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Five Questions Salespeople Need to Ask, but Rarely Do
Written by: Craig JamesArticle Overview: Ask these 5 questions, and watch your sales soar
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Free Download - Revitalize Your Referrals By Craig James |
Five Questions Salespeople Need to Ask, but Rarely Do
Salespeople won’t always get the call back, get the appointment, get
to meet the decision maker, or get the order. Now it is, of course,
unreasonable to expect to always get what we want. But, it is reasonable
to believe that we might get what we want more often if we changed the
way we asked for it. The sad fact is that one of the reasons we struggle
to get sales results is because we simply don’t ask for what we want -
or we don’t ask for it directly. Here are five types of questions that
few salespeople ask that can move the sales cycle along and help you
achieve your goals.
1) Qualifying Questions
Most
salespeople are taught to probe for “pain” – to find out what’s wrong,
and what the prospect is not happy about, what they don’t like about
their current situation. But there’s another question that should be
asked before that kind of question: “What do you like about what and
whom you’re using now?” At first blush, it may seem self-defeating to
ask a question that provides the prospect an opportunity to say
something favorable about his current situation.
But there are two
reasons why it makes sense: (1) it tells you what you need to - at a
minimum - provide as part of the solution you will propose and (2) it
builds rapport by giving your prospect an opportunity to discuss aspects
of his current product or service that validate his decision to have
selected them.
2) Money Questions
Many
salespeople have been taught not to mention money early in the
conversation. Nonsense. You should not be talking with any prospect who
cannot or will not pay you what your product or service costs. Period.
You need to find out whether the two of you are in the same ballpark;
the sooner you do, the sooner you can stop wasting your limited time
with those prospects that aren’t, and move on to those that are. After
you’ve conveyed the benefits of your offering, simply ask, “Here’s
approximately what this will cost. Should we continue talking?”
3)
Objection Questions
Contrary to what most salespeople
think, the immediate response to an objection should never be to try to
address it. It should be to acknowledge it, then ask a question to
determine the underlying concern. For example, let’s say the objection
is, “Your guaranteed delivery time is 72 hours, and the other two
competitors of yours I’m talking to guarantee 48 hours.” Your company
has been doing business for a long time with a lot of customers for whom
three-day delivery is perfectly acceptable.
A closed question
(one-word) response to an objection like this would be, “Yes, that’s
true. Tell me, how many times in the last two years would receiving this
product in three days rather than two have caused you a problem?” The
prospect’s answer will tell you how much of a concern it is. Your reply
would then be, “Right – in fact, what most of our customers really love
about us – and what we feel sets us apart – is…” You could also ask for
an open question such as, “Tell me why 48-hour delivery is important to
you.”
4) Trial Close Questions
Trial closes
are questions that take a prospect’s temperature – they’re used to gauge
how the conversation or presentation is going. A trial close question
to use after presenting a feature of your product could be as simple as,
“Is this what you’re looking for?” or “How does that sound?” The
answers to trial closes tell you how to proceed. Think of the answers as
lights on a traffic light: green means the prospect wants to keep going
in the direction you are headed, yellow means he’s giving off vibes
that indicate something’s not sitting well with him, and red means he’s
explicitly raised a concern.
Fail to use trial closes and you risk going in a direction different
from that in which your prospect wants to go or, equally bad, continuing
to sell when the prospect wants to make a decision to buy. Trial close
questions are always close-ended questions that can be answered with one
word responses.
5) Commitment Questions
Commitment
questions get a prospect to agree to do something you want them to do.
It could be to review literature by a certain date, schedule a follow up
meeting with the rest of the buying influences, review a proposal with
the decision-makers, or – to make a decision to buy. Some intermediate
commitment questions could be, “So we agree that you’re going to send an
email out to the team today to come up with a date for our next meeting
that works for everyone, right?” or “So you’re going to connect me with
so-and so by the end of the week, yes?” A final commitment question is
one that asks for the order: “So are we ready to go?” or “Ready to get
started working together?” or “Sounds like you like what you’ve seen,
yes? Great – let’s get you going.”
In the end, while it may seem
obvious, too many sales people don’t actually ask for the order. It’s
like a football team taking the ball 99 yards to the other team’s goal
line, then hitting the locker room. You don’t get points for getting the
ball to the goal line – you get points for getting it over. So get your
sales ball over the goal line – ask for the order.
Article Tags: Sales Questioning
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About the Author: Craig James RSS for Craig's articles - Visit Craig's website Sales Solutions Founder and President Craig James has over 12 years' experience in sales and sales management, primarily in technology and software. An accomplished speaker and presenter, Craig is President of his local Toastmasters chapter, teaches at New York University’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies, and has lectured at Columbia University’s School of Continuing Education. He also volunteers as a Discussion Leader with the Workshop In Business Opportunities, a "boot camp" for entrepreneurs whose mission is to enable small business owners and budding entrepreneurs in under-served communities to obtain financial success in starting, operating, and building successful businesses. He's been published and quoted in Business Week, Sales and Marketing Management, and Selling Power, and been interviewed by Sales Rep Radio. Craig earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, and his MBA from the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business. Click here to visit Craig's website How to provides buying incentives without discounting The Power of a Thank You Use TakeAways to Engage Reluctant Prospects Eliminating Burnout and Stress Warm Up That Cold Call |
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