How Marketers Can Help Sellers Overcome Their #1 Hurdle – Buyer Indecision
In their revealing new book, The JOLT Effect, Mathew Dixon and Ted McKenna partnered with dozens of companies across a variety of industries to collect and analyze over 2.5 million sales calls including both simple, transactional sales and complex, solution sales.*
What they learned is compelling new insight for any marketer trying to help sellers overcome?one of the biggest obstacles they face – customer inaction: a buyer’s decision not to purchase anything, even after going through the entire sales process and expressing purchase intent.
Prior to their analysis, customer inaction has historically been attributed to one cause – the customer’s preference for the status quo. Sales training and sales books have long focused on helping sellers overcome this obstacle, instructing them to “relitigate” the sale by re-emphasizing the benefits of their solution and risk to the customer if they don’t do anything. In other words, ratchet up the fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) and what the customer will be missing if they don’t make the purchase.
The Dixon and McKenna study shows that this is a flawed strategy and actually detrimental to closing deals.?
They note in particular:
“But once they [buyers] have agreed that they should move on from the status quo, the thing they now fear – and fear more – is the failure that may result from their actions: what will happen not if they do nothing but rather if they do something.?And?those costs will be concrete and directly attributable to their decisions.”
Implications for Marketers
In The JOLT Effect, the authors identify a number of worthwhile tactics that sellers can use to overcome buyer indecision.
Their analysis also points to a clear opportunity for marketers who realize that at a certain point in the sales process, buyers are looking for a provider that won’t let them down. They want a provider that understands their fears implicitly, clearly articulates capabilities that address them, and faithfully guides them into making a buying decision that will help their organization and themselves.
From a marketing perspective, this realization has two important implications:
However, continuing to push benefits later in the sales cycle, and what a buyer will lose if they do nothing, will only make them more fearful and hesitant. At that point, it’s counterproductive.
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How Buyer Personas Can Help
A buyer persona, developed from interviews with individuals who have recently made the exact buying decision that you’re trying to influence, is uniquely capable of informing your marketing strategy in both the early and later stages of the sales cycle.?
?Based on the 5 Rings of Buying InsightTM:
The importance of developing your buyer persona based on interviews with recent buyers cannot be overstated.?As Dixon and McKenna note, buyer fears are particularly insidious because they are typically unspoken. Only by carefully interviewing recent buyers can marketers accurately identify concerns that would otherwise paralyze prospective customers and stop the sale.
“A big part of the challenge for salespeople—and one of the main reasons indecision has gone unrecognized for so long—is that it is difficult for a salesperson to detect in a conversation… Because it’s rooted in personal fears, it’s something customers either don’t feel comfortable admitting to or, more likely, are unaware is even affecting them and preventing them from making progress.”
As the proliferation of competitive options and information continues to increase, buyers will only get more uneasy about their buying decisions. Marketers that develop buying insights to develop strategies and messaging tightly aligned to buyer needs and concerns will be in the best position to earn their trust, and their business.
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*The Dixon and McKenna study was only possible because for the first time, in the Spring of 2020, sales calls could easily be recorded as the world went virtual when COVID-19 hit. Advances in automatic speech recognition and machine learning also enabled the rigorous coding and analysis needed to effectively analyze this large, unstructured data set.
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Thank you for reading this edition of Buyer Persona Buzz. I hope you enjoyed the topic, and we welcome your comments and suggestions.
Here are some other ways to access insights about your target buyers:
After 27 years of B2B marketing experience, I can confidently say that the biggest sales obstacle is FEAR. "What if I make the wrong decision?" Sticking to the status quo may be the wrong decision, but few people are fired for maintaining it. As marketers, we have to do everything possible to make the purchasing decision SAFE.
Sr. Intrl. Qualitative/Quantitative Research/ Pre Screen Qualifying Interviewer at Knowledge Systems & Research-One KS&R Inc.
1 年While reading your article Jim, There are some valuable principles with guiding solutions that I have gleaned to assist my interviewer skills. Thanks.
Content Director | Managing Creative Teams
1 年Great insight here about how a buyer’s mindset changes during the sales cycle and why, as a result, different messages are necessary (read: more effective) at each stage. We’re digging deep into B2B buyer personas in 2023. I’d love to have you as a guest on our Business as ‘Un’usual webinar series or a more casual Q&A session if you’re interested in sharing more Jim Kraus. I’d love to hear more about how Marketing can impact buyer indecision, particularly through intentional content in later stages of their journey.
VoC Researcher, Storyteller & Product Marketer ?? I interview buyers and your customers to capture competitive insights that fuel your product, marketing, sales and CS strategies. 1,000+ interviews & counting!
1 年A fantastic book and great summary of the book. And great advice on how companies can address buyer's fear of messing up by better understanding their specific fears and concerns. Thanks for sharing, Jim Kraus.
FUD is a killer in the sales cycle... (fear/uncertainty/doubt); I like the idea of Buyer Personas as a tool to combat those doubts. Thanks Jim Kraus