Do you work in sales?
Are you passionate about how social can help your organisation sell more?
Do you want to know what role content marketing and content creation will play in the future way you will communicate with your potential customers?
This post explains how you can build a business case to help change the way your business sells it products and how your sales process works.
In my previous post on how to sell in a social era I explained some of the differences between a traditional sales person and person selling in the social era. I mentioned that up to two thirds of buying process is done before you speak with a salesperson. With this post I want to go into a bit more depth and help you demonstrate the return on investment to get buy in, so you can focus in this area. This post will give you some ideas how you can demonstrate the concept to the following people:
- CEO
- CMO
- Managing directors
- Sales directors
- Sales managers
It will allow you to spend more time in your current role or create a new role so you can help your company do it better, have you also considered hiring a phone answering service for your business? It saves a huge amount of time and also makes you sound very professional so is a brilliant option.
For the purpose of this post
I define social selling as using the social web to help you sell your products or services
I define content as information which conveys a message, such as a blog, video, podcast, ebook etc
Teaching vs selling
There is a phrase which I learnt from a thesaleslion.com post called assignment selling. The higher the value item you sell – the more relevant this is.
The concept works like this. When a salesperson goes to a sales appointment they spend a great deal of their time trying to inform the prospect what their product does and why they must have it. If the prospect doesn’t know this information before you visit then you risk wasting time your time with a prospect, who is never going to be a customer.
And for those companies which have staff working remotely or from home then have a look into the various time tracker options that are available so that they can get great detail on what staff have been doing and for how long.
Assignment selling works by giving responsibility to the potential client to do some research before you meet them. You send them a link to the answers to the most frequently asked question on a sales call.
If they don’t bother reading the content you send then they may not be that interested in doing business with you and are probably just looking to buy on price. If you are selling a product which is more expensive, then this customer will probably be a waste of your time.
Selling is what helps you hit your targets, keeps you in a job and pays the bills.
Traveling to a meeting to teach them about your product is not a great use of your time.
If you can demonstrate the benefits of your product beforehand then you will have a more productive meeting.
Increase productivity
As a continuation of the teaching vs selling I want to show you how it can help improve your productivity. A CEO has the luxury of being able to delegate work – most salespeople do not. I want to explain how you can delegate parts of the process to your content to enable you to do more selling.
These are the typical steps in a sales process
- Generate awareness for your product
- Generate leads
- Initial discovery of requirements
- Presentation of recommendation
- Evaluation of different options
- Negotiation
- After sales support
All these with exception of negotiation, could be done with content. If you were to publish the answer to every question you have ever been asked in a sales process then you could almost automate the whole sales process.
Depending on the complexity of your product and how much customisation you need to do, you may not be able to present an actual recommendation. However, if you can create content which educates your potential client then they may be able tell you what they want to buy.
Negotiation is one thing you can’t do with content, however if your content demonstrates the value well enough you may not need to negotiate.
Increase credibility of salespeople
In a short space of time you can establish credibility as an individual. If you read my post why use social media it explains what you can achieve in a very short space of time. I know personally that blogging can, within a short space of time, escalate you to be viewed as an expert in some people’s eyes. It can help you gain access to share your content with a larger audience if you content is good enough.
If you wrote an article and it was featured in your national newspaper or industry trade magazine it would position you as an expert because you have had third party recognition that your content is of good quality. There are varying degrees of credibility you can achieve which I have depicted below. You can easily create the first two on the ladder by writing an email or telling your marketing department to send out a communication. I think when you start to see content published independently for the world to see and find it, it gains credibility. Although anyone can publish a blog or white paper, for you to put your name to an idea or theory and publish it, gives it more credibility. Most people would have more confidence that what you are saying is correct because otherwise you may find you get some public criticism about the content. When you start generating high quality content you can start to submit content to third party publishers. If they like your content they will add more credibility by distributing it through their platform. If you are seen as a leading opinion on your chosen topic then one day, you may be contacted by national press to give you thoughts/opinions on a story they want to run. This won’t happen very often but you need to build your credibility and profile before you would ever be found let alone asked to be part of any such coverage.
Improve your closing ratio
There is a great example of how a sales cycle can be changed by using content to improve your closing ratio. The example is borrowed from thesaleslion.com post where he talks about how he has changed the sales process of his swimming pool company
1. Customer calls and asks us to come out to give them a quote.
2. We respond by explaining our process is different—we educate more than anyone in the world with our website, videos, blog articles, and eBooks—which gives consumers everything they need to know about us, our products, and what pool/options suits them the best.
