Alec Baldwin has been playing some prominent characters lately but his depiction of Blake in Glengarry Glen Ross. was the epitome of the high-powered, low-empathy, money-driven salesperson who gets what he wants through fear, intimidation, and profanity-laced speeches.
After threatening and terrorizing a group of salesmen, Blake gets to his point -- salespeople should "ABC": Always Be Closing. According to Blake, regardless of the individual prospect and their needs, the rep's ultimate task is to bring money in the door.
This kind of selling may have worked in the 1980s, when David Mamet penned the play the movie is based on, but fast-forward to 2017 and things are very different.
Salespeople today need to follow a totally different mantra: Always Be Helping.
Blake would never give up control of the sales process to a prospect. Yet that’s exactly what a top salesperson in 2017 needs to do. The "always be closing" school of thought ignores buyer needs entirely and places the salesperson at the center of the sales process, taking a brute-force approach to closing deals.
What’s a sales rep to do? Always be closing? Hardly.
Your job, of course, is still to sell. But abandon any strategies that involve force-feeding prospects a product they don’t want and don’t need. As Dale Carnegie famously said, people don't want to be sold to -- they want to feel as if they're buying. Instead, as your prospect moves through the funnel, provide resources and guidance as they attempt to solve a complicated business problem. Always be helping.
Why Should You Always Be Helping?
Seller-centric focused selling doesn’t play anymore, in either B2B or B2C sales processes. The balance of power has been tipped away from the sales rep and toward the buyer. With the transparency and availability of information online, and the ability to tap into third-party reviews, buyers are far savvier than they used to be.
High-pressure selling has stopped working because it treats customers as interchangeable piles of money. But that's not really true. Prospects' situations and needs are as diverse as the people themselves, and while one buyer might be successful with your product, your offering may actually hurt another.
So while Always Be Helping is simply the right thing to do, it's also just better for your business. Selling to poor-fit customers is a stopgap solution that will result in customer turnover, lost income in the form of clawback penalties, and in the most dramatic cases even shutter a business if churn gets too high. On a less concrete scale, Always Be Closing tactics also hurt the brand. As soon your company gains a reputation for having aggressive and selfish salespeople, it'll be much harder to gain customers in the future -- even ones you actually could have helped.
This outline lists the three things all sales reps must do in the age of ABH.
How to Always Be Helping: 3 Strategies
1) Determine if the prospect has a problem you can solve.
If the prospect has a problem completely out of sync with what your company offers or doesn’t need any help for the foreseeable future, get out! They don’t want to talk to you, they don’t need to talk to you, and chances are you don’t want to talk to them.
Why?
Because you can’t help everybody, and you shouldn’t be. Working bad leads is like throwing money down the toilet. Picking and choosing who to help is a significantly better use of your time.
If you pick correctly, you’ll have no problem making 110% of your quota every month. But spending an equal amount of effort or time on every prospect -- no matter how qualified or unqualified they may be -- is a surefire way to continually miss the mark. Not only is it a bad use of your time, trying to sell to prospects without business pain is a bad experience for the buyer.
2) Understand where your prospect is in the decision making process.
The kinds of conversations you engage in and questions you ask your prospects should vary significantly depending on what point they’re at in the buyer’s journey.
Awareness Stage: Your prospect knows they have a problem they want to solve, but hasn't decided upon a solution or begun to do vendor research. Salespeople usually won’t get involved in the awareness stage, since marketers generally control lead nurturing at this point. If you do reach out to a prospect who’s in this stage, use an extremely light touch or pass them back to Marketing.
Consideration Stage: Your prospect is aware of their problem, and is committed to spending time and effort to come up with a potential solution. At this point, potential buyers will begin to sniff around the edges of a resolution, but won’t have defined how much of a material commitment they’re willing to make.
Decision Stage: Your prospect has thoroughly researched their problem and potential solutions. They might not have a specific vendor in mind yet, but if your company’s a big player, they’ve probably at least come across your resources. This is also the point where BANT (budget, authority, needs, and timeline) gets defined.
3) Tailor your process to make it easy for the customer to buy.
Always Be Helping means giving up control of the buying process. It does not, however, mean that salespeople are obligated to let prospects drive the bus. Strike a balance between how your prospect wants the process to play out and using your expertise to guide them in the right direction.
Your value in the sales process is that you, unlike your prospect, have successfully sold this product many times before. They don't know how to get internal buy-in or structure a process that will get them the solution they need.
But you do.
Work with your prospect to understand their decision making process and the perspectives of all relevant stakeholders, and then use that information to sell your product successfully.
For many people, the process of buying is as important as the purchase itself. Prospects need to feel like they’re being heard and respected, and forcing a cookie-cutter sales process on them won’t work.
Ultimately, the Always Be Helping salesperson has to establish trust and confidence before they can close the deal. Modern salespeople help their prospects connect the disparate dots to form a coherent solution. The era of the intimidating, fear-inducing "always be closing" salesperson is officially over -- and that’s a very good thing.