OPM Sneak Peek: Action and Reaction in the Sales Process

Posted in OPM Sneak Peak by Keith Thompson on the August 19th, 2010

Although he didn’t intend it this way, Newton’s law on action and reaction works well when we try to unravel the sales process. The sales process is a reaction to the buying process.

The mantra of “the customer comes first,” leads to the conclusion that the deliberate steps defining the buying process should initiate responses from the salesperson that form the sales process. The OPM Sales Methodology works on the assumption that the sales process is a reaction to the buying process.

If the buyer is concerned, understand the concern and work to eliminate it. If the customer wants to know more, provide the information and explain it. If the customer wants proof, provide the evidence and references to back it up. If the customer wants a better deal, reconstruct the deal and prove that it is better.

Cause and effect, give and take, push and pull, action and reaction—whatever you want to call it, the salesperson has to be adaptable to every nuance of the customer’s process and any change in direction it may take.

–Excerpt from OPM: Opportunity Portfolio Management, the upcoming book.

Post to Twitter

Will Technology Ever Make the Salesperson Obsolete?

Posted in Sales,Technology by Chris Hamoen on the May 6th, 2010

Will technology ever make the salesperson obsolete? In short, absolutely not.

This is a common refrain at every step in technological advancement. Back in the late 1990s, there were whispers of how Internet technology would remove the salesperson from the transaction between buyer and seller. Now, over a decade later, we know that is not the case.

For the buyer, Internet technology allows them to conduct research on their own (with popular and trusted review websites like CNET, and Consumer Reports), and go through early phases of their buying cycle without contacting any vendors.

But technology also plays a big role in helping the salesperson achieve their goals. Advances in technology help salespeople reach prospective customers better, and provide the tools to manage a salesperson’s day-to-day workload.

Technology is neither the buyer, nor the salesperson’s enemy; it facilitates both the buying and selling process. In fact, technology is even right at the core of what we do here at SalesWays. The sales tools we develop at SalesWays allow salespeople to expand their opportunity portfolio, driving up overall value, and bringing them the results they are looking for.

So, technology is not going to replace the salesperson or leave them behind; for those adopting the best tools, technology will propel them even further toward their goals.

Post to Twitter

What is Selling? – Part Two

Posted in Sales by Keith Thompson on the April 25th, 2006

The last post introduced the idea that two basic selling styles dominate the salesperson’s efforts to capture customers. We can see what the two styles are if we look closely at the idea of the conversation between customer and salesperson that happens through the sales cycle. The end game of the conversation for the customer is to obtain a product or service that will solve some form of immediate need. The end game for the salesperson is that they supply the solution to the customer, rather than a competitor.

Multiple interactions occur between the two parties throughout the sales cycle. The customer is engaged in a buying process and the salesperson is reciprocally pursuing a sales process. This is a business transaction and both customer and salesperson will be using certain sets of skills. The customer needs value, and the salesperson must show that they can provide it. Value will be determined by capability and price.

The skills that the salesperson uses can be learned or acquired through experience. The degree that he or she can use them effectively will partially determine whether they will win the sale. There will be others who present different solutions – each will have their own spin, highlighting strengths and minimizing weaknesses. The skill of the salesperson to boldly present what he or she believes to be the truth will lead to gaining the customer’s confidence.

But there is another important factor that determines selling style. The better the relationship between two negotiating parties, the more chance the deal will go through. Salespeople who have the ability to gain the respect and the loyalty of their customer will have a much more solid platform off which to build on their true selling skills. This kind of skill is usually inherited and driven by the intrinsic personality of the salesperson. In Opportunity Portfolio Management we refer to the style of relying on selling skills as being opportunity focused. The style relying on relationships to win sales is being relationship focused.

Salespeople naturally are inclined to one of the two styles, but the most successful ones are comfortable with either, and moreover, have the ability to blend the two styles to match a particular stage or point in a sales cycle. This idea is at the heart of Opportunity Portfolio Management and represents a key opportunity for salespeople, whether seasoned or newcomers, to test themselves in their strategic interactions with the customer. We’ll talk about how to do that in future postings.

Post to Twitter

Next Page »