by
GSchulz
29. June 2012 08:30
Is it easier to sell a product or service? “It’s easier to
sell a product because you have something you can actually show the prospect”.
“Oh no, it’s much easier to sell a service because you can really sell them on
the features and benefits!”.
Guess what, you’re both wrong! You are never selling a
product or a service, you are only selling what the product or service can do
for your prospect. The solution your customer perceives is the problem to the problem
they are experiencing is the only one that matters. What your product or
service does is irrelevant, until the prospect tells you what actually is
relevant.
We have a friend named Rich. Rich and I had a discussion one
night at dinner on this very subject. Rich told me he could ‘never’ (and I love
that word) sell a service because a product is so much easier.
“Why is that?” I asked.
“It’s just easier to compare when you have something in your
hands. You can show your products ‘features and benefits’, (another of my
favorite terms) and really compare apples to apples against your competitor”
Rich stated proudly
“Rich, how do you know what ‘apples’ they want in the first
place? What if they want oranges? “Oh I ask them up front what their needs are
and then I show the differences”.
“So, I’m confused, why can’t you do that with a service?”
“Well Greta I guess you can but it’s easier with a
service”...
“OK Rich, I got it” even though I didn’t but at this point,
my husband was kicking me under the table to leave it alone.
In sales you are a matchmaker of sorts. Your job is to
uncover as much about the prospects issues as they see them and the effect
these issues are having on them and their company. Additionally if nothing
changes, what are the re-percussions of that? Once you have a good
understanding of what that is, you will recommend the proper solution,
irrespective of the product or service.
Often salespeople misunderstand the word “benefits” for
solutions. Feature and benefits selling is typically is a pre-set dissertation
of what the prospect should see as a
benefit, not what they decide is a benefit. For example if you say “the feature
of this copy-machine is the speed of the copies and the benefit is you can get
them faster and have your copies ready earlier”. Well, if you don’t have an
issue with time and you issue is something completely different like ease of
use, who really cares about your “benefit”?
If you are selling properly, it shouldn’t matter whether it
is a product or a service because what you are really selling is what the
client is ultimately looking for, not how you get there.
Anyone can “demo” a product or talk “features and benefits”
but a real pro only gives solutions to the issues the prospect is talking about,
no more and no less.
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