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By Alistair McQuade How to beat every competitor, every time.

How to beat every competitor, every time

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In order to out sell the competition you need better products, right? Wrong. Let's be clear, you do need to be able to satisfy the customers key purchasing criteria, the following advice will not work with a substandard offering. I'm not trying to turn you into a magician. The first step in beating any competitor, at any time, is to remove the misconception that the best products always win. For those of us old enough to remember, VHS beat Betamax as the main video recorder (the thing before DVDs) despite being an inferior technology at the same price point. As I always ask in my Sales Training Courses, deal reviews, and any deal plan that I oversee, the first and most important question is, "Where is the prospect in the purchasing process?" If the prospect has not yet decided to make a change, your job is to build their need and create a business case to show why change is required and the benefits it will bring. As part of the business case, help the prospect to build a specification of the product/service that will realise the benefits in the business case. If you have features that perform better than the competition, ensure that those performance levels are set as the minimum bar to tender for the business. Any supplier that cannot attain those performance levels are ruled out, reducing the field of competitors. Any performance criteria where you are behind the competition, help to make them vague so the same does not happen to you. Also try to. reduce their importance in terms of contribution to achieving the business case benefits. If the prospect has already decided to change, and you have not been involved in the specification design, you need to get the prospect to re-evaluate their specification. If you don't it is just plain luck if your product / service matches their specification. I prefer to make my own luck, so here's an article on how to do that. Once you've done that, use the specification setting advice above. When the prospect is nearing a decision, create value by helping them to anticipate and the deal with any concerns that arise. Don't just keep asking for a decision like the other sales guys will be doing. If there is no distance between you and the competition in the negotiation phase, you may think it will come down to price. It won't. It's still down to value, but the customer is throwing price at you as a distraction. This is where you need to get creative with the value options that you put on the negotiating table. How can you package up your offering to create more value? Think wider than the product, by looking at the value created by your whole company and your wider team. Think about personal and politics wins for your prospect that do not appear in the business case because they can often be hard to quantify. Even if the competition get the deal this time, stay close during implementation, as things will go wrong. And finally, the prospect will tender for the business again.

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Page 1: How to beat every competitor, every time

By Alistair McQuade

How to beat every competitor, every time.

Page 2: How to beat every competitor, every time

It’s not always the best product that wins the deal.

Page 3: How to beat every competitor, every time

Where is the prospect in the purchasing process?

Changes over Time

Recognition of Need

Evaluation of Options

Resolution of Concerns

Decision

Implementation

Page 4: How to beat every competitor, every time

Show Your Prospect How High To Set The Bar

As part of the business case, help the prospect to build a

specification around your offering. If you have features that

out perform the competition, ensure that those performance

levels are set as the minimum bar to tender for the business. Any

supplier that cannot attain those performance levels are ruled out.

Page 5: How to beat every competitor, every time

Don't just keep asking for a decision like the other sales guys will be doing.

Page 6: How to beat every competitor, every time

Move Away From Price

• Think wider than the product or service, by looking at the value created by:1) your whole company 2) your wider team3) Personal value4) Political wins

Page 7: How to beat every competitor, every time

Conclusion

• Even if the competition get the deal this time, stay close during implementation, as things may go wrong.

• The prospect will tender for the business again. Learn what really lost you the deal (beyond price). You may have lost the battle but you will win the war!

• You can outsell any competition. First of all you need to recognise that you can. Then adopt these sales techniques to make sure you do.

Page 8: How to beat every competitor, every time

more resources at salestrong.co.uk

podcasts decks

articles

movies

certification

There are lots more resources to make your sales brain

stronger at salestrong.co.uk.

Page 9: How to beat every competitor, every time

By Alistair McQuade

How to beat every competitor, every time.