Archive for August, 2009
A Motivated Customer
Posted by: | CommentsThere are four reasons why someone buys something from you:
1. It makes them money
2. It saves them money
3. It solves a problem
4. It fulfills a need
As you go through your learning activities–building the relationship, establishing rapport and credibility with your clients, you must discover and know what their motivation is for buying from you. This requires you knowing how they envision your product or service supports that motivation. If you don’t know what that is, you don’t know enough to close the deal.
An effective sales professional takes the time to learn about what drives and motivates their customers and prospects. Through effective listening and learning and more listening, the customer will begin to identify their issues, challenges and needs in their business (B2B sales) or their life (consumer selling). Once this information has been effectively and diligently collected, the true sales professional can effectively focus their conversation on how their product offering fulfills the specific motivational need. One cannot sell to what they want the motivation or the benefit to be. You can only sell to the motivational behaviors of the buyer. Understanding what that is requires taking the time to learn and identify what the customer’s motivational needs are first.
More from The Sales Cooke
- The “Solution” is a Matter of Perspective
- Consumerism in Sales and Marketing
- A Change in the Sales Landscape
The Sales Cooke Recommends
- The Loyalty Lady Drives Customer Retention (Captivated Customers)
- It takes a village to raise a one-person business (PamSlim)
- Customer Rage is on the Rise (Captivated Customers)
The business environment has gone through massive transformations in the past few years. In his keynote presentations, Dave Cooke brings energy, insight, and inspiration to the many exciting opportunities that exist for businesses today. "Thought provoking" and "powerful" are just two of the descriptions applied to Dave Cooke's talks. 


