It pays to develop a
market. The more in business-to-customer selling like a bank or
insurance agent does. Market development is focusing your energies on
one or two large markets as opposed to scattering them in all
directions. Here are three benefits of market development.
Time management
Most
salespeople complain that they have too much to do — making calls,
preparing sales action plans, developing and maintaining a customer
database and on and on.
Well, as this column has
averred, the progressive salesperson has only three activities: customer
facing, computer facing and ‘air’-facing. Only the first pays the
dividends you will be judged upon.
Focusing your efforts on one large employer or small and medium
enterprise (SME) area (like Industrial Area) inevitably leads to
maximising your customer-facing time and its dividends. The average
seller busies herself with the latter two: email correspondence,
browsing the Internet and travelling (not merely moving) from one sales
meeting to another and then laments her lacklustre performance.
Solve problems as they happen
Market
development lets you solve problems as they occur (that is, in real
time). The alternative is to be reactive. You learn from the office, in
church, or the pub, that this frustrated client is poisoning all who
care to listen, against you or your company. You struggle to put out a
blazing inferno or, hope it will blow itself over, yet all you would
have had to deal with was a candle flame. You would have been the angry
customer’s first and likely only point of contact.
Market
development builds credibility and trust. You are not there just for
the bouquets but for the barbs too. And because you are in its face, you
become intimate with the system and close faster. You know how to get
certified copies of payslip because the payroll manager is your client,
you get referrals by asking this client to dial the extension of the
next one to introduce you, you get introductory letters from an employer
for your clients faster because the human resource officer loves how
you are there for them.
High return on investment
Prospecting — looking for new clients — is the cornerstone of successful selling. If you do not prospect, you ‘die’.
Focusing
on a market solves this problem because you go to where the prospects
are. In addition, with client facing time fully optimised and
credibility and trust too, it is only a matter of time that you get into
that magical place where few salespeople ever get to.
While
the rest of your colleagues struggle to look for new clients, you
wallow in the joy of being spoilt-having prospecting done for you by
your advocates.
They tell you of this new lot of
interns who have just joined and need a bank account, you find the
institution waiting for you to ask about the opening — say, a medical
scheme with your institution — you finally reap the ultimate return on
investment — you ‘own’ this market.
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