Sales training teaches the
obvious fact that to sell more to a customer, you either have to get them to
buy more per purchase transaction or get them to buy more frequently. Easy to
say, but, in our fragmented media environment and our multi-channel retailing
world, it can be difficult to engage your customers and close a sale, let alone
sell them more. The intent of this blog post is to not to provide all the
answers for all markets, but to get you thinking afresh about these basic
approaches to your current customer base.
Plannned
Purchases
The
easiest way to grow sales should be to close the planned purchase. Customers
want to and plan to buy products like yours—your product is an intentional
purchase. You need to be prepared to capture that planned purchase and not lose
it. It should be easy…but consumers leave stores every day without making a
purchase and customers choose your competitor’s products over yours. Many companies/sales people act just as order
takers and will just take orders that come to them. Companies that take the
time to get to know their customers can then offer solutions that are aligned
with the customer’s wants and needs. Whether selling online or offline,
creating value through a customer-specific solution and a great user / selling
experience can win and keep customers.
Where
in these key steps might you strengthen your sales process?
- Qualifying a customer – what do they want to buy and when?
- Identifying needs – what is motivating the purchase – both rational and emotional purchase drivers
- Presenting solution – what is the recommended solution that is a good fit for the customer’s wants and needs. Explain the value of your solution vs. alternatives.
- Handling objections – give information to address concerns regarding your recommendation
- Call to action – Ask for the sale
In
some categories, you have the time, the staffing and the opportunity to hold
these sales discussions. But in most consumer sales, you must rely on your
packaging, POP materials and your marketing communications. Take time to think
through how you can get better consumer purchase decision information through
ethnographic and behavioral research, shopping basket and purchase data
analysis. Use these insights to better present your sales information. Where
are the leverage points? What new information and message points can be more
persuasive that your current communication?
If
the first category is planned purchases, all other purchases must be unplanned
purchases. We will discuss three ways to sell and close unplanned purchases. These include impulse selling,
upselling and cross selling.
Impulse
Selling—the opportunity to introduce value
All of us have been in a store
to buy one thing and ended up buying an additional item by seeing it on display
or on sale and adding it to our shopping cart. For today’s discussion, impulse
purchases will be defined as an unplanned purchased that has nothing to do with
our planned purchase item or category. Impulse purchases are driven by new
information presented to customers while they are shopping or making another
purchase.
Are you using all of these
approaches to gain impulse sales?
- A new product the customer has not seen before
- A featured item (in store on display or signed at shelf, online, on a menu or in a sales brochure)
- A price discount or promotional item
- Prompting consumers to remember key consumable/refill products they need
How are you leveraging new
information and location to win impulse purchases?
Information—are you providing the right information about your
products to create an impulse purchase? A reduced price sign will often prompt
an impulse sale. Highlighting a new product attracts attention and trial.
Telling your product’s story can help trigger impulse buys vs. competitive
products. Tell them what this product is, why it is right for them and why it
is a good value. Consumers respond to products that tell authentic stories.
Location—are you placing target products and/or product
information where your customers will easily find them while shopping or
researching other products or services? At retail, you can place products on
secondary displays or use signs and packaging to call attention to your
products. If you do not sell your products at retail, locate information about
your products in targeted, relevant places to be discovered by your customers
and prompt a purchase decision.
In Part 2 of How to Sell
More, we help you assess whether you are doing all you can to upsell and cross sell
your customers to enhance the value you offer and the experience your customers
have with your products and services.
GrowthSpring Group is a marketing
strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your
sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights
& opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com
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