This document discusses the concepts of sales prospecting and the sales process. It defines prospecting as activities to position yourself in front of potential customers to determine if there is a fit to present your product or service. The sales process is described as having 5 steps - prospecting, qualifying, proposal, decision, and repeat business. Each step involves specific activities and goals to move the customer through their buying process and ultimately close sales and gain repeat customers. Microsoft Outlook and Prophet software are presented as tools that can help salespeople manage opportunities and stay connected with customers to help improve sales.
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This document discusses the concepts of sales prospecting and the sales process. It defines prospecting as activities to position yourself in front of potential customers to determine if there is a fit to present your product or service. The sales process is described as having 5 steps - prospecting, qualifying, proposal, decision, and repeat business. Each step involves specific activities and goals to move the customer through their buying process and ultimately close sales and gain repeat customers. Microsoft Outlook and Prophet software are presented as tools that can help salespeople manage opportunities and stay connected with customers to help improve sales.
This document discusses the concepts of sales prospecting and the sales process. It defines prospecting as activities to position yourself in front of potential customers to determine if there is a fit to present your product or service. The sales process is described as having 5 steps - prospecting, qualifying, proposal, decision, and repeat business. Each step involves specific activities and goals to move the customer through their buying process and ultimately close sales and gain repeat customers. Microsoft Outlook and Prophet software are presented as tools that can help salespeople manage opportunities and stay connected with customers to help improve sales.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document discusses the concepts of sales prospecting and the sales process. It defines prospecting as activities to position yourself in front of potential customers to determine if there is a fit to present your product or service. The sales process is described as having 5 steps - prospecting, qualifying, proposal, decision, and repeat business. Each step involves specific activities and goals to move the customer through their buying process and ultimately close sales and gain repeat customers. Microsoft Outlook and Prophet software are presented as tools that can help salespeople manage opportunities and stay connected with customers to help improve sales.
Copyright:
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DEFINATION OF PROSPECTING
Prospecting is defined as any activity or conversation you
engage in to position yourself in front of a prospect with the intention to inquire, assess, discover, and educate so that you can determine whether there's a fit and a relationship that's worth pursuing which can then lead to presenting your product or service in order to earn your prospect's business."
SALES PROSPECTING AND ITS ORIGIN
Let's take a look at the word prospecting. It gets its
orgin from the physical act of looking for minerals, specifically gold. So for sales people it is making calls, for others it is direct mail and still others it is networking. I am sure there are others who are still even more creative or use a combination. But keep in mind, it is the act of doing the searching, not the preparation of doing it. You can buy a shovel, a gold pan or a dredge to search for gold and doing so will make you more succesful but just becuase you purchase these tools or prepare for prospecting does not mean you are actually prospecting. The only part of prospecting that counts in my book is the act of searching for possible customers. After you have identified possible customers it is also valuable to qualify them. You can do this during your prospecting time, after your done prospecting or not at all. Obviously those who do use qualifing strategies will spend their time more efficiently as they will spend less time with those who are not likely to buy. This is much like when a gold prospector takes his gold to a geologist to put a value on the gold. Some of the gold (like the prospects) will be more valuable than others. And some will find there work completely without reward. But the more and more prospecting one does the better chances of him finding that golden nugget.
THEORECTICAL PROCESS OF SALES AS
WELL AS SALES PROSPECTING
Creating an Effective Sales Process
A sales process is simply a series of steps that enable your sales force – whether that’s a single sales professional or a small team headed up by a sales manager – to close more sales and generate more repeat business. Customer Buying Process Steps Identify Determine Evaluate Negotiat Impleme Needs Requireme Options e nt & > > > > > nts Evaluate Success
All customers go through five basic steps in the Customer
Buying Process. Obviously someone who is thinking about purchasing a candy bar at the check-out stand at their local grocery moves through the steps much more rapidly than a plant manager considering upgrading his drill presses. Nevertheless, the fundamentals of each stage are very similar.
