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We live in a world that for many has become
technology advantaged in business and life. Imagine, for a
moment, just how communication, science, art, medicine,
automation, supply chain and products have all been reinvented.
Even consumers' behaviors have been unearthed and changed beyond
recognition. Consumers have become more assertive, demanding,
highly skeptical, and more cynical, less trusting and with less
loyalty to brands and companies.
With all the reinventing and shifting in a diversity of industries
and cultures we find however, little has changed in the process
of how marketers and sales proceed to understanding why
consumers' buy and how they think. Most marketing methods and
selling techniques probe for surface understanding and not the
core emotions and feelings of consumers' behaviors.
Marketing and sales people rely on worn-out familiar campaigns and
techniques that simply obtain less than marginal results and
then place blame on their products, services or the economy.
This become more apparent with sales and marketing people in hot
industries where demand exceeds supply - sales skyrocket with
little effort or skill on the part of sales and marketing. Then,
when supply exceeds demand and there are too many sellers
chasing too few consumers' -- the blame sets in and the excuse
making erupts, causing products and services to fail or drop
dramatically below projections.
Change doesn't come easy when you're entrenched in deeply rooted
behaviors of which takes much courage to change. Change means
thinking differently about how one does things, which sometimes
goes against all that you were brought up to believe in. People
who hold stubbornly to their view and can't envision a different
world will fight to maintain their current one.
To maintain a competitive edge in your business will require
stepping outside your comfort zone and the traditional methods
of conducting yourself in business. The world has become a
melting pot of various nationalities and cultures creating the
backbone of our economy. Regardless, if you have a world vision
of your business or not, the effects of you succeeding are
influenced by your understanding of how consumers' think and how
they buy.
Consumers' ask for one thing and do another. They make illogical
leaps of judgment and come to unreasonable conclusions based on
their experience, memory and unconscious thoughts. The truth is
most customers form opinions about you before you ever get a
chance to deliver your service or product. That opinion is
formed mostly unconsciously.
Customers' are your only business and requires you to reach beyond
product features, benefits, quality and reliable delivery
methods. Sales and marketing people service their consumers in a
more efficient manner when they understand how consumers feel,
think and experience you and your products and services.
The interaction between the confidence of your marketing message
and the confidence of a salesperson in his/her product or
service sets the stage for how, when and why the consumer will
or will not purchase goods and services. When a salesperson
conveys confidence in his/her company, product and service, it
delivers subtle nonverbal cues to the consumer. That confidence,
if perceived by the consumer, as authenticity on the part of the
salesperson, adds great persuasive power to the decision making
of the consumer.
There is plenty of anecdotal evidence and scientific brain research
showing that human emotions and the unconscious plays a major
role in consumer selection of products and services. As our
multi cultural society matures; it becomes evident that those
companies and individual who what to advantage themselves in
sales and marketing must understand the perception and mind of
other cultural groups. That will require a better understanding
of your conscious and unconscious mind - how memory, experience,
and associated emotions exert a force on the thinking and buying
behaviors of consumers.
According to Gerald Zaltman, Professor of Marketing at Harvard
Business School -- says that 95 percent of consumers' thinking
occurs in their unconscious minds. Much thinking surfaces
through metaphors and consumers' memories, which are much more
malleable than previously thought -- which is why "confidence"
adds great persuasive power. Artificial confidence does not
work, but authentic confidence will decisively engender a
winning edge every time when a salesperson truly believes in
his/her products and services.
Fostering a shift in sales and marketing will require a deeper
understanding of how pervasive the unconscious mind of the
consumer works. Breaking into new ground requires breaking out
of traditional thinking about features and benefits selling. You
need to enter into the mental activity of unconscious thoughts,
feelings, memories, intentions, metaphors and just how they
direct consumers' attention, influence perception and manipulate
their decisions and actions.
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