Faulty Sales Technique
Salespeople are both a blessing and a bane to every industry.
You can't live with them, and you can't live without them.
“How are you tonight, Mr. Smith?”
“Fine.”
“Glad to hear it! Mr. Smith, my name is Phil, and
I'm calling…” Click.
Salespeople are always people people. People have to love
people to do sales because the life of a sales person is
filled with people. Most sales people are natural people
people before they enter the sales market. That’s
why they go into sales!
Then comes sales training, and the natural people person
gets canned. No, she don't lose her job. Rather, he is forced
to learn and use a canned sales spiel and proven sales techniques.
Much has been written about sales. And a lot of it is great,
but a different lot of it isn't.
Sales Training Contradiction
The other night I stumbled across a blaring contradiction
in the literature that puts sales people in an impossible
bind. Every sales person is taught two fundamental sales
techniques that are in stark opposition to each other, and
few people seem to be aware of it— not even the sales
people who use them. Perhaps this contradiction contributes
to the fact that sales people generally have a poor reputation.
This contradiction may help explain why identifying one’s
self as a sales person so often engenders a smirk.
The Art of Listening
The first of these contradictory techniques involves the
art of listening. Sales people must listen to customers
in order to understand their needs, so that they can shape
their sales approach to fit the needs of the customer. The
sale must be tailored to the needs of the customer.
The customer is supposed to be king. Customer service is
all the rage. The customer is the boss. Thus, listening
to customers is good. Everyone could benefit from listening
more— and from listening better. People often talk
past one another, each person fully committed to the sound
of his or her own voice. Things gets said, but not much
is heard.
The Problem of Hearing
Listening is essential. A sales person who doesn't listen
is a pain below the belt. But so is hearing. The difference
between listening and hearing is crucial. Listening to someone
means that you understand what he has said. But hearing
someone means that what she has said has caused a change
or adjustment in your thought process, or even your life.
To hear something is allow what you hear to change you.
“Billy, please clean your room! Are you listening
to me, Billy?”
“Yes, mom I'm listening.”
But the next morning reveals that Billy did not clean his
room. He was listening, but he didn't hear the message.
It didn't register in a significant enough way for him to
remember it, and take action upon it. Mom expressed herself
and Billy listened, but he didn't hear her.
Overcoming Objections
Sales training literature often speaks of overcoming objections.
Sales people are taught various techniques for overcoming
the customer’s resistance to buying the product or
service now. And herein lies the rub. The sales person is
taught to listen to the customer, except when he says that
he doesn't want to buy the product or service now.
Too often, sales people take a short-sighted view of the
sales process and press to overcome the customer’s
objections by pestering the customer to change his mind.
He wants the sale today. But pressing to overcome objections
requires the abandonment of the listening process at the
point that listening is most critical.
While it is true that overcoming objections requires careful
listening, it is also true that such the effort to overcome
objections refuses to hear the essential fact that the customer
doesn't want to buy now. To press to overcome objections
requires not listening, but manipulation—and people
don't like to be manipulated.
Back off, Dude!
So, what is the sales person to do when confronted with
objections? He should back off the sale and work to develop
a genuine personal relationship or friendship with the customer.
And short of that, he should find someone who doesn't object
to buying his product or service, and not waste any more
of his time—or theirs!
There will be another day. If there isn't, he has not only
lost the sale, he has lost the customer. |