How to Conduct Discovery Meetings That Will Help You Win More Clients
The Initiate Stage - B2B Sales Maturity Framework

How to Conduct Discovery Meetings That Will Help You Win More Clients

Hello friends????

You finally got that meeting booked!

Or you had an inbound sales lead from your webinar. Yass!!

In B2B sales, we call this a discovery call or meeting.

Discovery meetings happen because you or your prospect/clients initiated a discussion.

Discovery meetings allow you to get to know your clients and their needs and help you provide them with the best service or product.

There are five key defining moments in the sales process that we must decide with our clients/prospects.

Initiate: Should we be talking?

Qualify: Should we keep on talking?

Validate: Are we on the same page?

Strategise: How will we do this?

Proposal: Should we do this together?

The Importance of Client Discovery Meetings in the Sales Process

80% of lost sales opportunities result from a lack of an effective sales strategy and process.

The discovery meeting is the start of the sales process.

Not only do they allow you to understand their needs, but they also help build trust and rapport. This is your first step to building that connection with your client. Clients who feel you genuinely care about their success will be open to sharing important information.

What Should a Client Discovery Meeting Include?

A successful client discovery meeting should cover the following key elements:

Before the meeting

Prepare

  • First what is your goal and objectives?
  • Pre-qualify if this is your Ideal Client Profile or Target Market.
  • Develop a comprehensive understanding of the company and the individuals you will meet and what they care about. (Internal Sales Materials like Checklist)

Research thru:

  • LinkedIn/Sales Navigator
  • Websites
  • Annual reports/news

Next, create a brief business hypothesis. Remember, this is your thinking, not your client. We will discuss later on how to validate assumptions. For now, this is all your hypothesis.

Check out the Account Customer Profile Template to help build your client’s situation and business hypothesis. Account Customer Profile

During the meeting

1.Introduction

Start the meeting with a quick introduction. When giving an introduction in client discovery meetings, it’s important to keep it concise and focused. I love how Wes Kao reminds us of cutting out all the crap. I almost lost a client because my ex-boss kept talking about himself and giving a detailed career history during our meeting!

  • Connect Personally.
  • Introduce yourself clearly and confidently.

Remember that the introduction is just the beginning of the meeting. Avoid going into too much detail or overwhelming the client with unnecessary information.

From Wes Kao

  • Be genuinely curious

How effective are you in knowing your client better? How can you get your client to talk more about themselves and their organisation?

  • Transition to Inquiry and asking effective questions.

Instead of sharing a PowerPoint slide and presenting your company capability, etc.. start with setting the goal of meeting and agreeing on what would be a successful meeting for your prospects.

If they let you lead the meeting, you can start with:

“Thank you for meeting with us.

We wanted to meet with you to explore a potential revenue growth(or revenue recovery, depending on your research and account profiling) opportunity and work together to identify strategies that will benefit your business (this is generic, make this specific to your industry and your research).

After covering this topic, please let us know if there is something important to you that we can pursue. If there is, please inform us if you would like our assistance.

Does that align with your goals for our meeting?”

But if the client asked for the meeting, they would probably take the lead and present a solution they want.

??Warning here is to avoid getting too excited and doing a sales pitch.

How to avoid pitching

  • Listen. Don't think about what you want to say until you hear the period!
  • Use Empathy Statements
  • Redirect Questions

If your client presents a solution and says, here is the solution I am thinking of, please give us a proposal next week.

Don’t rush and write that proposal.

Responding to a solution without understanding the problem is a problem!

Sometimes our clients propose solutions that do not address the real issue or the outcomes that they want.

Also, they might already be working with another vendor who supplied the solution, which is important to know.

First, listen.

Second, apply an EQ statement.

Imagine your client says,

We need a company-wide inventory system, and looking at our options, please submit a proposal with all the features and add the pricing, too.

Sounds familiar? When you hear this... slow down. And initiate a dialogue.

You can either use a PROBLEM QUESTION or a RESULTS Question.

  • Problem Question

Great, I love presenting our solutions and talking about our capabilities. For me to focus on those relevant to your situation, what are the most important business issues you are trying to address this year?

or

Thank you for this opportunity, before rushing straight to the proposal, what kinds of business problems are you experiencing?

