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Archive for the ‘Value Creation’ Category

High Impact Results with Low Impact Techniques: Business Development from a Trust Perspective

Monday, March 1st, 2010

man-fishing-12

Ask any sales or non-sales executives (consultants, small business owners, etc.) what part of business they most dislike and they will almost universally answer with two words: business development (in other words, prospecting). No matter the overall business experience or training or overall capabilities, business development or thereof is typically abhorred. Not only is it difficult, but many of the processes hurt the business (and the individual’s efforts) as they are typically:

Short term focused

Utilizing techniques that are uncomfortable to both the prospects and the sales people

Product focused (and not client focused)

Over automated and under personalized

..only to cause dissatisfaction with the client in the short and long term- which subjects you to losing their business.

Disliked

This distaste reflects (or perhaps causes) one of the most troubling and intractable problems in business: despite spending time, effort and money encouraging, supporting and demanding that salespeople maintain a decent pipeline, these efforts produce low returns and poor morale.

We also observe that non-sales executives are typically experts in other areas such as consulting, engineering or marketing and are just not geared up for filling up the pipeline.

After all, who likes making (and receiving!) “cold calls.” That includes the client, who is typically annoyed with an overly automated under personalized script or technique that turns them off from the start.

What is an easier route?

There is no easy route. But there is an easier one. Everyone agrees that it is easier to get business from your current client base than chase new clients, and you should proceed along this path. If you have built a trusted relationship with your client base, you can capitalize on referrals.

But what happens when your business sees a big drought and dries up? Who can afford this scenario when things are uncertain? Nobody can.

Rewarding and Fun… What?

Here is a solution…

Business development does not need to be woeful. In fact, it can be rewarding and fun with the right attitude and approach.

One means to do this is through trust and the models that establish trustworthiness. When you understand and utilize the models of trust, you can see the power of it; it actually eases the stress and elevates the confidence in both you and your client, so that you can become more confident, comfortable and aligned with prospects.

Trust does take some time to establish, but the beauty of it all is you can start establishing trust through the structure of your dialogue (engage and listen) with your prospects right now. And, if you understand the Trust Equation, it only takes a little bit to build trustworthiness by heightening your credibility, reliability, intimacy and by lowering your self-orientation. Put these efforts in effect now and the results will endure.

Trust is ever so important in business commerce today and it is believed that trust-based business relationships are the single best route to corporate and personal success. And this different approach works for business development, too.

What could be better in times when clients or prospects are dissatisfied with the “quick turnaround” and “smile and dial” techniques that are often used today?

Results

When you develop business by initiating with trust (and therefore building trustworthiness), you get an engagement that is more personable and client focused, which allows for:

Less stress in your interactions and therefore more productivity

Faster results

Less “second guessing”

Less competitive bids

More referrals

After all , if the client trusts you, you get immediate credibility.

High impact results with low impact techniques.

Take the following  Trust Quiz and think about how the 4 areas of the Trust Equation can help your immediate business development and long term relationship development.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Using the “Drip Method” to Build Stronger Relationships

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

 

drip coffeeWhat am I talking about here? Coffee? A hospital?

You may need both to help build stronger business relationships…but that is not what I am referring to.

The “Drip Method” is all about feeding the client bits and pieces of valuable information to “hook” them into a long term relationship.

How is this done?

To start, you need to always be:

Understanding the client’s business

Anticipating his needs

Listening to him to understand his needs/priorities

Keeping a record of those needs/priorities so you can constantly refer to them

What is next?

You use the vast world of the internet, your creative mind and your network. You then gather the pertinent information, put it all together and send “value packages” to your prospects and clients.

With the value packages of client pertinent information, you feed your prospects and clients, on ocassion, through emails or face to face, pertinent articles (preferably ones that you write in your own blogs) and verbal tid-bits of information. Make sure that every message is personalised and timely. Make sure it is unobtrusive.

What does this do? It keeps you in front of the client with their agenda, not yours. It builds a value add relationship. Simple as that.

Keep in mind that this requires a lot of thinking and research… and it takes time, but it will bring results.

By the way, I drink my coffee expresso style…

Cheers.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

HR Leaders are Looking for Differentiators- Why?