• Step 1: Identify needs. Business owners look for
ways to improve revenues and market share, to lower costs, and to improve operating efficiencies. Consumers look for ways to improve their standard of living or their overall satisfaction. • Step 2: Determine requirements. The customer’s goal in this step is to clearly identify all the aspects of the problem or opportunity they are trying to solve and to specify the requirements for a solution. • Step 3: Evaluate options. The customer solicits proposals and seeks out proof that the potential vendors can meet the stated requirements. • Step 4: Negotiate. The customer now has a clear understanding of the options available and begins negotiations to acquire the product or service. Price is one consideration, but negotiating considerations include the cost of change and the risk that the solution will not meet their needs. • Step 5: Implement and evaluate success. The product or service is implemented and the customer begins the process of judging whether it truly meets the stated needs.
Sales Process Steps
Prospecti Qualifyi Proposal Decision Repeat > > > > > ng ng Business
Five steps define the sales process methodology. Each step
is made up of several key activities with predictable, measurable outcomes. The steps help small business sales professionals succeed by:
1. Focusing on a total understanding of critical business
issues faced by customers. 2. Developing potential value to be gained by customers. 3. Creating a strong desire in the customer to buy products and services supplied by your company.
Step 1: Prospecting. At this first stage of the sales
process, the salesperson is generating qualified leads, finding new opportunities among the existing customer base, and differentiating his or her company versus the competition. Depending on the type of business, prospecting can take many forms including networking, seminars, marketing, trade shows, and cold calls. The purpose of this step is to identify a qualified decision maker, or an ally in the organization who can help you reach the decision maker.
Step 2: Qualifying. In this stage you and the customer are
sizing each other up. You are assessing the revenue potential and costs associated with a customer opportunity to decide if it’s worth pursuing further, while the customer is assessing whether your company can meet their needs. In this stage of the process, your sales professionals need to be adept at probing to unearth the customer’s true needs, in detail. Then they need a way to clearly articulate a “buying vision” to the customer – capabilities that illustrate how your company’s products or services can uniquely meet their needs. The goal of this step is to convince the decision maker to move ahead with an in-depth evaluation of your solution.
Microsoft Outlook with Prophet gives you increased insight
into your business, whether you are a sales professional or a small business owner. A sales professional can quickly assess a customer opportunity by attaching pricing information to the opportunity and assigning a probability of closing the sale. The business owner can take a broader perspective and run one of the sixty customizable reports in Prophet Reports to view the entire sales pipeline sorted by customer, product, or stage.
Step 3: Proposal. When you reach this stage the promises
end and you have to demonstrate to the decision maker that your company can really deliver the goods. You can create a mutually agreed upon Product/Service Evaluation Plan that highlights key steps to prove your capabilities and ensure a win for both the customer and the salesperson. The Evaluation Plan is an important, formal lever that many salespeople overlook: once a customer agrees to the Evaluation Plan, the salesperson is in control of the sales process. In other words, the customer can only afford to go through the steps of an Evaluation Plan with one selling organization because of the time, cost, and resources to perform each step. The goal of the Proposal stage is that the value has been demonstrated – via successful completion of the Evaluation Plan – and the customer requests that the salesperson submit a proposal.
At this stage of the process the consideration set of
companies narrows in the eyes of the customer, and responding rapidly – and professionally – is essential for the sales professional. Most small business owners wince at the thought of how many potential sales slip away when a commitment falls through the cracks or an e-mail goes unanswered. Microsoft Outlook with Prophet consolidates all of your customer interactions – e-mails, tasks, appointments, notes, and even documents – in one place so you will always have a comprehensive, up-to-date picture of what is going on with that customer.
Step 4: Decision. By now, you are so close to pushing this
deal across the goal line that you can almost taste it. But how often has your sales force fumbled the ball in the red zone? Perhaps one of your salespeople gave too much away in the final negotiations, making the deal unprofitable. Or conversely, perhaps he or she walked away from a good sale when a low cost giveaway might have sealed the deal. Such is the delicate and tantalizing nature of the Decision step of the sales process.
The desired outcome, naturally, is a successfully negotiated
deal – perhaps formalized in a signed contract – that symbolizes a win-win arrangement for your company and the customer.
Step 5: Repeat Business. A signed contract is really just
the first chapter of the story. The Repeat Business step acknowledges that it is indeed a sales process – not a moment in time when a contract is signed or a sales commission is paid out. First of all, the product or service must be delivered and implemented as promised. A sales professional focused on a long-term profitable relationship will take ownership and follow up with the customer to make sure that everything is going smoothly. And at the right time, he or she will begin the Prospecting step again, probing the customer to see if there is an ongoing need that can be serviced with a simple reorder or, if needs have changed, the opportunity to upsell or cross-sell a new product or service. Obviously the goal of this step of the sales process is repeat business – not to mention a satisfied customer willing to be a referral for you.
