"For every
action, there is an equal and opposite reaction." – Sir Isaac Newton
A fundamental
question in selling is not why people sell, but why people
buy.
It is well known
that people buy for their own reasons – not for the seller’s. In
fact, their motivation to buy may have very little to do with the
reasons why the seller thinks he or she should buy. When it comes
down to it, people buy something to meet their needs or resolve the
problems they are facing. According to Neil Rackham, author of
SPIN Selling, people decide to buy when “the pain of the problem
and desire for a solution have been built to the point where they are
greater than the cost of the solution.”
A good sales
professional can help customers come to that realization. But it
doesn’t happen as easily as you might think. Despite the fact that
most people learn the basics of conducting needs analysis,
customizing solutions, and linking benefits to pain in their Sales
101 class, when they are out in the real world, they forget to bring
these classroom lessons to life and somehow their competence,
composure, and confidence evaporates. Faced with self-induced,
pressure-filled selling situations, they confuse telling with
selling.
Equal and
Opposite Reaction
As dairy farmers are apt to say, “Cows don't give milk. You have to
take it from them.” The same is true with selling. Nobody just gives
you a sale. You have to take it. But how you “take it” is very
counterintuitive. A natural tendency of most sellers is to rush in.
And as the Newtonian principle outlines, the equal and opposite
reaction on part of the buyers is to shut them out.
Like milking a
cow, selling can be a delicate operation. While a customer probably
won’t threaten you with a hoof, you’re still faced with the fact that
the harder you push the more push-back you get. Why? As President
Truman once said: “The best way to give advice to your children is to
find out what they want and then advise them to do it.” Nobody likes
to be told what to do – not even children. Imagine going to a doctor
who gives you the same prescription he gave the previous patient
because it worked. By not listening, by not being inquisitive, by not
clarifying assumptions, sellers come across as not caring – or caring
more about themselves – and perpetuate the stereotypes of an
arrogant, pushy salesman we all love to hate.
Breathing Your
Own Exhaust
So, if
you can’t tell prospective buyers how good your products and services
are for them, how the heck are you supposed to sell? Start by
understanding how not to de-sell.
Most salespeople
hate dead air. They become anxious. So they make every effort to fill
the void by talking incessantly about what they know the most – their
own products and services. They get excited about the value they
offer and start spewing the features, advantages, and benefits.
Unfortunately,
the more they talk the more they are de-selling. And the more their
customers’ eyes glaze over and heels dig in. Customers don’t want to
be talked at and pushed. They want to be understood. The ancient
Greek philosopher Diogenes had it right when he said “We have two
ears and one tongue so that we would listen more and talk less.” As
fundamental as this advice is, not talking can be very difficult for
an enthusiastic sales professional.
The greatest
conundrum in selling is this: You can’t sell without a relationship.
And you can’t have a relationship unless you have sold and
demonstrated value. You may be thinking that selling-by-listening
only works in one-on-one selling, and not in more complex, B2B
selling. You would be wrong. No matter how complex the sale, you’re
still dealing with real people who are making decisions – not
faceless corporations. They have the same emotions as anyone else:
ambition to do better, fear of failure, confusion with uncertainty,
need to be recognized, etc.
Listen and Learn
If
telling isn’t selling, then what is? What actions can one take to
break the vicious cycle and not to generate an undesirable, equal and
opposite reaction? Counterintuitive as it sounds, the more successful
salespeople are those that ask the most questions. Not just any
questions, but smart questions posed in a systematic way. Neil
Rackham, in his SPIN Selling Fieldbook, eloquently lays out a
systematic approach to asking four types of questions as follows:
1.
Situation:
Finding out basic facts about the existing situation and establishing
an overall context. This is ideally done through prior research so as
not to bore the buyer to tears because they get very little value out
of it.
2.
Problem:
Asking about the problems, difficulties, and challenges the buyer is
experiencing with the present situation. People buy only when they
have needs and needs almost always start with a dissatisfaction with
the status quo. Follow-up questions identify, clarify, and expand the
buyer’s implicit needs.
3.
Implication:
Understanding the consequences and impacts of the situation, thereby
transforming implicit needs expressed as problems into explicit
needs. They build the significance and seriousness of the problem so
that it is large enough to justify action.
4.
Need-Payoff:
Checking and
assessing the value and usefulness of a solution in a positive and
constructive way. They develop the buyer’s desire for a solution and
move the discussion toward action and commitment.
If you thought
that asking questions in this manner is simple, think again. It is
enormously difficult to have the confidence and patience to step
through these without getting ahead of yourself. It requires
tremendous planning, preparation, and practice. And most importantly
patience.
Patience, My Dear
What
makes sellers anxious is the pressure they put on themselves to
persuade the buyer. When a sale is seen as a conquest, persuasion
naturally becomes the modus operandi and telling appears to be the
fastest, easiest, and safest way to the victory lap. However, if the
sellers adopt a frame of mind to truly understand the buyer’s point
of view, they are likely to become less anxious. If they seek first
to understand, then to be understood, they will be more comfortable
in asking questions. Armed with the answers to these questions, they
will have gained better insights into the buyer’s world and will have
earned the right to help them with a solution.
French
philosopher Voltaire was right when he said many centuries ago:
“Judge a man by his questions rather than by his answers.”