  • Results

I am happy to provide a proposal before I jump into details. Do you mind me asking what business results you hope we can help you achieve?

or

Let’s say we are able to provide you with the perfect solutions; what would allow you to do as a business that you can’t do today?

These are just samples. You can apply them based on your business and expertise.

2. Needs Assessment:

Find out your client’s needs and how you can help meet those needs.

Here is an outline of the needs assessment. We will deep dive into part 2 in the next newsletter issues with real use case examples you can apply in sales.

2. 1 Opportunity

1.Don’t Pitch.

2.Get out all the pain/results.

  • Encourage the client to talk all about their issues and concerns.
  • Acknowledge and show empathy.
  • Summarise
  • Validate and confirm

3.Prioritise the list of pain/results.

  • Once you have summarised, proceed to prioritising issues.
  • Or getting the top one or two.

4.Gather evidence and impact.

  • How do we know it is a problem?
  • What is there too much or too little?
  • Monetise the client’s issues.

5.Explore context and constraints.

  • If it is a new problem, what can prevent a successful implementation?
  • If it’s an old problem, what has stopped them from changing or addressing it?

??TIP: These are the top two simple questions that reveal a lot of client information.

  • Tell me more.
  • Is there anything else?

2.2 Resources

Money conversation starts in the discovery phase.

The aim is to understand if it is a real opportunity, which means the clients have people, time and money allocated to the opportunity or project.

So start with discussing expectations for both you and your client.

  • Time - Is this urgent or for next year?
  • Money - Understand your client’s budget to ensure your products and services align with their financial capabilities.
  • People - Who is the lead person or team? Why will you write one if no one can read and decide on your proposal?

2.3 Decision-making

Understanding your client's decision-making process before submitting proposals is important to avoid any potential time wastage.

The 5 Questions Decision Process Framework helps understand the client’s decision-making process.

It is important not to present a proposal without understanding the decision-making process. Doing so may result in a mismatch between your proposal and the client’s needs or expectations.

And always have micro-commitments in every step of the sales process.

How can the 5 Questions Decision Process Framework help you?

  • Gain insights into the steps, key decisions, timing, individuals involved, and decision-making methods.
  • Presenting a proposal without understanding the decision-making process can lead to a mismatch between the proposal and the client’s needs.
  • Understanding the decision-making process helps navigate obstacles and address concerns.
  • Engaging directly with decision-makers builds consensus and increases the chances of winning the client’s business.

2.4 The question to ask after the end of every meeting

"How do you want "us" to proceed?

This is not a pushy sales question. It's clearly defining the next steps after the meeting, including any follow-up actions or meetings. Or this is not what the client is looking for--and that's okay too.

After the meeting

Send an email summarising all the key points and next steps. Book the next meeting by sending a calendar invite if there is an agreement to meet.

If it's a long term opportunity, stay in touch with your client and nurture the relationship.


This is how successful salespeople initiate and run client meetings.

They don’t begin with sales.

They don't pitch and minimise the time spent talking, or demonstrating their product.

They focus on curiosity, listening and building an innovative business case through preparation, intelligent discovery, and collaboration.

I hope you found this week’s lesson helpful.

Have a great week ahead!

Ren


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Dora Vanourek

Coach in Chris Donnelly's The Creator Accelerator | xIBM Consulting | xPwC | Certified Executive Coach | #1 ???? creator

9 个月

We can never go wrong with curiosity and listening - so that people feel valued and cared for, and we establish trust. Thank you for these timeless tips, Ren Saguil ??

Mary Beth Hazeldine

Helping technical experts & product specialists improve their win rate on pitches. 829 clients helped to-date with training that had an immediate, positive impact on their results. Will you be next?

9 个月

That's some solid advice for successful client meetings! Thanks for sharing. ??

Jan Bakker

Interim CEO at Shortcontentsolver

9 个月

Great tips for successful client meetings! ??

Alex Belov

AI Business Automation & Workflows | Superior Website Creation & Maintenance | Podcast

9 个月

Great advice! Listening is key. Thanks for sharing. ??

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