Monday, November 30th, 2009

 

HR

To support the business in changing and turbulent times, HR leaders are looking for ways to support their stakeholders and offer new ideas/programmes above and beyond the norm.

Why? Due to the pressure of the business. The pressure for profitability and the pressure to contribute more to the business.

How are the HR leaders looking to do this? The HR leaders are looking to supply the right tools, and some of the old tools may not work anymore. They also feel that they need to add more value to the business.

So what might work today?

We all know that HR needs to understand the business and needs to link learning and development to the business goals and strategies. That is a no brainer.

To date, HR leaders have exausted their efforts with the sales and sales management teams by providing sales training programmes that offer a scripted, burdensome process. These programmes have brought in results, but the HR Leaders should take it one step further- even as  the executives continue to look  for quick answers-and quick results.

Wait a minute. Quick answers and quick results? You have tried programmes that offer the quick answers and results already. Some work and some don’t. What to do next?

As an HR leader, shouldn’t you be in the position to advise the business? Shouldn’t that be your key role?

To provide value you should look to be a proactive advisor. And as an advisor, you can position business differentiators.

How to differentiate?

Soft skills.

Soft skills are truly in need today. And I don’t recommend that becuse Egyii’s business evolves around that. I (and others) believe  it.

Soft skills need to complement the current sales process and the product training.

Soft skills are the “glue” to keep it all together.

So why is it difficult to pitch to management? Is it because soft skills are difficult to measure? They don’t show “direct” results? If that is on the mind of your executive team, they need advice. Your advice.

Soft skills, such as relationship skills, are important as they complement the drive for immediate results.

They also build the pipeline.

…and they turn a prospect into a client and keep the client a client.

If you are focusing on programmes that bring immediate results, chances are you are losing the client, because they know when the sales pressure is on. Relationship building soft skills help relieve this pressure and give you the ability to sell immediately and medium/ long termwithout losing the client.

Isn’t that what the business REALLY wants?

HR Leaders have the opportunity to be more active as advisors. Contribute more of your ideas to the business. Add more value by advising the business and offering new tools such as more targeted soft skills.

It may difficult to convince the stakeholders- give it a try.

For more, see:

Building and fostering client relationships.

Building and rebuilding trust.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Tips for Success in Major Accounts Sales: Understand Your Buyers

Friday, November 20th, 2009

 

No longer can global or major accounts programmes rely on decisions being made in mother countries. Decisions now need to be made on a local, Asia Pacific level, whether it is in Sydney, Singapore, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Shanghai or Tokyo.

And no longer can account teams rely on relationships alone. They must also add value.

Adding value means understanding what is on the mind of the client and giving them the tools to meet their personal and business goals. It’s not all about bits and bytes, bandwidth or speed or bells and whistles. To meet the goals, it’s all about understanding their problems and where they are in the decision making cycle…and being sensitive to that.

Neil Rackham, of Huthwaite and SPIN, was not a salesperson, but a behavioural psychologist. He studied how buyers bought and did not focus on how sellers should sell. He built a simple yet powerful tool to understand the buying cycle, or decision making process. He added sensitivity to the buying cycle.

SPIN Buying Cycle

In the buying cycle, there are multiple stages..changes over time, recognition of needs, evaluation of options, resolution of concerns, decision, implementation. No matter where you enter the buying cycle, you need to work (by continually adding value) with your client until he enters the “recognition of needs” area. This is the crucial time to be side by side, collaborating with your client to build the solution. (Rackham  also recognises that all of this takes time, so focus on medium-long term, not short term).

Once you are at the recognition of needs phase, you should understand how the client makes the decision.

What motivates him to buy?

The client (or buyer) typically has four levels of questions when it comes to the question of motivation when buying:

1) The product and its characteristics/features

2) A solution to the problem

3) A good business partner

4) Someone we can trust

Buyers state that they want want the first or second and ocassionally the third. Most sales programmes/processes focus on levels two and three- focusing on identifying the buyers’ needs through consultative selling.

Levels one through three are rational and impersonal. The fourth level, a person we can trust, is far more powerful.

If you understand the buying cycle and ultimately what motivates your client when buying, you are one step ahead of your competitors.