Staying connected with your customers is easier with
Microsoft Outlook and Prophet. You can:
• Use your current Outlook contact list to connect various
individuals and companies to a single opportunity through the Sales Opportunity Manager. • Use Outlook and Prophet to set tasks and reminders for specific Opportunities. • Use the Prophet Contact Manager to find all emails, attachments, tasks and appointments for specific people or companies. • Use Sales Opportunity Manager to quickly view all active or inactive sales opportunities, what stage they are in and what the next steps are. • Use Prophet Reporter to summarize the data in various ways to give you the view and formats you need.
HOW QUALITY IN A SALES PROSPECTING CAN
IMPROVE SALES There were days when companies thought about improving the product alone to enhance sales. In today's hyper- competitive global market, growing sales is typically based on improving the sales process first. Understanding the sales process and how best the sales force is adapting to it will enable companies to focus on the sales resources better.
A commitment to quality in the sales process is central to
the growth dynamics of any enterprise. Each step in a sales process should be well defined and the action to be performed clearly set. Beginning from researching leads to closing a sale, everything should move in clockwork precision. Apparently trivial things can make a huge difference to the final outcome. So care must be taken to strengthen every action involved in each step of the sales process. And often it's mistakenly assumed that sales
process improvement means sales training. Sales training
may be a part of the sales process improvement training, but it is a broader subject.
Following are some examples of how improving the sales
process can make a difference.
Fresh and Creative Prospecting - The list of leads should be
current and include as many qualified leads as possible. Trying to qualify prospects from a partially redundant list of leads is going to waste your time and prospecting efforts. A firm with a stale source of leads has got it all wrong from the beginning. Working on the leads and checking for their revenue potential will mean that you start your prospecting activities from a position of sales strength. This will require good lead generating and customer relationship management (CRM) practices.
A Chilean company, Andrueza Patrimonios, rode the wave of
economic boom and made impressive growth. But soon the sales force found that they were making duplicate calls and that the information gathered during sales calls with clients were lost. This is the example of a terrible loss because of the absence of a good customer relationship management - CRM - program to keep track of all the information.
All possible channels of generating leads should be
considered. Have you tried social networking websites apart from trade shows, seminars, and lists of companies as potential customers? Do you know how and when each of your prospects prefers to be contacted? A good sales process makes provisions for all of these sales actions. Response Time and Quality
Sales depend on external customers that have identifiable
expectations from your company. They wish that their questions and concerns be responded to within a reasonable time limit. They expect a certain level of clarity and objectivity in the answers they receive from salespeople. A simple issue, such as response time to a new client inquiry can make a huge difference to actual sales outcomes. When a customer wants a proposal from a company she/he expects to get an initial response within a few hours and an actual proposal within a reasonable time frame depending the size and nature of the project. If a sales rep fails to send a proposal in a reasonable time-frame he is out of the race even before it has begun.
Technology can play a vital role in responding quickly. An
email from the customer can be accessed when out of the office and responded to instantly through a Blackberry, Palm, and Windows Mobile. There are many customer relationship management- CRM- tools out there that are inexpensive and yet very useful. It is a sin not to be using these devices to get back to customers immediately.
A set of winning proposals of past sales can be stored in your
company data bank and every salesperson should be allowed free access to them.
The stored proposals should cater to all permutations and
combinations of customer requirements within all budget ranges. So the moment there is a proposal request from a customer, a sales rep will just have to search for a few proposals broadly fitting the customer's requirements from the archive. From those the best one suiting the customer and the sales opportunity should be selected. This should only take a few minutes. Changing the content of the proposal to tailor it to the exact need of the customer is what the rep in question has to work on before sending it to the customer. Remember customers appreciate a quick response. A delayed response may reach a customer when the deal is already closed.
