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| How to Shorten the Selling Cycle and Reduce
Buying Stalls |
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By Doug Staneart, CEO of The Leader's Institute
The main reason for buyer resistance and
selling stalls boils down to one simple fact:
the reasons for not buying are bigger to
the prospect than the reason to buy.
If you sell an intangible product
or service,
it may be even tougher to close
down a sale
because your product or service
is not something
people can see, touch, or feel.
So the reasons
for your prospects to buy have
to be vivid,
logical, and emotional. There
has to be a
reason for them to buy NOW, or
they'll put
off making the decision until
later.
When you sit down with a prospect,
ask a
lot of questions about the prospect
related
to your product or service to
get the person
to tell you what is important
in his/her
life.
If you are selling a tangible
product, you
might ask questions like the
following:
- What do you like most about your current
product?
- What do you like least?
- If you could change anything about the product
you have now, what would it be?
- Have any needs changed that make buying a
new product different than the last time
you bought (bigger family, etc.)?
- Why do you want to buy a new product?
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If you are selling an intangible product,
then questions like the following might be
more helpful?
- At this point in your family/career, are
you more concerned with getting ahead, security,
planning for the future, creating a legacy,
being esteemed by other, etc.?
- Is that different from what your focus was
two years ago? Five years ago? Ten years
ago?
- Where do you see yourself in three to five
years?
- What kinds of things have to be put in place
to in order for you to accomplish what you
have planned?
The answer to these and other
questions may
help you determine what is most
important
to your prospect. Now, just look
to see what
types of products/services you
supply that
can help the prospect get what
he/she wants.
For instance, if you sell insurance,
you
have to realize that NO ONE wants
insurance,
but they may want the things
that insurance
provides like security. Or if
you sell real
estate or cars, the car or house
may not
be nearly as important to the
prospect as
the status that each may provide.
So if during
the questioning period, you find
out that
your prospect is most concerned
about security
for his/her family, then you'll
show the
prospect how the policy you sell
will give
the family security, or the house
you have
in mind is resistant to forces
of nature,
or the car you sell just won
Motor Trend's
safety award.
If you have a personal example
of a sale
you've made in the past that
was able to
get the thing that your new prospect
wants
by buying from you, then by all
means, tell
the new prospect about this success.
Be specific.
Use proper names, time, and location,
and
your prospect will begin to picture
himself/herself
having received that benefit
as well.
During the close, give them options
like,
1) buy this now, 2) wait a year,
3) wait
five years, 4) wait ten years,
etc. Shem
how much they will miss out on
if they wait
(higher premiums, less return.)
Show what
might happen if circumstances
change between
now and the time they buy.
Give them options, and they will
probably
choose to buy now.
Doug Staneart, doug@sales-leader.com,
is
CEO of The Leader's Institute,
www.sales-leader.com,
specializing in sales training,
public speaking,
and team building training for
individuals
and groups. He can be reached
toll-free at
1-800-872-7830.
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