B2B customers say they care most about product and price, but
what they really want is a great sales experience. For sales reps, that
means getting the basics right.
When it comes to building valuable relationships with customers,
sales representatives are critical players on the front lines. But are
they getting the basics right? Customers want to be contacted just
enough, not bombarded. Sales reps should know their products or services
intimately and how their offering compares with those of their
competitors. Customers need information on exactly how a product or
service will make a difference to their businesses. And while they may
say price is one of their biggest concerns, a satisfying sales
experience is ultimately more important.
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Trashy Bags stand at Accra Mall.
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EnterpriseAfrik
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These were the key findings of a survey we conducted of more than
1,200 purchasing decision makers in small, medium, and large companies
throughout the United States and western Europe who are responsible for
buying high-tech products and services. The insights were consistent
across simple to complex products and apply readily to most
business-to-business (B2B) industries, which also have complex,
multi–touch point sales processes involving both end users and
purchasing professionals.
We found a big difference between what customers said was important
and what actually drove their behaviour. Customers insisted price and
product aspects were the dominant factors that influenced their opinion
of a supplier’s performance and, as a result, their purchasing
decisions. Yet when we examined what actually determined how customers
rated a vendor’s overall performance, the most important factors were
product or service features and the overall sales experience. The upside
of getting these two elements right is significant: a primary supplier
seen as having a high-performing sales force can boost its share of a
customer’s business by an average of 8 to 15 percentage points.
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Cellphones at a stand |
That makes the next finding all the more important. Of the many
habits that undermine the sales experience, two that are relatively easy
to fix accounted for 55% of the behaviour customers described as “most
destructive”: failing to have adequate product knowledge and contacting
customers too frequently. Only 3% said they weren’t contacted enough,
suggesting customers are open to fewer, more meaningful interactions.
Fortunately, both damaging habits can be fixed. Companies can address
a lack of product knowledge by centralising content development to
guarantee a uniform message and creation of compelling value
propositions for customers. And to ensure deep understanding, sales reps
can receive experiential training and on-the-job coaching, preferably
side by side with the content-development team. Finally, sales reps
don’t need to know everything. When it comes to specifics, we found
customers were more than happy to use self-serve or online tools and
selectively tap specialist support for the most complex situations.
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South Sudan Brewery. |
Striking the right balance between contacting customers too much and
too little requires understanding their stated and actual needs. There
should be a clear strategy for reaching out to customers based on needs
and profit potential, with schedules dictating frequency. The best
contact calendars centre around events that create value for customers,
such as semiannual business reviews, which provide an opportunity to
assess customer needs and ensure satisfaction. The key is to recognise
that customers are also looking to lower their interaction costs, so any
contact with them must be meaningful.
The sales experience matters, and a good one starts by getting the
basics right. Companies should examine exactly how they are performing
by asking the following questions: What are the most influential drivers
of the sales experience? What things are your sellers doing that could
damage relationships? How does the perception your customers have of
your sales force compare to how they view your competitors? It is only
by knowing and understanding the answers to these questions that
companies can begin to identify and pursue the right fixes.
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