3. Once a potential customer educates themselves through our content, they tell us the pool and options they want, at which point we send them via email an actual quote.
4. If the customer reviews the quote and agrees to its terms, we then go out to their home to confirm there are no hidden costs and write up the contract.
This process was designed around the fact that they realised that the typical closing ratio of their industry (30%) was improved to 80% if they could get their prospects to read 30 pages of their blog. They then made it their mission to build content into the sales cycle to boost the closing ratio.
Cynics may doubt if their customers would spend $50k on a swimming pool without meeting the salesperson but they actually found out more about the company and why they would want to do business with them than if they had met them a couple of times.
Increase your profit margin
As part of a salesperson’s role they have to demonstrate the value in what they sell. More often than not the salesperson gets to the end of the process having spent a lot of their time on the deal. The price then gets negotiated down which devalues the product/service you offer and the time you have spent with that customer.
If salespeople could demonstrate the value of the product/service they are selling then they could demand the fair price they started the sales process with. This would rely on companies setting a realistic, fair list price.
If you are selling a product or service which costs more because it is worth it, then be proud of the fact you are better than everyone else in the market. Tell people you are more expensive and prove to them why you are worth the extra investment. The earlier you do this in the sales process the less time you will waste with customers who do see the value in your product to pay what it costs.
If you tell someone your product is £1000 and they say they only have a budget for £250 you can either suggest a cheaper product you sell or qualify out. You might go through the sales process and increase their budget to £500 but you will never get £1000. If they say they don’t see the value in spending £1000 on your product when they can buy similar products for £250 it is a different conversation. You then need to educate the potential client in the value your product can add to his company. They can then decide if they think the value proposition is right for their business. You can decide if you move forward or qualify out.
Help people buy and don’t sell = Build trust
Think of the last time you went to buy something where you had to speak to a salesperson. Did they help you buy or did they sell? If you make the ultimate goal to help the customer and not to make the sale then you will begin to earn trust.
If you as a salesperson have the ultimate goal of helping a customer buy, then you are more centered around their objective of buying the right product, than your objective of making a sale.
To gain trust you need to be comfortable to do the following
- Tell customers when your product is not right for them
- Be honest about any weakness you may have
- Recommend a competitor’s product, if it is better for the customer
- Be transparent around costs
If you can do these things you may not win the battle but you will win the war. You may not get every deal but trust is something which you earn and it will help you to sell when your products are right for the customer. It will help you get referrals from the people you haven’t sold to, when one of their friends wants to buy a product that you sell.
Some great examples of content that builds trust are linked below:
- Tackle commonly perceived problems with your products
- Talk honestly about comparisons between yours and your competitors
- Discuss your pricing up front to give customers rough figures
Understand who your customers are and what they want
This is one of the most common themes you would find if you were to google social selling. I think creating content is equally, if not more useful in the sales process and is a topic less frequently spoken about. A great resource in this area is the Social Selling University.
It is a great idea to use the social web to research your potential clients. You can find out information about who they are, what they are doing and how you may be able to help them. I do not know one salesperson who would not want a good reason to call a potential customer at the right time, with the right approach. Researching your customers through the information they share on social networks is a great way to do this.
Social research has limited use when your potential client is not active or has no presence on the web. These techniques rely upon mining information to provide some context around a contact.
I feel that generating content is a more universal technique that could help the sales process across a wider range of industries and customer types. If someone is not on social networks you could still email them the content or even post them a hard copy.
Summary
All of this can be done without one call, meeting or email to a customer. They can do this research and find the answers they need before they even talk to you as a sales person. If done well you can influence the whole buying process and not just the last bit when they want to talk to a salesperson.
The result is perfectly qualified leads, who are ready to buy or are very close. The deals you close will be more profitable, more forecast-able and you will close more deals. Salespeople would have more time to sell because they are only talking to people who want to buy.
Nice post Chris. I’m with you in the fact that teaching is selling. I’ve tried to create educational content about buying a home which is handy for all the first time home buyers who land on my website.
I aslo like Marcus’ new sales process where they let the customers educate themselves, then Marcus’ team goes in for the sale. It’s reversed from the old days!