The "FORCE MULTIPLIER" most Sales Teams don't bother to deploy.
Justin Stephenson
Helping Revenue Teams & Business Operations grow by transforming performance. Supporting business leaders, sales leaders and CS teams to enhance operational & commercial performance. ?? go.sandler.com/londoncity ??
One of the most powerful ideas for maximising team sales productivity
At Sandler, we believe that sales process and methodology
We tell our clients that today’s sellers must expect to create a ten-fold increase in client-facing activity
To get a handle on the idea that drives the Post-Sell, look beyond the immediate question of whether a given sale has “closed.” Focus instead on the question of how to ensure that a strong and enduring relationship has opened up. Then ask yourself: Why would you ever buy back tomorrow what you sold today? Who would want to??
The truth is, though, this kind of buy-back happens all the time. It’s called buyer’s remorse. Fortunately, with a strong Post-Sell step, we can make minimising buyer’s remorse
We’ve all run into situations where we received a “yes” from the buyer, and then for some reason, the relationship went dark, and the sale fell through. Maybe we couldn’t get them back on the phone. Or maybe they decided to cancel everything through text or email. Or maybe they contacted someone else in the organisation and decided that they did not want to buy after all, even though they wouldn’t say that directly to us. The point is, we couldn’t get face-to-face or voice-to-voice with them to use our selling skills
The key to avoiding this painful experience is to acknowledge that every time somebody says “yes” to us – whether we are face-to-face or voice-to-voice – that “yes” is conditional. Selling actually starts after the “Yes.” That’s when we want to be sure to take off our happy ears and start posing questions we’ve prepared (and practiced in role-play sessions) that clarify how the buyer is going to respond to the various pressures, both internal and external, that will inevitably arise.
Delivering the Post-Sell?
Everyone on our team needs to be comfortable conducting the Post-Sell. Everyone on our team needs to be able to describe to the team leader exactly what happened during this critical conversation.?
No matter how positive the signals are at that moment, the buyer may still experience buyer’s remorse once we leave. Our job as a sales professional is to walk them through the buyer’s remorse experience while we are in front of them, so we can deal with it in person and hopefully keep the deal from falling apart when we’re gone. We want to find a way to use our in-person selling skills to help the buyer navigate the predictable, emotionally difficult experience of doubt that often follows a purchase decision.?
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One great way to do this is to think of a minor objection that came up during the sales cycle and bring it back up for discussion. This kind of discussion may run counter to our instinct to “close the deal,” but it is nevertheless a core part of our sales process.?
Here's a quick example of what Post-Sell might sound like.
“Mary, I know you wanted the product in blue; we only have red. And you said that was going to be okay. I just want to confirm, before we conclude our discussion today, that red really is going to be all right with you.”
When Mary thinks it over for a moment and then says, “Yes, actually red is fine,” something important takes place. She has psychologically closed the file. She’s good. She’s gone through the process of setting aside doubt. And we helped her to do that.
It’s part of our job to help people manage the fear, doubt, and worry they have about making the right decision, so we need to play the role of the psychiatrist here. We need to help them process their natural insecurity and then work with them to overcome it. What David Sandler was suggesting when he came up with this vitally important selling rule is that we make a conscious choice to help buyers overcome those fears, doubts, and worries while they are still in front of us… so we don’t end up having to buy back the product or service that we sold today.
If you are a sales leader
Yes. Many salespeople push back at first when they hear about this best practice … but they tend to stop pushing back when they see what consistently implementing a Post-Sell step does to their closing ratios!
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