SALES LEADERS: YOU DIDN’T START THE FIRE

SALES LEADERS: YOU DIDN’T START THE FIRE

Here’s a gut-check question for sales leaders: When salespeople come to you with a problem, is your first instinct to hand them the solution? Is that your default setting:?simply putting out whatever fire the rep identifies for you? Because you think doing?so, will save time????

Or … do you look for ways to create an adult-to-adult conversation that empowers them to find their own solution to whatever issue they’re facing???

The best way to create that kind of conversation is during a private one-on-one meeting. During that meeting, we can start by asking them to expand their horizons a bit – to give us more information about the problem they’re facing. We might say something like this:??

That’s interesting. Can you tell me a little bit more about (X)???

That question is probably going to be a bit of a pattern interrupt for the salesperson, because they may be used to being handed the answer right away. It’s a good idea?to avoid filling the awkward silence that sometimes follows this kind of question. A better approach is simply to be curious and wait for the salesperson to answer back.? Them taking responsibility for describing the problem in more detail increases the?likelihood of them assuming responsibility for understanding the problem.??

After they’ve responded to this first question, we can continue with the next one,?which will sound something like this:??

Can you be a little more specific about (X)? Can you give me an example???

Again – setting aside the instinct to help them answer this question will help them to assume ownership of the issue. Once they give us a response, we can continue with?a question like:??

Let me ask you something. How long has this kind of issue been a problem for you? ??

Translation: Have they been coming to you for help with this type of issue for a while? Typically, the answer is going to be “Yes.”? Maybe we let them process that fact and quantify it in terms of weeks, months, or even years.. Once they’ve done that, we?could continue the conversation with:??

What have you tried to do about that? (Any answer.) And did that work? (Obviously not, because here they are trying to get us to solve the problem.) I’m curious – how much would you say this has cost you, in terms of both time spent or opportunities lost because you were dealing with this? ??

Now, if you have any familiarity with Sandler, the odds are pretty good that you recognize these questions. They’re part of a powerful interview sequence known as the Pain Funnel. This is a classic Sandler questioning sequence that delivers remarkable results when it’s used with prospective buyers. But you know what? It also delivers great results in coaching settings with individual salespeople. In fact, it can deliver major breakthroughs in a matter of minutes. And it can change the culture of your team from “Please fix this for me” to “How can I solve this problem on my own, in a way that supports me, my colleagues, and my whole organization?”??

If all else fails, we can ask: “Just out of curiosity … what would you have done about this if I’d been out sick today?”??

Asking questions like these will free up more of our time to do all those things we’re responsible for besides putting out fires that salespeople could be putting out themselves. If that’s not worth changing our default setting for, what is???


Jake Fry ??

Passion for serving with love, developing growth mindsets, and building each other up for a better tomorrow. PMP | CTP | CTB | CSCP | MBA

3 个月

Q: In a world of no numbers, how will the salespeople survive? [This one is for you] Q: In a world of chaos, how will those that inherit the earth live? A: With no Numbers.

Lindsay Fuchs

Got something real to share? Content Specialist helping entrepreneurs get clarity on their mission, audience, and authentic messaging. Stay true to who you are, get noticed, and scale.

3 个月

This is a fantastic article Blaine Arnold. Sometimes it's hard to slow down, but the relationship you build by doing that is worth it's weight in gold. The question, "What have you tried to do about that?" and "How did that work out for you?" are so telling. And helps them decide in their head that what they've been doing isn't going to cut it. They convince themselves they need you before you've even offered a solution.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了