There is a lot more to it than that for global/major accounts selling but understanding the crucial aspects of buying are vital.

*Derived from Trust-based Selling by Charles H. Green.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

(The author ran the Anixter Asia Pacific Global Accounts programme in the earlier part of this century. There are certainly a few things he did well but there are a lot of things he could have done better. He wishes he had known all of this then.)

Why it is Integral that Salespeople Create Their Own “Personal Brand”

Monday, November 16th, 2009

 

Products aren’t the only things that need marketing. People do too. How do you build your presence for your clients- to market yourself and your company?

personal-branding-seo-300x239

In a world where millions, if not billions, of people converge on a digital platform, communicate via mobile phones and meet face to face, to really establish a presence, a salesperson should create his own personal brand.

Twitter. Facebook. Linked In. Blogs. All free ways to create your extended presence.

Your extended presence  is a great way to add value to your current relationship. Post and share your content and others’. Build upon subject matter that is relevant to your clients’ needs. Base it on the last conversation you had with your client.

A few helpful hints…peruse the following; Dan Schawbel’s articles as he is the personal branding expert who pens Personal Branding Magazine and, of course,  the business guru Tom Peters, whose  article The Brand Called You was originally written in 1997.

After all, the client’s relationship and loyalty is with the salesperson, not with the company.

Heat up the branding iron.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Want to Add Value in Your Sales “Process?” Try Adding Trust

Friday, October 30th, 2009

 

“We need to constantly be adding value to our client base,”  a comment said recently by a business leader in the South Asia territory for a major US medical company.

trust add value

Yes I agree wholeheartedly. But how do salespeople and support teams add value?

Value add can be defined in numerous ways, for example…

Offering the best solutions to a clients’ problems

Support throughout the whole sales cycle- pre, implementation, post.

Overall by positioning the product, the comapny and the salesperson himself

…and more

Value add as defined  by Tom Reilly, who wrote the book Value Added Selling ….”the only differentiation that may exist in this competitive comparison could rest with the salesperson.  Two Fortune-100 companies surveyed their customers to determine how much value their salespeople contributed to the sale; they discovered that 35-37% of the value that customers receive comes from the salespeople with whom they deal. Value added salespeople don’t make sales calls; they go on job interviews with customers. They ask customers to hire them to be their personal representative with the supplier’s company.”

So Tom’s definition of value add  is the salesperson as the company differentiator. I agree.

But, building trust through trustworthiness is also a value add. How? By putting the client first.

When you put the client first, the client sees that you care about him and his interests and not just about pushing a product or service.

And, as Charlie Green says in Trust-based Selling “It is possible for selling to be a genuinely value adding, beneficial process for the buyer AND seller alike.”

You just have to align trust properly. And if you align trust properly, it will be your value add and the differentiator.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

The Agile Mind of a Salesperson: Motivation

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

 

There are  two things that typically motivate a salesperson- money and personal success. (Personal success = achieving goals, positioning a product you admire in an industry you like, building personal and business relationships, Etc)

I will be touching on building successful relationships as the important aspect of personal success in this article.

Money

mooooney

Most people assume that all salespeople are driven by money, and most salespeople say they are purely in it for the money (just to pound their chests and impress their boss).

Money is a big factor for sales, otherwise why would anyone put up with the daily grind of forecasting,  threats from management when the numbers are not met, getting down on your hands and knees begging for a deal, Etc.

 

Relationship Success

Bus Relationships

Many salespeople are in sales because they love the people aspect of it. They like to connect, build a relationship, add value and become a trusted advisor. They like to walk hand-in-hand with the client, bringing them the best advice and solutions available. Overall, they feel a great sense of accomplishment – it is a great feeling. There are great advantages to this as it builds loyalty and therefore better medium to long term business. And it builds friendship.

 

Money and Relationship Success

In many instances, salespeople are driven by both motivators. Is this the best of both worlds? Maybe.

In Conclusion

So, as much as many would like not to believe,  sales and salespeople are not all about money. And money may not be the best single factor for motivation because  there are alternative methods of obtaining money through commissions and bonuses without having to bury yourself with the company dogma and the personal quota pressure.

These alternative methods of obtaining money (and rewards) can be found through other personal drivers (or personal successes), which ultimately lead to sales and therefore commissions (=money).

