It sounds so mysterious and elusive. But sales differentiation is much easier and much more effective than you may think.
The importance of differentiating yourself can't be over-stated. Our research with 530 B2B buyers revealed that there are 30 differentiating behaviors that will make buyers more likely to meet with sellers AND more likely to buy from them.
The best thing about differentiating behaviors is that they are identifiable, replicable and break down selling into simple choices. Will you or won't you behave a certain way? That decision is the only one you need to make in order to differentiate yourself in ways that cause buyers to respond favorably.
In an age of empowered buyers, it's becoming increasingly difficult to get an appointment or even 10 minutes phone time with a prospect.
AI, auto dialers, SDR support, lead gen systems... A lot of time, effort, tools and attention go into finding and connecting with good prospects. And when you do connect, you only have seconds to demonstrate that time with you will be high value.
You already know that rapid fire pitching doesn't do the job. Scripts seldom work. Your canned value proposition doesn't do the job either.
So what can you do that's different and changes the way a buyer sees you? How can
There's only one thing you can do to compel a prospect's attention and interest. According to buyers, you need to ask a thought-provoking, relevant and quality question.
Right at the beginning of the conversation. In voice mail, email or live, you can ask a question that is so compelling that it actually opens a conversation. That question, all by itself, sets you apart from other sellers.
Participants in the DISCOVER Questions® workshop have field-tested quality questions to open sales and report breakthrough success with buyers. Try one of these:
By opening with a hard-hitting question that's relevant to a prospect, you trigger a response other than "I don't have time" or "I'm not interested." You start a dialogue. It will lead, in good time, to the qualifying and needs assessment questions you'd like to ask. But you will never get to those until you open the relationship.
That's what strong, differentiating questions will do.
Don't make this mistake!
It may be tempting, once the sale is opened, to lapse into stereotypical sales behaviors that feel like "bait and switch" to buyers.
As a field coach, I see this happen far too frequently. The seller promises a meeting to discuss the buyer's needs. The buyer grants the meeting, only to be ambushed with the same-old sales pitching. The discussion of the buyer's needs ceases just as soon as the seller catches even the faintest whiff of a potential need.
Buyers notice the pivotal moment when a seller could choose to probe more and
On the positive side, buyers also notice when a seller does not launch into a premature product pitch. It's differentiating when a seller asks follow-up questions to more completely comprehend the situation. It's even more differentiating when a seller engages the buyer in the co-creation of insights.
What's more, buyers respond. Sales advance. Sellers sell when they differentiate themselves during the sales process by truly remaining buyer-focused.
Sales advance when a buyer trusts a seller. Buyers want to buy when a seller has collaboratively worked with them to create the solution that makes sense. Buyers want to reward sellers who have positively differentiated themselves.
When it comes time to close the sale, remain buyer focused. This is about getting a solution in place to help the buyer. It's not about going in for the kill and making that whopping commission. Your intent is evident to the buyer.
Closing the sale on value means staying tuned in to what matters to the buyer. The
Sellers lose sales when they revert to closing on price or use high-pressure that suddenly conjures images of all those other sellers. It's important to remain differentiated and to let the buyer know you are not going to abandon them once the contract is signed.
Buyers are skeptical because they've been burned before by smooth-talking sellers who promise but don't deliver. This is an easy way to differentiate yourself. Just do what you say you will do. Be credible. Don't be the stereotypical seller who suckers unsuspecting buyers into deals they'll regret.
When you differentiate yourself from open to close, you'll get satisfied customers, repeat business and great referrals. This is the way to working smarter, not harder. It all starts with showing you have something unique to offer -- You.