Turning ‘value’ into sales

Where is “value” in your sales equation?

Where is “value” in your sales presentation?

What role does “value” play in building customer loyalty?

How does “value” help build solid business relationships?

- Advertisement -

How does value convert selling to buying?

How does your prospect PERCEIVE what you’re saying and offering is actually valuable to THEM?

ANSWER: Your value proposition needs to define value in terms of the customer (in other words, fix your value proposition).

Giving value and adding value are words that many salespeople and sales executives have a difficult time understanding, let alone providing. Most people think that value is all about something the company adds. Some small additional service, something tacked onto the product, a slight reduction in price, even something “free.” Wrong.

Value is something done for the customer, in favor of the customer. The right value proposition will: engage, gain interest, eliminate price as an objection, eliminate bidding, eliminate competition, and double your sales.

And it can only be accomplished by proving value.

Last week I gave you elements of the components of the value proposition. Part one is available on my website.

Here are the rest of the value proposition elements:

n The value that helps your customer produce more, benefit from, and/or profit from. The paradox of this element is that it is the most important of the entire value proposition, and almost never employed by the salesperson (that would be you). In most cases it’s the only thing that your prospective customer is interested in, and in all cases, it’s what will create the greatest engagement.

There’s an old cliché in sales that goes, “They don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.” That statement is wrong. It should read, “They don’t care how much you know unless they know where the productivity is, where the benefit is, where the risk reduction is, and where the profit is.”

Because this is the most important element of the entire value proposition, it’s where you must put the most emphasis, and spend the most time.

Action step: Take a moment right now and write down all the ways your customer produces, benefits, or profits from your product or service. Just a bunch of bullet points will do. Some of these bullet points may be scattered throughout your sales presentation, and I’m challenging you to put them all in one segment. And there’s a secret here: Make certain that these value points and these profit points are added into any request for a proposal bid that your customer may have. This means that your competition will have to prove their value at the same time they’re trying to figure out how much to cut their price.

n The continuing value after the sale. This is my version of added value. By continuing to provide value, you let the customer know this is a relationship, not a transaction. That this is a partnership, not a vendor/customer process.

The value proposition, if used properly, can ELIMINATE competition. The value proposition can set forth things that make you the only choice. If your prospect asks you about a competitor, you respond, “They’re great … if you want second best” – or – “I don’t know, ask them about their value proposition. If they come back to you with ‘price reduction’ or ‘save you money,’ run the other way.”

Tell your prospect that they should not allow “three bids” or “proposals” UNLESS the competition can match the value proposition that you have provided and proof by testimonial.

What is value worth? I promise when you master the value proposition, and use it in your selling process, you will double your sales, keep your profit, generate a long list of loyal customers, and confuse the “price-no-value” competition.

What are you doing or giving that benefits your customer? What are you doing that they perceive as valuable to them? Or does everything you do just benefit yourself?

Here’s the formula: The more they perceive value, the more they will buy from you at your price. •

Jeffrey Gitomer is president of Charlotte-based Buy Gitomer. He can be reached at (704) 333-1112 or email to salesman@gitomer.com

No posts to display