Those who excel in selling find a way to overcome challenges in order to deliver value to customers. File
By JOHN KAGECHE
In Summary
Few sellers become sufficiently proactive to engineer a product, programme or plan informed by problem identification.
Recently, I met a woman who chose to be a general in the
travel industry. While the rest of the industry griped about the
challenges of slashed commissions, low barriers to entry (ease of
starting an agency) and the ubiquitous social media, she devised special
international packages targeted at the business fraternity, which
commercial banks cannot get enough of.
These generals get richly rewarded for being
daring. Besides personal fulfilment, because of their novelty they break
the mould of challenges that bog down majority in the army, pricing
being a major one.
In return, they are rewarded with sustainability. I
know a trainer whose leadership programme is fully booked two years
ahead and that the impressive growth is all achieved by word-of-mouth
despite the price being easily three to four times the industry
standard. Meantime, the rest of the army offers the same courses, with
some claiming differentiation on the delivery or imported programmes
(franchises).
It’s the same at work; most managers will tweak a
minor component of the previous year’s plans to use this year rather
than start from scratch.
Few sellers become sufficiently proactive to
engineer a product, programme or plan informed by problem
identification. Generic problem solving is preferred. Engineering a
product for sale from scratch takes time and energy. Sometimes even the
prospects don’t know they have a problem.
But for generals who desire to show value, money is
rarely the challenge; they find a way to overcome it. Starting from the
end also invites the possibility of failure, yet in the same breath it
invites the possibility of spectacular success.
Problem identification implies research, creativity
and patience, traits that the army looks at and wonders, “Why bother?
Copying is so much easier. After all, isn’t money the only issue?”
This attitude that money is the sole driving force
is the problem. For the generals, value is the driving force.
Ironically, the money that follows them is a hundredfold what the army
is left contending with. In addition, the general’s business also finds
traffic flowing to any other humdrum products that are sold alongside
the unique one.
Another advantage such generals have is that the
army of imitators struggles to copy them but it is a hit-and-miss
exercise. They simply cannot get the DNA. And when they think a clone is
imminent, along comes the next creation.
Problem identification, not problem solving, is the
way to show value and ease the sale process. For instance, with the
rapidly dwindling price of DVDs and now with digital TV allowing viewers
to play movies from a flash disk, movie sellers are finding themselves
struggling to survive. The one who will package movies based on
generation could find the foot-fall favouring his stall.
I envisage a collection of movie hits from the 70s,
80s or 90s recorded in today’s high definition, packaged and sold as a
collector’s item. I doubt price would be an issue here, and I even doubt
further that buyers would buy with the explicit purpose of copying for
others. It just wouldn’t be the same.
Kageche is lead facilitator Lend Me Your Ears, a sales and speaker training firm
lendmeyourears@consultant.com
lendmeyourears@consultant.com
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