The
seven steps of the sale |
||||||
This structure assumes that the appointment has been made, or in the instance of a cold-call, that the prospect has agreed to discuss things there and then. The process for appointment-making is a different one, which is shown later in this section. Aside from the questioning stage, this structure also applies to a sales visit which been arranged for the purpose of presenting products/services or a specific proposal following an invitation, earlier discussions or meetings. For these pre-arranged presentations it is assumed that the sales person has already been through the questioning stage at prior meetings. 1.
planning and/or preparation Planning and preparation - the seven steps - 1 Generally, the larger the prospect organization, the more research you should do before any sales call at which you will be expected, or are likely, to present you company's products or services. * ensure
know your own product/service extremely well - especially features, advantages
and benefits that will be relevant to the prospect you will be meeting introduction/opening - the seven steps - 2 * smile - be professional,
and take confidence from the fact that you are well-prepared
* the main purpose
of questioning is to confirm or discover the strongest or unique perceived
organizational benefit that would accrue to the prospect from the product/service
- it may be one (usually) or two (occasionally) or three (rarely) key
things, which may be obvious to seller and buyer, or not obvious to either,
in which case questioning expertise is critical
* the sales presentation
should focus on a central proposition, which should be the unique perceived
benefit that the prospect gains from the product/service
* decades ago it
was assumed that at this stage lots of objections could appear, and this
would tend to happen, because the selling process was more prescriptive,
one-way, and less empathic; however, successful modern selling now demands
more initial understanding from the sales person, even to get as far as
presenting, so the need to overcome objections is not such a prevalent
feature of the selling process
* in modern selling,
even using the traditional Seven Steps process, every sales person's aim
should be to prepare and conduct the selling process so well that there
are few if any objections, and no need for a close
* after-sales follow-up
depends on the type of product and service, but generally for every sale
the sales person must carry out a number of important processes:
|
|