Your salesperson tells you: "my prospect finds us too expensive". How do you react to that?

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Every sales or business leader experiences this: their salespeople telling them that their offering is too expensive.

As long as I have been a sales consultant, I have heard salespeople complaining about their product/service being considered too expensive. There are different reasons why prospective customers can find you too expensive. Sometimes lack of funds can be the reason, but often it has to do with not realising that what you have to offer them will satisfy their need. Lack of insights into how to sell value by the salesperson plays an even more critical role.

For people to buy from you, there must be a need. This need can be dormant, which means the demand is there, but they are not actively aware of this need. Or, there is an operational need, but they need to make a choice.

Let's take a closer look at how to avoid getting swamped into price discussions.

  1. Preparation: Before the call, research the prospect, market, and what they offer to their customers.

  2. Know your product, including your value proposition, features, benefits, and value for the customer.

  3. Prepare your conversation, which means having a script in place which should sound natural. Your story should include your introduction, followed by the prospect telling you about their business and followed through by you asking questions. Your questions should be in a conversational way where you avoid behaving like a detective.

  4. Above all, pay attention to how you start a sales call with a prospect. The first minutes of the call are crucial for the whole conversation. Your introduction and the way you lead the discussion depends on these first minutes. Either the prospect accepts that you take the lead, or they take it!

Price can be crucial, depending on the value that the buyer sees in your offering. The reality is that professional buyers know that using price is an excellent instrument to put pressure on the salesperson and get the best deal. Quite often, they bring up "price" at the beginning of the sales conversation. And quite often, salespeople tumble right into this trap.

Be aware that a sales conversation with a professional buyer will be different from a C-level manager's call.

Conversations with professional buyers usually focus on price. Still, if you can stay away from price and focus on their deep needs, you will sell on value.

Conversations with C-level managers or VP's are more focused on strategy, shareholders value, the organisation's well-being, future development and much more.

Take care that you discover at least three compelling reasons why they would want to buy what you are offering.

Receptive listening plays an important role here. Sometimes salespeople ignore critical remarks, which can be essential.

I'll give you an example: the prospect just reacted to a feature of your offering with, "this is interesting". Most salespeople would say "thank you" and continue. Wrong! Try the following by asking: "why do you find it interesting" "where does it fit your expectations", "how would it solve the issues you have", any many more questions you can ask.

You will add a new dimension to your sales conversations regarding "price" by trying the above-mentioned approaches.

Contact me here, if you want to know more about increasing sales performance and more profitable margins. Call me at +31 0642713033.

What salespeople can learn from pilots and thrive!

At the age of 32, I decided to take up flying lessons. My flight instructor René, was a very disciplined guy who cared a lot about safety. Before every flight, we would have a walk around the plane to inspect that all is well. Before starting the engine, after starting the engine, there would be more checks to ensure all is functioning well before and after taking off.

It's an obligatory process that needs to occur before every flight, during flight and before landing to ensure you have a safe journey and enjoy your trip.

In sales, sales processes guide us through checks and balances to ensure we secure our chances of getting the deal. Next to that, it helps us manage your pipeline closely and forecast reliable results.

The difference between a flight safety process and a sales process is, when pilots bungle up their operation, they might crash and die. When salespeople bungle their process and lose the deal, they often blame others for their failure.

Those that have a process will have increased chances of succeeding. And if they fail, they will be able to analyse their technique, learn and do better next time!

If you want to significantly improve your sales team's performance, contact me for a chat that will give you insights into how to increase your sales team's effectiveness and grow your business.

I can tell you more about designing and activating a sales process that will support your business growth significantly.

Want to know more? Please contact me at robert@peterson-company.com or +31 (0)642713033.