How many times have you been pitched to or sat in a meeting with someone blathering on about the features and benefits of their products? I say blathering because that’s what it feels like when someone is sitting in front of you talking about their product, their features and what they believe are the benefits.
It feels like a pretty one-sided conversation, one size fits all—from only their perspective, right?
Features are intrinsic to the product. But benefits, are intrinsic to the user or consumer.
I feel annoyed in these situations because the sales person is assuming what my priorities are, what I value, and what’s most important to me. How often do we get it right if we assume everyone has the same value systems?
Not often. And if this sounds like you and how you’ve been selling, it could be seriously putting off your customers and handicapping your results.
To connect strongly with your customers, build a more flexible sales process—one that accounts for varying perspectives, influences, and values.
Over the next few posts, we’ll share our formula for creating strategic selling tools that profoundly speak to your customers.
Start with asking questions about your product or solutions’ features and how they’re relevant to buyer benefits. Stay focused on the customer’s varied perspectives and be open to differing values—not broad marketing messages.
Take each product or offering and drill down as deep as you can, exhausting all the answers. It may seem redundant, but in this process, you’ll
From your customer’s perspective, what are all the possible ways they could answer these questions:
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If you’ve struggled to answer many or all of these questions, perhaps you’ve been presenting your offering from only your own perspective – and it’s been too narrow. Combine many potential answers for each question and allow for the unknown as well.
If you need more perspective, interview your current customers and ask them these questions. If you’re a small business, bring your whole team in to get their perspectives too. Test and revise often so you’re continually reflecting your customer’s context and values.