Streamlining Product Information
A Fortune 50 telecom company had 300 product descriptions
on its web site that were being referred to by its sales force of 5000 people spread all over the world. The product description was done by several authors and lacked coherence as well as uniformity in voice. That caused confusion among the sales reps and they found it difficult to provide consistent information. They couldn't find quick answers and when they found answers those didn't match the sales process. They didn't trust the web site. A consulting firm was roped in to set the problem right. The consulting firm streamlined the product information and created a logical and intuitive navigation framework for the web site to support the sales process.
The consulting firm rewrote the product descriptions in a
uniform style. Salespersons could now access information at every step of the sales process and there was consistency in the information they obtained. They could digest the information easily and share it with the clients.
The revamping resulted in the elimination of 66% of
unnecessary information and a 70% increase in web site use and traffic. The division manager of product marketing for the telecom company admitted that the bottom line was - a huge boost to sales productivity and revenue.
A good sales process should be revamped to include uniform
product information and the best resources available for salespeople. There should also be effective product samples at the disposal of sales force for demonstrations.
Customer Focused not Vendor Focused
Sales process guru Michael Bosworth firmly believes that
sales processes should be customer focused. They should address the need of the customer. Vendor focused processes cause confusion and delays. The customer is always interested in and tuned into radio station WIIFM, "what's in it for me"? A sales process should be modified to communicate that.
Spending Time with the Prospects - Does a prospect qualify
for your time and attention? If yes, how much? Genuine prospects should be paid attention to and it is wise not to waste too much time on prospects that won't buy. Distinguishing between the two categories is a fine balancing act that every salesperson in the organization must know. Research has shown that the best salespersons spend considerably more quality time with their top prospects.
They also spend less time on paper work. A survey
conducted by Watson Wyatt of 841 salespeople from 500 companies with large sales forces has established that the best sales professionals from financially high performing companies working for high incentives and stock options invest 40% more time on their best prospects and spend an additional 3-4 hours on high-value sales activities than their counterparts do in financially low performing companies. These achievers also analyze the needs of the prospects in detail and allot more time to prospects that they know.
If a good sales rep is producing satisfying results but taking
an inordinately long time to do so he could be the victim of this - getting hypnotized by posh offices of potential customers and spending more time than necessary there. Some of the high-profile potential customers may actually be looking for very competitive prices for low volume of purchase. They may be valuable as customers but are the long hours and special attention lavished on them worth it? An effective sales process should weed out such time consuming practices. It can lay out a broad time range to be allotted to different categories of customers.
Too Close to a Good Closing Yet Missing Out - Do you have
sales reps that get very close to a fruitful closing but don't succeed in clinching the deal? They do everything right to get there, but miss the target by a whisker. There are uncountable numbers of sales efforts that have come very close to a successful deal and failed at the last minute. The reason - lack of knowledge of proper closing techniques. A solid sales process lays down the best closing practices to be followed. Be aware if your salespeople are asking the right questions or offering the right incentives to close a deal? Are they practicing active listening techniques and allowing the customer to talk? Are they allowing the customer to say "yes" to a deal? Are they keeping some offers until the end as final incentives to strike a deal?
An effective sales process makes it clear to all sales reps to
use the best closing techniques.
Repeat Business - Referrals - Signing a deal is not the end of
the sales plan, it's just the beginning. There are more deals in the offing and a good sales process recognizes that. Repeat business is easier and cheaper than prospecting for new business and every sales process should include steps to procure repeat business via a referral process. After a sale has been made the sales rep should follow up with the customer about the performance of the product and the degree of satisfaction of the customer. If the customer is happy with the product than it can lead to repeat sales or sales through his network of contacts. A sales process gives this fact due consideration and mandates that sales reps don't wash their hands of a customer after the sale is made.
Practical Sales Process - Take an honest opinion poll of your
sales reps and find out what they feel about the company's sales process. If the majority of them feel that it's - "Too theoretical", "It worked back in 2001", "Management's fantasy", or "Cast in computerized concrete" - it's time for you to consider overhauling or changing the entire sales process.
Sometimes a problem may lie with a single step and may
need slight modification. Evaluate periodically how your sales process is performing. Watch out for weak areas and fortify them. A sales audit can help in identifying problem areas that require attention.
It is less of an art and more a scientific formula that the
combination of a smart sales process and efficient salespeople almost always produce astounding results. Companies therefore should have a vibrant and workable sales process in place to aid their sales force in achieving their sales targets smoothly.