Book Notes: The JOLT Effect
Hi! Today, I'm sharing my book notes for The JOLT Effect by Matt Dixon and Ted McKenna .
Note: this isn't a review... it's all of the notes that I made. So, it's long (almost 2000 words).
I recommend that any salesperson, sales manager or revenue leader pick this up and give it a read. It's well-researched, and has some great ideas to ponder and observe in your organization. On the downside, I felt the book tailed off halfway through and I didn't get much out of the latter bit personally.
Let me know what you think of content like this; if you enjoy it, I'll share more as I read a ton.
Erik's Unqualified-to-Rate Books Rating
Final score: 8/10 -- if I was only grading the first six chapters. If I had to grade the whole book, I'd knock a point off of it. Didn't feel there was much life-changing information on first read, and everything past the pitch and JOLT framework was filler illrelevant to me, or a pitch for Tethr.
Worth reading?: Yes, especially if you're in sales. There's some good points made about and coaching on the sales cycle post "acceptance of changing the status quo" that every salesperson should review and bake into their every day.
A handy shortcut: read it once, then just read the "Conclusion" section at the end of each chapter again a few times to bake it in. I appreciate that they summarized the chapters, because you can speed through the fluff. And there's a bunch of it.
The Big Takeaway
The JOLT Method
Judge the buyer's indecision by diagnosing the source(s) of indecision and ascertaining the likelihood of overcoming them
Offer your recommendation to confidently simplify the buyer's decision, as opposed to endlessly asking them what they want to buy
Limit the buyer's exploration by shutting down unproductive lines of inquiry and discouraging evermore "research"
Take risk out of the deal by managing expectations and offering "safety net" options that give the buyer confidence they won't be left hanging
All The Notes?
The Data, Story and Setup
The authors reviewed a ton of recorded sales calls and correlated that there's more than one way to lose a deal to inaction. The first is losing to the status quo, which is well documented in sales literature and coaching. The new insight is losing to the buyer's inability to make a decision.
Status quo preference is driven by human biases that lead buyers to want things to remain as they are. Buyer indecision is driven by a separate psychological effect known as the omission bias.
Omission Bias
The buyer's desire to avoid making a mistake. This is compounded by a number of factors:
Overcoming these preferences or biases requires two different playbooks, as the fear of missing out is replaced with the fear of messing up:
Overcoming status quo preference: dial up the fear of not buying
Overcoming buyer indecision: dial down the fear of buying
Three flavours of Status Quo Bias:
In research by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, we learn:
In research by Veerle Germeijs and Paul De Boeck we learn that buyer indecision stems from three fears:
The phrase "I need to think about it some more" was more highly correlated with closed lost deals than any other across tens of thousands of phrases recorded. It was worse than being told no.
When sellers attempt to "re-litigate" the status quo with customers who have already accept the change, it results in a negative impact 84% of the time.
Average sellers believe it's only about beating status quo and pain of same. Elite sellers know there's a second phase, how to detect it, how to deal with the buyer's fears, and how to try to prevent it.
The early stage of the sale is largely about convincing the buyer of the potential loss of not acting. The back half of the sale is about avoiding the potential loss that stems from acting.
Loss is something all buyers want to avoid. But loss that they are personally responsible for is something they want to avoid like the plague.
Judge the Indecision
A four-step process for judging buyer indecision:
In research by Herbert Simon in 1956, it was determined there are two kinds of decision makers:
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Both the importance of the decision and time pressure can increase the propensity of buyers to get stuck
Everybody is decisive when it doesn't count. But actually acting entails a lot of risk.
Elite sellers:
Offer your Recommendation
As the sale transitions, the seller must move from reactive posture (i.e. Help me understand your needs) to a proactive posture (i.e. Here's what you need)
Combining proactive guidance with advocacy lowers the burden of choice for a buyer
Elite sellers:
Limit the Exploration
Remember: buyers aren't looking for sellers to teach them how to do their jobs. Instead, they're looking for help to be smarter consumers of a technology, product or service they don't know much about
Leverage the Colin Powell rule:
Own the flow of information to the buyer!
Anticipate the buyer's needs and objections
Practice radical candor once trust is established
This is a critical concept for sellers to understand: listening is important in sales, but if you want to close a deal, engagement is actually more important.
Indecisive customers need an active, engaged conversation with a salesperson to get them over the hump.
The optimal amount of silence time is between 8 percent and 17 percent of the call, and is associated with win rates of 30 percent.
Elite sellers:
Take Risk Off the Table
Don't use FUD tactics:
Remember that the buyer is not struggling to make a decision because they might miss an opportunity to win.
One effective tactic is to create detailed project plans before the deal closes, to show the buyer that the seller and their company know exactly how their customers get value out of the purchase
Outcome uncertainty is arguably the most intractable and difficult-to-overcome source of customer indecision
Elite sellers:
Misc From the Rest of the Book
Once the buyer has agreed on a vision and purchase intent is established, JOLT sellers shift gears and stop selling TO the buyer, and instead and start buying FOR them
In most cases, the buyer's indecision is less a function of something they did as sellers and much more a function of who customers are as people
Confidently asking for the business positions saying yes and signing the agreement to move forward as the default option.
Left to their own devices, sales managers often skew their coaching efforts toward the tails . . . [But] the real payoff from good coaching lies among the middle 60 percent—your core performers. For this group, the best-quality coaching can improve performance by up to 19 percent.
If you read this far, thanks! Please buy the book if you'd gain value from it, the authors deserve your support. Also, please share a comment or feedback in a DM as to whether you liked these book notes!
Driving business outcomes through better #Sponsorship | Speaker | Lifetime Learner
1 年I'm in the midst of reading The Jolt Effect right now. These are VERY good notes and capture the key points of the book really, really well.
Wall Street Journal bestselling co-author of The Challenger Sale, The Effortless Experience, The Challenger Customer and The JOLT Effect; Frequent contributor to Harvard Business Review; Founding Partner at DCMi
1 年What a summary—really outstanding. Thank you for sharing, Erik MacKinnon, and for the kind words about the book! Already looking forward to the next one of these you put out.
Operator & VC | SaaS Startup & Scale-up Strategic Leader | Growth and then Scale to $25M ARR | Multiple Exits
1 年This was a solid share. Thanks Erik MacKinnon ??
Demand Generation & Performance Optimization
1 年Thanks for putting this together!
Head of Revenue at Wynter
1 年Carl here you go, curious how this jives with your read through