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How to Beat Low-Cost Providers August 10th, 2018
Welcome – we’ll be starting soon!
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How to Beat Low-Cost Providers August 10th, 2018
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The OLD Winning Sales Process
Persistent (Pushy) Always Be Closing (Confrontational) Aggressive (Manipulative)
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Modern Winning Sales Process
A Perceived Expert always gets the invitation. A Perceived Expert commands attention during demos / presentations. A Perceived Expert shows they’re going to help, and wins the business.
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Being more expensive helps build the perception of expertise, if done correctly…
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Agenda Seven Ideas Lesson Plan Let them know you’ll be more expensive
Sell yourself Develop an internal champion Give ‘em a taste Know your differentiators Show the price early in proposal Logically justify Lesson Plan
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Poll Question
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How frequently do you compete against low-cost, cheap products and/or services?
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How frequently do you compete against low-cost, cheap products
How frequently do you compete against low-cost, cheap products? - Never - Sometimes - Most of the time - All the time
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1. Let them know you’ll be more expensive
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How to do this without being a jerk…
Have this conversation early. Don’t ask about their budget in the same conversation. End a story about a case study or two with this: “In both these cases, we were weren’t the cheapest … or the second cheapest, but our customers felt they were worth the extra investment. Hopefully that’s the same here.” If there is a relationship: “We’re going to be the most expensive of this group. Is that ok with your team? Will we have a shot?”
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2. Sell yourself
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You Explain exactly how you work with your clients.
Don’t use adjectives describing you – tell them what you do. Use personal references from clients. Ask personal questions that matter to them – not the organization.
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You Explain exactly how you work with your clients.
Don’t use adjectives describing you – tell them what you do. Use personal references from clients. Ask personal questions that matter to them – not the organization.
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You Explain exactly how you work with your clients.
Don’t use adjectives describing you – tell them what you do. Use personal references from clients. Ask personal questions that matter to them – not the organization.
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You Explain exactly how you work with your clients.
Don’t use adjectives describing you – tell them what you do. Use personal references from clients. Ask personal questions that matter to them – not the organization.
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3. Develop an internal champion
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“Why are they looking at these cheap bozos?”
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You can’t ask this!
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Who? Not necessarily your point of contact or best friend.
Influencer on decision. Personally impacted by you winning the sale.
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4. Give ‘em a taste
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Offer a free service that gives them a feeling of never going back.
Act over-the-top during all sales interactions. Bring them to your office. How to give ‘em a taste
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5. Know your differentiators
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Know Your Differentiators
Quality of product. Best material. Ideal technology. MTBF 10x. Focus on and know the industrial market. Have all the certifications, insurance, etc. Response time < 4 hours. Triple and half 9’s. Exercise Let’s list some differentiators between your products / services and the less expensive ones we’re addressing.
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Know Your Differentiators
95 locations Users of the equipment that we install Cyber security group Use only products that have been purchased by US government Three legs – physical, electronic, cyber Exercise Let’s list some differentiators between your products / services and the less expensive ones we’re addressing.
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6. Show price early in proposal
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It’s all about the momentum after the meeting
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“As I mentioned a few weeks ago, we’re usually more expensive
“As I mentioned a few weeks ago, we’re usually more expensive. I’ve found it’s helpful to show the price up front, and then share our services with you. That way, instead of it being a mystery, you know the price and can justify throughout the presentation.” Say this…
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7. Logically justify
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Poll Question
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When is the best time to provide logical justification (tailored ROI or TCO calculations)?
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When is the best time to provide logical justification (tailored ROI or TCO calculations)? - As early as possible. - In the proposal. - After they want your solution. - After the sale.
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When is the best time to provide logical justification (tailored ROI or TCO calculations)? - As early as possible. - In the proposal. - After they want your solution. - After the sale.
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Best Practices to Providing Logical Justification
Wait, Wait, Wait. Make them want it first. Provide general numbers as a teaser. Don’t stretch the logic, but let them. Include the subjective, intangible benefits as bonus. Let customer drive calculations. Provide graphical image.
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Lesson Plan
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Questions and Discussion Chris Peterson cpeterson@vectorfirm.com
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