Win with TRUST, not Low Price: How to Sell More, Raise Prices, and Increase Loyalty
Yoram Solomon
Trust Researcher ? Professional Speaker ? Author, The Book of Trust? and The Trust Premium? ? Host, The Trust Show? Podcast ? 3x TEDx Speaker ? Adjunct Professor ? TV Host ? (972) 332-1490
In one of my surveys, I asked about the most important quality for people in other people they must rely on. On average, across six types of relationships, trustworthiness was the most important quality 61.2% of the time. The highest was for salespeople, 77.4% (followed by spouse with 77.2% and a far third boss with 60%). Three of four respondents stated that trustworthiness was the most important quality of a salesperson trying to sell them something.
So, I decided to see if people were willing to “put their money where their mouth is” and test if there was an actual premium for trustworthiness. In a second survey, I described a scenario where two salespeople bid on a $10,000 home renovation project. Without using the words ‘trust’ or ‘trustworthy,’ I described one of them as trustworthy and the other, well, not so much. Then, through a series of questions and calculations, I reached the following conclusions:
The trust premium doesn’t always exist. Multiple factors affect whether customers will put a premium on the salesperson’s trustworthiness and how much. Those factors include:
Potential Negative Consequences
The more severe the potential negative consequences of placing your trust in an untrustworthy salesperson are, the higher the trust premium. Relying on a financial advisor with all your money would have severe consequences if you were wrong and thus would warrant a high. Investing 1% of your net value will not warrant a high premium.
Reliance on the Salesperson vs. Myself
Knowledgeable people often conduct significant online research, read consumer reports, and compare specifications before buying a new TV. For them, there is very little reliance on the salesperson's knowledge. In fact, they often know more about the product than the salesperson, and the latter fills the role of no more than an order taker. If they can’t buy the TV online, that is. For people who are less technically inclined, relying on a salesperson who knows more than them is essential, and therefore, they would put a higher premium on their ability to trust that salesperson.
The question to ask here is, can I prevent, stop, or recover from the potential negative consequences of trusting a salesperson I shouldn’t have? Can I know enough to not engage in the transaction before it starts? Can I stop the negative consequences early on? Can I recover from them such that they are not as severe? The more I can rely on myself, the less I must rely on the salesperson, the less I must trust them, and therefore the lower the trust premium is.
Long-Term Relationship
Sales situations can be categorized as transactional (a single transaction) and relational (leading to or part of an ongoing relationship). In a transactional sales scenario, the trust premium might be lower, mainly because we would believe that the salesperson is highly motivated to complete this transaction and is not looking after my interests more generally. In a long-term relationship, such as with a financial advisor or an insurance broker, customers tend to put a higher premium on the trustworthiness of the salesperson who represents the company to them.
Given that different selling scenarios are different in those three dimensions (and more),
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How Trustworthy are Salespeople?
While in my survey I found that the average premium for a trustworthy salesperson is 29.6%, in some circumstances, especially with severe potential negative consequences, high reliance on the salesperson, and long-term relationships that premium could be significantly higher. One would think that with having such a high trust premium, salespeople would work hard to be trusted. Hubspot conducted research in 2016 to measure trustworthiness of different occupations. While they found that doctors and firefighters were considered the most trustworthy (With 49% and 48%, respectively), salespeople (in general) and marketing people were close to the bottom with 3% each, above politicians, car salesmen (still a type of salesperson), and lobbyists. The problem is even exacerbated by salespeople not realizing that the are not trusted. Consulting firm Price Waterhouse Coopers found in 2022 that while 87% of business leaders believe they and their companies are trusted by their customers, only 30% of the 2,500+ customers surveyed agreed, a 57% gap!
What Makes a Salesperson Trustworthy?
The same relative trust model that applies to trustworthiness in every relationship also applies to salespeople. The six components of the model are:
But beyond that, two of the eight laws of trust play a significant role as well:
Summary
With the increase in the pervasiveness of spam and scams, as well as salesperson-centric sales pressure and marketing techniques, the overall level of trust in salespeople is declining, leaving a significant gap between how trustworthy salespeople believe they are and how trustworthy their customers perceive them to be.
This is a great opportunity. Not only can you win business by being a trustworthy salesperson, but a premium is paid at higher prices when the customer knows they can trust you.
Want to hear more? Listen to Season 10, Episode 8 of The TRUST Show podcast here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/s10e8-win-with-trust-not-low-price-how-to-sell-more/id1569249060?i=1000625251922
or anywhere else you listen to your favorite podcasts
Hire Culture Virtual Assistants ?? International Speaker ?? Video Marketing Expert ?? Best Selling Author ?? The Collective Coaching!
1 年I sent a potential lead a video of me feeding out baby after I met her an at event. She loved it and the trust factor went through the roof! Thank you this, Yoram! It's so good!
Keynote Speaker, Author, Innovation & Disruption Expert,Founder Travelocity, Founding Chairman Kayak.com, Chairman Amgine.ai
1 年Sometimes the power of brand and reputation and reviews can trump the trustworthiness of the sales person but buying something new and unknown from someone who is not trustworthy. ?Yes, I’d pay a premium to get a trust in that situation.
Shows leaders how to read Body Language and Influence Decisions? Speaks and Consults on how to win new clients, career opportunities and support of stakeholders ? Author of "Read The Zoom"
1 年Yoram the trust piece is really important to me because I’ve seen people go with the lower price and then get stiffed by the resource. This just happened to a neighbor on a landscaping project. The resource took the down payment, started the project, then disappeared. The cheaper project ended up costing much more.
Yoram Solomon what a fascinating study. We’re you surprised at the initial results or did you have an idea that trust was a primary concern for buyers?
Hall-of-Fame Speaker. Bestselling Author. Leadership Communication & Executive Presence Expert. Book Writing & Publishing Coach. Global Gurus Top 30 Communication Experts, Marshall Goldsmith's Top 100 Coaches
1 年Are you familiar with all the studies 3M did a couple of decades ago about the premium price customers would pay when the only variable in the sale was color and packaging? Fascinating to me.