But if it is all done right, then money can be one of  the many rewards.

Do you see or know of any other things that motivate salespeople?

Do you think it is best to be motivated by money or personal satisfaction or a combination of the two?

Please comment.

 (You may also be interested in Why Don’t Companies Focus More on Relationships?)

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Introducing…Andrew Sidwell

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

 

Welcome, Andrew, to Team Egyii.

andrewIn a nutshell, Andrew brings to clients years of hands on experience in the call centre space and in the learning and development arena, working with major banks, insurance and technology companies, to name a few.

Andrew helps clients with the effective sales conversation and the reinforcement behind it. His focus is on solutions for front line service, sales teams and management:

 

Frontline sales and acquisition

Frontline customer experience

Leadership and coaching development

For more on Andrew, see Andrew Sidwell and for more on the programmes he has delivered to banking, finance and the tech sector, see the following.

 

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Two Simple Keys to Success in Sales

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

 

I met up with an Account Executive from one of my former employers the other day and she asked me, as we were parting, “Can you give me some tips on how to be successful in sales in my current position?”

sign

I love these kind of questions where I am asked for advice.

I answered “Relationships and value.”

“The relationships with your internal support mechanism (your colleagues) and the relationships with your clients are the most important. Without either of them, you will not survive.”

Simple enough. But…

“Relationships are very important but you must also add value. Always be adding value.”

“With your colleagues, always understand what drives and motivates them. Know their “business.” Instead of asking for their help, ask how you can help them. You would be amazed how they change their perspective.”

“With your clients, always be adding value- know their business and environment, anticipate their problems and offer solutions. Become a trusted advisor.”

This would be my simple answer to anyone who asked me about success in sales.

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

Tips and Advice for Financial Organizations from a Leading Research Organization

Friday, July 17th, 2009

 

The Egyii team recently attended a financial services briefing in Singapore, hosted by Gartner, one of the global leaders in research and analysis.

gartner-2

The following is some of the advice offered to the Singapore and global banking community.

(Highlighted in Bold Italics are quotes from the analysts. The rest  are comments from Team Egyii)

Technology can help but it’s not the be all to end all. CRM systems, online support, Etc are important, but facing the client (face to face), is more important.

Banks going back to basics- focus on core business away from the peripherals. Too many complicated programmes were rolled out over the years. This caused too many problems and contributed to the  collapse. Keep it simple moving ahead.

Be more inclusive with clients as they have lost your trust. Remove yourself from siloed thinking and involve the customer in more decisions.

Best innovations come in time of bust- don’t stifle innovation. If you wait you will be left behind- you will never catch up. Be  bold- try new things, otherwise someone else will beat you to it.

Life goes on (during the crisis) so understand what your customers are doing.  Don’t put everything to a halt as business continues- keep client focused.

Internet usage and popularity in Singapore facts and stats: Facebook ranks 4th, users spend avg 23.2 mins. DBS ranks 17th, users spend avg. 4.1 mins. Times are changing.  How do you engage and listen to the voice of  your clients in these times?

Customers  say- “It’s my money, so listen to me.” Retailers get it & respond. Banks don’t. How do you respond to your clients needs?

Banks need to get more advice from peer groups. The web community is one way…face to face is another.

Know me (the client). Know my life. Retailers know it & get it. Banks don’t.” retailers engage well with clients why don’t financial organizations?

The client is pleading…”Please. I need a helping hand. Help.” They are calling for you- respond please.

How many helpful and meaningful  messages have been sent to customers during the crisis about what is really happening (and what to do about it)? 0- zero.” (from research of 25 major banks) Banks need to communicate better, not just from a broad sense but from a personal sense.

Customer experience is about building trust and understanding the entire customer experience process. Don’t segment it- look at the whole experience and the different ways of delivering it.

Customers want help. The financial organizations are not there- they are too internally focused. How do you focus on the client when he is crying for help?

Your customers have interests outside of banking and insurance. Look beyond the immediate financial services relationship. Look at building personal relationship where you can…

 

In conclusion, times are tough but you must forge on. Don’t sit back- take advantage of the situation as you will benefit long term. Keep it simple and focused on the client..

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

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