Today’s buyers don’t like to be “sold” or pitched. They would rather feel like they are in control of their purchase process. This is why the most successful sales professionals understand this and view their job as helping their customers buy and achieve their goals rather than pushing products. Let’s explore how to use this distinction to build a mindset for successful selling.
The key to this mindset lies in aligning your sales process with the buyer's purchase process. Understanding how your customers make decisions and mapping your sales process accordingly can significantly improve your sales performance. In this article, we will explore the crucial connection between how your customers make purchase decisions versus how you sell and how you can leverage the alignment between these two processes for better sales results.
Most sales professionals have a sales process, but few consider their customer’s purchase process. Every buyer goes through a predictable five-stage purchase process before making a purchase. Let's briefly review each of these stages of the Purchase Process using a familiar experience - buying a car:
For relatively simple purchase decisions, a buyer may move through these stages quickly. In complex purchases, however, it is a long process, that may involve multiple decision-makers entering the purchase process at different stages. It is also essential to notice that the process is not linear. A buyer can advance through several stages of the purchase process and then return to a previous step before moving forward.
To effectively guide buyers through their purchase process, aligning their journey with your sales process is essential. By understanding the stages of the buyer's purchase process, you can better position yourself to help them make a buying decision. In the next section, we explore how the common 5-stage sales process corresponds to the buyer's purchase process.
For each stage of the buyer’s purchase process, there should be a corresponding stage in your sales process. Here is a common sales process:
Knowing how buyers make decisions puts you in an advantageous position. It allows you to align your sales process to the buyer's purchase process. This makes selling much more natural and less adversarial as you “guide” your customer through their own purchase process rather than “push” them through your sales process. Moreover, identifying where the buyer is in their purchase process enables you to apply the appropriate selling skill to move their purchase decision forward.
Here’s how you guide the buyer through their Purchase Process:
Selling the way your customer buys will also result in fewer stalled deals. Problems often occur when a seller move things along before the buyer is ready. A fundamental mistake many sales reps make is asking for a commitment too early – for example, when the buyer is in the Knowledge or Evaluation stage and not yet ready to make any purchase decision.
Aligning your sales process with the buyer's purchase process is essential for achieving better results in sales. By understanding and mapping your strategies to the stages of the purchase process, you can effectively guide buyers and improve your sales performance.
Careful planning and identifying customer needs serve as the foundation for effective selling. To align your sales process, consider tailoring your approach based on the buyer's needs and preferences. Present your solution in a way that addresses their challenges and highlights the unique value your offering brings. Effectively managing feedback and objections allows you to build trust with the buyer. Lastly, gaining commitment solidifies their decision to move forward.
Integrating selling skills with the sales process is crucial for improving sales performance. While top performers often have excellent skills but little regard for process and lower performers adhere to process but lack skills, finding a balance is essential. By integrating skills and processes, sales organizations can enhance their training programs, making it easier for sales managers to reinforce critical skills within the context of the sales process.