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.

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.)



Challenges to achieveing great sales conversations

In 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.
