Sales

Is the Sales Model Broken?

I’ve spent my career showing organizations in crowded markets how to survive—and thrive—without cutting their prices by using the simple, yet powerful technique of value creation.

While I was speaking with the Vistage CE Group in Buffalo, New York, this month, some of its members expressed a frustration with this concept, a frustration that I’m hearing more and more these days.

Many companies go to a lot of trouble to enhance the value they provide through a range of so-called value-added services, only to receive “commodity” prices for their products.

This can be a disaster for any company’s margins and profitability.

The executives I spoke with expressed a particularly acute frustration that their investment in “value” didn’t win their sales people more business—or help them hold firm on their price.

So what’s the solution? It got me thinking and I came to this conclusion: at many organizations, the sales model is just plain broken.

It All Starts with Clarity

In today’s sales model, the one item that’s always crystal clear is price. So can we blame customers for seizing on it and using it as a bargaining chip?

Now, when it comes to value, the picture gets much more murky. Even though most customers are demanding proof that your solution is providing value in excess of the price paid, most sales professionals simply aren’t trained to deliver that clarity.

Because price is crystal clear and value is unclear, the resulting buying decision inherently returns to—and erodes—price.

A Radically Different Way of Approaching the Sales Process

Products, services and solutions deliver little business value in and of themselves. Actual business value depends on 1) how well the solutions are targeted and 2) how well they positively impact what matters to the customer, such as the customer’s bottom line, business revenue and ability to serve their own customers, among other factors.

Because this differs so drastically from organization to organization, it’s the primary job of each sales person to uncover and understand these factors—and understand how their solution fits into this picture.

In this new world of selling, sales teams need to develop the skills to build financial models for their offerings, run preliminary numbers through the model and then engage C-level executives in a process of debating and verifying the predicted value.

In addition to bringing complete clarity to the value of each benefit of your solution, this skill set positions the sales professional as more than just the “sales guy.” He or she becomes a business consultant who has the authority and information to solicit support from the highest levels of management in the client organization and dramatically shorten the sales cycle.

Once the value of your solution is established, the second step is to create a tracking process to measure and demonstrate to your customers how adequately those value promises have been filled, with an emphasis on financial impact. When presented with this evidence, you can be sure that your sales people go into a renewal armed with solid evidence for a decision in your company’s favor.

The Changing Role Of Salespeople

It’s up to executives to make this switch and refocus their sales teams. Companies who want to flourish in uncertain economies or crowded markets need to look beyond the old sales paradigms of overcoming objections, educating customers, negotiating deals, conducting demos, answering questions, or any of the other well-known traditional selling activities.

Instead, in this new value-based model, every sales professionals needs to develop the skills and tools to:

1)     Understand their customer’s business (perhaps better than their customers do), and identify what matters to each customer (what I call their “value drivers”), be it new business, customer satisfaction, decreased production costs, etc.

2)     Quantify in specific financial terms how your company’s solution affects these value drivers and communicate this value to your customers

3)     Become a trusted business and financial advisor who can penetrate higher levels to get buy-in from their contacts as well as upper management

When you combine this philosophy with the tools and skills for consistent execution, the potential for dramatic sales and margin improvement is considerable.

For example, if a sales team improves its activity rate by 10%, improves its win rate by 10% and reduces the selling cycle by 10%, the combined effect is a 48% improvement in bottom line results. That’s the kind of investment that won’t disappoint.

I’d love to know your thoughts. Is the sales model broken at your organization? Are your sales representatives focusing on your customer’s value drivers? Are your customers able to recognize, understand and quantify the unique strategic value your solutions bring to their organization? Leave me a comment below.

Category: Sales

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About the Author: Kevin McArdle

Kevin McArdle is a leading marketing and sales strategist who specializes in showing his customers how to get more clients and increase sales by quantifying their unique strategic value in the marketplace. Kevin brings more than 25 years of …

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  1. Paul

    June 5, 2012 at 7:40 pm

    My work with multiple sales organization confirms this perspective.  We have found that working with Sales professionals and executives that invest in personal/professional development and wellness end up by knowing themselves better and therefore can understand their clients better.  Without a comprehensive understanding of self, they cannot begin to understand their clients.

  2. Stephen G Houston

    June 5, 2012 at 9:03 pm

    ‘free or full’ should be the only two options on
    pricing.  when “free” the
    provider is in charge of the content, delivery and demonstration.  when “full price” the customer is
    in charge.  either way the boundaries and
    limits are well-defined.  this will
    negate ‘product or service value issues’ and the integrity of the person and
    organization remain intact.

    Above is my advice to any organization struggling with pricing as THE issue.

    Nice summation Kevin, of challenging the sales mindset that chases ‘transactions’ rather than ‘making a mark’ and taking the time to build loyalty and trust

  3. Spider Lockhart

    June 6, 2012 at 4:35 pm

    Kevin, great article. Some Thoughts: Customers aren’t really looking for trusted advisors from their vendors and solution providers, they’re hoping for competence. Also, at the risk of blaspheme, sellers have lost sight of need to tie work product features to value. All the “sell benefits” messaging we have insisted on over the last 40 years have left our sellers less equipped to tie value and desirable outcomes to what they sell. Give it some thought- benefits are easy to sell; cost reduction – yeah we all want that. Increased Top Line performance – everyone get’s that. 12x ROI’s – No Duh. Benefits are easy. It’s the features that create the value that creates a belief in realizing the benefits. Skill 

    P.S. Life is all about transactions. Without the, no meaningful relationships exist, either personally or in commerce.

  4. Kmcardle

    June 6, 2012 at 8:31 pm

    The real test of value clarity is whether customers are able to clearly recognize, understand and quantify the incremental value a vendor’s solution brings to their bussiness. We’ve found it effective to build value messaging around a three level value pyramid:
    1. Features of the solution – what it is (“is”)
    2. Benefits of the solution –  what customers can do better with it (“does”)
    3. Value of the solution – the value and business impact it has (“means”)

    Equiping sales people with this Is-Does-Means model helps ensure they’re holding relevant and compelling conversations with their customers.

    • Sean O'Driscoll

      March 4, 2014 at 7:29 pm

      I’m clearly late to this party, but I really like the 3 level pyramid…..clear, concise and gets across an impactful message.
      Sean O’Driscoll

  5. Allan Himmelstein

    September 1, 2013 at 4:52 pm

    Very good article. There are some failures in the system for sure. First, you have to ask yourself how many major decisions have you made that were strictly based on price. How many times have you told a seller (even thought it was not true) that their price was to high? Have you ever had salespeople ask if our price was the same would you buy from us? People buy from people, and unless you have spent millions to build a brand, they will buy from people and teams that they trust.

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