Sales Training Strategy - Consultative SellingCategory: Sales Training | Permalink Published: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 Sales Training Insight: Consultative Selling StrategiesThe following is an archive of an article that was written and published by Selling Power magazine, taken from an interview with CustomerCentric Selling(R) Co-founders, Mike Bosworth and John Holland. The basic concept of consultative selling is to view the selling process as helping a customer to solve a problem or achieve a goal through the use of the seller's offering. However, while most salespeople are familiar with the concept, they have no idea how to go about implementing it. This is because most salespeople have been trained to believe that the best way to sell a product is to educate the user on the product. Such product-oriented selling is inefficientand ineffective. It inevitably leads salespeople to swamp customers with exhaustive menus of product features and detailed product demonstrations that have little or nothing to dowith the problems and goals of the customer's organization. This alienates customers, especially managers and executives who have little interest in technical details. As a result, salespeople trained in product-oriented selling often take the path of least resistance and focus their sales efforts on low level technical employees who are willing to discuss products at the feature/function level. However, technical employees are usually not the final decision makers, which means (at worst) that the salesperson is wasting time or (at best) that the salesperson will be unprepared to describe the benefits of the product to the actual decision makers, even if the salesperson eventually obtains access to them. Product-oriented selling can easily lapse into product evangelism, with the salesperson attempting to convince the customer of the superiority of the salesperson's product. This is ineffective. Pushing a product too hard drives a customer to raise an objection, because that's the only way the customer can reclaim the conversation. The basic error is spending too much time talking about the product and not enough time listening to the customer. Unfortunately, many companies encourage product-oriented selling by providing internal sales training that's focused on product features. Ironically, product training is generally the responsibility of product managers who are familiar with the product but who have never had an actual conversation with a customer. Sales managers and sales teams must therefore take responsibility for translating product features into customer usage, so customers can understand the benefits of using the seller's product offering and the salespeople can act as consultants rather than ineffective product pushers. There are three steps to accomplishing this. Click here to read the archived article.
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