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Only Losers Cut Their Prices
In today’s marketplace, offering discounts seems to be the
number one technique people are using to try and get business.
Management has bought into the age-old argument that the only
reason their salespeople can’t sell more is because their price
is too high. It’s time to put this to rest. This argument of
cutting prices actually reveals the lack of selling skills by
the salespeople who are using it. It also indicates a
management team failing to provide necessary strategic planning
and direction for the company.
Rarely does a salesperson say that the reason for a lost sale
was their inability to uncover the customer’s true needs or to
create a sound price/value relationship. Salespeople are by
nature confident people, so they automatically assume the loss
of a sale couldn’t have anything to do with their own skills.
The natural progression in their logic is that “it is
management’s fault” or “the price is too high.”
I am not offering specific steps a salesperson can do to
alter a customer’s behavior. Rather, I’d like to focus on the
steps a salesperson must take in how they view their role in the
sales equation. It starts with the salesperson no longer going
into a selling situation believing they are all-knowing in terms
of how they will handle any situation. Too often they walk into
a situation and within 30 seconds believe they’ve summarized how
the sales call will go, and that their incredible selling
expertise will allow them to close the sale. Here is where I
start to laugh, because the solution the salesperson always
comes up with is the exact same process they used yesterday. In
fact, it’s the same sales strategy they use on nearly every
sales call. Then, as if on cue, as soon as the customer starts
to show any signs of resistance, the salesperson immediately
starts to think the only way to save the sale is by cutting the
price.
Behavior modification on the part of the salesperson is the
only way to get around this problem. Many people believe if
they just give the salesperson some new marketing materials,
some really great testimonials, or a proven list of questions
they can ask, they will be able to overcome the urge to offer a
discount. Yes, I agree that each of these do help, but the
problem is they tend to be short-term solutions.
When a salesperson is given new tools like these, many times
they will go out and find some success in closing more sales and
doing so without offering a discount. Eventually, however, the
newness of the sales tool wears off. The salesperson before long
is facing a hesitant customer, and they fall back into their old
habit of offering a discount.
Long-term behavior modification comes only when the
salesperson truly believes in their pricing strategy. This
seems obvious, but I have often found that salespeople don’t
believe in their company’s pricing strategy. This perception is
then reinforced (sometimes subconsciously) by emails from
management about the state of the business and the pressure to
make a number. A key behavior killer is when management puts
out a report detailing sales results. Many companies release
reports stating why certain sales did not occur. When companies
do this, they encourage (or expect) the salesperson to provide
reasons. The salesperson is often going to point to price. Do
you see the vicious cycle that occurs? Price cutting becomes
the “go to” method to keep bringing in sales (but
quantitatively, profit is going down).
In my 10 years of sales consulting, I’ve watched this single
report do more to kill the behavior of salespeople than anything
else. There is a stigma that prevents the salesperson from
admitting that the reason they didn’t get the sale was because
of their own doing, not because of price. To eliminate the
effect of this stigma and the “price is too high” excuse,
management needs to stop compiling reports that require a
salesperson to say why they didn’t get a particular sale. There
are other far more effective ways to measure the value of a
salesperson than by creating a report that encourages a
salesperson to not state the truth.
A second matter that requires management’s attention is to
stop cramming every cost reduction technique into the laps of
the sales team. When the majority of correspondence a
salesperson sees from management has to do with how and why they
need to cut expenses, it only winds up reinforcing in the minds
of the salesperson that they too need to cut the price they’re
charging customers.
Yes, this is a challenge – finding ways to hold down expenses
without deflating the pricing perception of the sales team. It
might be a challenge, but this is what management gets paid to
do – to make the tough decisions without impeding the end goal
of making quarterly sales and profit numbers. This is no
different than a parent/child relationship. There are many
times a parent will make a decision that impacts the child but
doesn’t tell the child in a way that leaves the child feeling
upset or scared. For example, a parent tells their child to
fasten their seat belt while in the car. They do this to protect
the child, but they don’t go into detail about all of the things
that could occur to them should there be in an accident. An
approach like that would leave the child feeling scared about
riding in the car. When we apply this same concept to the
environment of sales, I think we would all agree that management
doesn’t want their sales team “scared.” Fear is not the
greatest motivator for long-term positive results.
A third behavior change is one the salesperson must do
themselves. It starts with removing from their thought process
that offering a discount is even an option. If a salesperson
knows a discount is an option, they’ll take it. I call this the
“last-dollar principal,” which says it’s amazing how fast your
money will go until you suddenly find yourself down to your last
dollar. When you have only one dollar left, it’s amazing how
far you can stretch it. You could have handled your money more
frugally when you had more, but because you had more money at
the time, you didn’t feel the same pressure to save and protect
it. When you get down to your last dollar, you sense that
pressure more acutely.
Management can help their salespeople steer clear of
discounting price by not allowing salespeople to have control
over price discounting. In my years of sales consulting, I’ve
worked with many companies that have taken away from the field
all pricing flexibility. After the sales force gets over their
whining about the loss of control and their proclamations that
the world will end, it’s amazing what happens to the
bottom-line. In each case, the bottom-line profit has gone up.
Many times profit has increased not because of more sales, but
because the sales that are made are more profitable (no price
discounting has occurred).
Finally, a salesperson needs to believe in their pricing as
much as they believe in their selling skills. Management and a
sales team need to work together to continually reinforce why
their pricing is correct. It’s no different than a coach and
team working together to achieve the highest potential
possible. Discounting is for losers, and there’s not one person
out there in sales or management who wants to be a loser. We
all want to be winners, and that means we are proud of what we
provide our customers. In the end, it’s not the price that
matters. The quality of the salesperson will determine the
outcome.
Mark Hunter, “The Sales Hunter,” is a sales expert who speaks to
thousands each year on how to increase their sales
profitability. For more information, to receive a free weekly
email sales tip, or to read his Sales Motivation Blog, visit
www.TheSalesHunter.com. You can also follow him on
www.Twitter.com (TheSalesHunter) and on
www.LinkedIn.com (Mark Hunter). |