Competing on Price in a Down
Market
How your thinking and actions can increase
margins
An article in USA Today discussed the demise of
a major electronics supplier in the past year.
One of the major
reasons the article sited was the inability to sustain
profits against the low ball competition! Having had a
reputation for better service and added value, the
supplier cut its best and most experienced people and
moved to compete on price only!
Obviously a big mistake!
The low ball competition had lower overhead,
understood the bottom feeder mentality and could function
on the lower margins.
One might ask what this has to do with me in
selling equipment, services or supplies.
Answer; there is always a lesson to learn! If
you are getting hit with the price competition response
the following can give you an edge! ……
Here is the deal, even with a tougher financial
market, customers are looking for answers and many are
more open than ever! An example is our own
sales training. When the phone is ringing off the hook no
one has time for sales training. But now when the phone
has slowed down, people are aware they may need to
approach their sales with a higher skill level and are
looking for sales training and willing to invest the time
and dollars.
The reality is the customer is looking for
answers, not products! Those that can provide answers and
solutions will get the sale and the customer long
term!
Meanwhile those that focus on selling product
will always be fighting the price war and spinning their
wheels!
The first thing needed to give you the edge is
your own thinking and attitude. One needs to realize that
customers now need solutions that work! So ask
yourself…
·
What really does my product or service
potentially solve for my customers?
·
What can this solution do to help my customer
not only survive but grow in this economy?
·
How can my customer measure or realize a return
on investment with my solution?
Because you have analyzed your product against
the previous questions, you now are thinking beyond your
product or service and more solution focused versus
product. This will give you a mental edge over your
product focused competitors!
IMPORTANT: If you customer sees no advantage,
difference or added value to your offering, then price is
the only decision point left.
Now because you are solution focused the
customers are seeing you. So how do you get them away
from a price only decision?
Once more ask yourself these questions, and then
formulate open questions to obtain the information from
your customers.
-
What really is your customer's main
objective, in their words?
-
Are they and you able to describe this end
result clearly to others?
-
What is their current situation?
-
Why are they in this situation?
-
What do they see needing to happen to obtain
their main objectives?
-
What are the barriers or obstacles they need
to overcome to meet their main
objectives?
-
What is in it for them, in their words, if
they could obtain their main objectives?
-
What are they willing to do to obtain their
main objectives?
Now stop and really
think about these questions! Can you clearly answer each
of them fully and with total confidence?
If your answer is yes, then you are most likely
not experiencing the price issue as much as others. On
the other hand should the answers be blank you know where
the problem is!
Here is the solution!
-
Invest the time to create open questions to
uncover the information for each question
above.
-
Forget your product and ask the questions to
uncover this information.
-
Listen, listen and listen to what your
customer is really saying.
-
Ask lots and lots of clarifying
questions.
-
When the customer asks what the solution is,
then and only then bring out your
solution!
-
Enjoy the success, a new relationship and a
high margin sale!
If you are skeptical about this approach, find
someone making $200,000 in commissions a year and ask
them about it!
I have seen it before; things are great and just
about anyone can make a sale. Things get tougher and the
field thins leaving only the professionals that are
willing to adapt and do things differently.
To your success,
Harlan Goerger

Copy write 1-2009 Harlan Goerger
Reprint in entirety only
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