non-existent. They are each looking out solely for their own objectives. They want to know who you are before they are ready to spend much time with you.
Example:
Ball Company is a packaging company with a high-technology base. Items use in space technologies.
The purpose of the first call is to explain further about the company.
On subsequent calls, salespeople tell buyers about each of the four products.
The validity of Ball Corporation selling approach is backed by research comparing the sales approaches of average and high-performing salespeople.
This research found that higher-performing salespeople felt that assessing the prospect's knowledge of the seller's company and discussing the prospect's background were more important activities in the initial sales call than did lower-performing salespeople.
Conversely, the lower-performing salespeople felt that making a complete presentation and explaining each product benefit was more important than did higher-performing salespeople. Gerrard Macintosh, Kenneth Anglin, David Szymanski and James Gentry, “Relationship in selling, a cognitive analysis”, Journal of personal selling and sales management, 4 (Fall 1992), pp. 23-34.
2. Exploration:
Initial trial with limited commitments by both parties. This trial period may go on for an extended period of time
Gain initial acceptance / Build a successful relationship
The heightened sense that the possibility for mutual benefit exists is the beginning of the exploration
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