Sometimes we have problems, but we don’t do anything about them. Other times our problems are so urgent we take immediate action. Consider, for example, a slow dripping faucet versus a flooded basement. For sales professionals, however, the reality is almost never so extreme. In most cases, assuming you are meeting with a qualified buyer and ask enough questions, you can help the buyer identify a problem.
But is identifying a problem enough to get a buyer to take action? No, most sales professionals lose deals to the status quo. In other words, the buyer decides not to take any action in spite of the fact they have some type of problem.
So why do buyers choose to live with problems? While buyers may offer up many reasons – no budget, too busy, not a priority – the reality is that buyers don’t take action when they don’t have a strong enough rationale for doing so.
And that's an all too common trap for unskilled sellers: talking about their solution too early. Successful sales professionals first help the buyer develop the rationale for taking action before talking about their own solution.
In order to understand how you can help your buyers move from a problem to solution, you need to consider the psychology of how we change and why we don’t. As humans we like constancy and familiarity, to differing degrees we resist change as it makes our lives less certain and complex. So, we need a significant incentive to even think about changing.
For B-2-B buyers this process involves predictable steps where buyers start by thinking about the problem and then move to considering what solving the problem will look like. This process is a follows:
For example, if you solve this problem who else in the organization will benefit directly? Or, you could ask, what are your top two or three challenges that this problem is connected with?
As you help your buyer through this process it is critical to your success is staying “in-sync” with the buyer through each stage, not jumping ahead and discussing solutions before the buyer is ready. For example, asking “How useful is do you think this solution would be?” when they are not even sure it’s a big enough problem to solve.
Staying in-sync with your buyer means you need to tailor your questions to which stage they are in and listen for signs of movement to the next stage. This will require careful pre-call planning and research, and asking different questions for different purposes. Doing so will enable you to identify and close gaps in your knowledge of the Buyer both in terms of their challenges, opportunities and how they prioritize their problems and needs.
Being in-sync with your buyer will also demonstrate to the buyer that you are more concerned with their concerns than your own. This approach is inherently more consultative which means you are positioning yourself as being seen as an “advisor” not just a vendor.