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Two Types of Decisions: Buy-IN, and BuyING
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| Guest post by: Sharon Drew Morgen |
Article Overview: Recently someone told me that Buying Facilitation® is an old concept, that its been written about in books since sales books have been written, and that he's been helping buyer's buy for decades. Of course he has, except that he, like the entire sales field, has a paltry success rate - certainly under 10%. Why? If the seller understands the need, has the right solution, and has a great relationship, what's stopping the buyer from buying as often as they should? Why isn't the buyer deciding on the obvious solution?
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Free Download - Sales is a Flawed Model By Sharon Drew Morgen |
Two Types of Decisions: Buy-IN, and BuyING
Indeed, I just heard a statistic that in mature prospecting situations in which sellers are waiting for a close, at least 20% of these situations don't close due to ‘no decision.' But a decisions has been made! It's ‘We Have Decided Not To Buy Your Solution From You At This Time.' So it is a decision. It's just not the one you wanted. Or it's possible that you never had a buyer to begin with, and have either told your managers you'd be closing, or convinced yourself that you have a buyer when you really don't.
And I'm not even discussing the 30% that are in line to close but choose another vendor.... a waste because they didn't know how to choose you. And what about those that you lost well before they got in line to be READY to close? The entire sales process is a giant waste of time and energy!
TWO DECISIONS
Buyers have two types of decisions. One is the focus of our sales efforts: the decision to buy a solution. Of course this has been written about for decades. But the other set of decisions they must make is around buy-in: until or unless all of the people, policies, relationships (partners, vendors, rules, etc) buy in to bringing something new in, nothing will happen and no buying decision will be made. These decisions are private and idiosyncratic, and we sit and wait for them to happen. Sales does not manage this.
I call the facilitation of these non-solution-oriented decisions - the behind-the-scenes decision issues that have nothing to do with the Identified Problem - Buying Facilitation®. You can call it anything you want. But until or unless a buyer recognizes and manages these often-unconscious decision issues necessary to get group/company buy-in, buyers won't choose a solution.
This is where our prospects go when they don't choose us: they get caught in their internal relationships and politics, their old vendors, their status quo. And the sales model does not handle this. It never has.
WHAT'S GOING ON BEHIND-THE-SCENES
Before you showed up with the perfect solution, the buyer's environment (I call it a system) worked... well, it worked the way it worked. The problem we can resolve with our solution is not an isolated event: it sits within the buyer's system as a piece of the pie, an ingredient if you will, not the whole pie. The system has accepted it and has created work-arounds for it. In other words, the problem we can resolve is not a big problem to the system. We see it as such because we concentrate on it so we can sell. But if the system was being harmed by it, it would have fixed it already
It is only when the problem becomes an annoyance to the rest of the system that the buyer is willing to do something different. At that point, not only does must it choose a solution, but because the problem has been embedded and touches so many parts of the system, it must manage the work-arounds that were created along the way to make sure the system kept working with the problem in it. A decision to bring in a new solution (a buying decision) is a change management activity.
A decision to buy a solution must be backed by the full force of the team/group/company/family, otherwise the fall-out would harm the originating group and not be worth it. If the head of training will quit because she doesn't want the new vendor to ‘do her job' or if the tech team will not be able to integrate the new software or if the management team is wary of having outsiders come in, no buying decision will be made. The system is sacrosanct.
SALES FOLKS THINK IT'S ABOUT THE SOLUTION
Sales is necessary to help manage the needs assessment and solution placement AFTER the buyer has navigated through all of their decision issues. Unfortunately, buyers don't know at the start what sorts of issues they're going to have to handle. That's where we come in. With an entirely new/different skill set - NOT SALES as I repeatedly say in my new book Dirty Little Secrets - it's possible to be a GPS system for your buyer and help them navigate through their decision issues. Not toward a solution, necessarily. But toward a resolution of the factors they need to address to get buy-in. First help buyers make their buyIN decisions, and then you can help them make their buyING decisions.
Buying Facilitation® is not sales: it does not do needs assessment; it does not do solution placement; it does not manage objections (but it mitigates them). But it will make you first a decision facilitator and true consultant, will differentiate you from your competition, and it will help buyers make decisions 80% faster. Buyers have to do all of this anyway, with you or without you. And the time it takes them is the length of the sales cycle. You're already waiting for them - you might has well offer them true leadership while you're waiting (It's not sales. It's not sales.).
Article Tags: buying decision, decisions, facilitation, right solution, sales books, success rate
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About the Author: Sharon Drew Morgen RSS for Sharon Drew's articles - Visit Sharon Drew's website Sharon Drew Morgen is a pioneer and thought leader, the bestselling author of NYTimes Business Bestsellers Selling with Integrity , Sales on the Line, and Buying Facilitation, the new way to sell that expands and influences decisions as well as 2 other books and 800 articles on her original collaborative decision-support model Buying Facilitation. As the architect of a wholly original sales model, Sharon Drew has provoked, inspired, and motivated thousands of sales professionals world-wide. With a history as a million-dollar producer and 30 years in sales, an entrepreneur of a successful start-up, and a sales consultant in many Fortune 100 companies, she brings field knowledge as well as innovation to her audiences. Based on supporting the buyer's internal (management) decisions, Sharon Drew is a trainer, consultant, keynote speaker, and designer of patents that help site visitors and sellers make the decisions necessary for success. Her model has been trained worldwide, in global corporations such as Coors, Wachovia, Intuit, KPMG, IBM, and retail corporations such as Clinique. Click here to visit Sharon Drew's website Lead Gen Isnt Enough The Heart of Business How Much Time Do Sales People Waste The Basis of Sales Has Remained Stagnant Solutions are meaningless without BuyIn |
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