logging in or signing up selling_spin_tequniques DR HAYTHAM stimulations Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 450 Category: Product Traini.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: October 21, 2009 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: dnp_mahendra (12 month(s) ago) can i get a copy of your presentation ? thank you very much . Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide 1: S P I N SELLING Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien MBA. Marketing USA 00971503377862 stimulations@gmail.com Spin Selling : Spin Selling Is a 'hurt and rescue' approach. -You find their problem and 'hurt' them by exposing the terrible things that might happen (spot the use of tension). Then you ‘rescue’ them with your product. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Types of questions : Types of questions SPIN Selling proposes there are four types of questions, thus SPIN stands for : Situation ( questions ) Problem ( questions ) Implication ( questions ) Need-payoff ( questions ) S P I N Situation questions : Situation questions Data-gathering questions about facts and background not to be over used. Minimize the small talk and focus on finding background detail that can be used to make sense of the buyer's business situation. This is about understanding the wider context before you zoom into the details. Problem questions : Problem questions ~ Explore problems difficulties, and dissatisfactions in areas where the seller’s product can help. Ask about the buyer's pain and focus the buyer on this pain while clarifying the problem Inexperienced sellers generally don’t ask enough . Ask questions to uncover problems which your product can address. Eg: If you are selling tractors, ask about maintenance costs, breakdowns and so on. If you are selling life insurance, ask about how many dependents the person has. Implication questions : Implication questions Discuss the effects of the problem. Talk about solutions. Develop the seriousness of the problem to increase the buyer's motivation to change This is the 'hurt' of “HURT & RESCUE”. Eg: Life insurance salesperson could carefully ask what would happen to the children if the target person died or became very ill. Need-Payoff questions : Need-Payoff questions ~ Get the customer to tell you the benefits that your solution could offer. With careful questions, you can get them to the state where they are asking for your product even before you show it to them. This is a very neat 'rescue' of ‘HURT & RESCUE’, where they either rescue themselves or ask you to rescue them. Eg: The insurance sales person could ask questions that build pictures of the target person's children being safe and secure whatever curve-balls the world might throw at the family. Sales Behavior and Sales Success : Sales Behavior and Sales Success Successful Salespeople are… Not better closers Not better at handling objections Not better at using open ended questions Many believe the 3 key components to a sales pitch are: 1. Uncover needs with open and closed questions. 2. Overcome objections. 3. Close for the business. Success in the Larger Sale : Success in the Larger Sale Traditional (not necessarily effective) steps of a sales call are: Opening the call~Relate to the buyer. Investigating needs Giving benefits Objection handling Closing techniques The 4 Stages of a Sales Call : The 4 Stages of a Sales Call 1. Preliminaries 2. Investigating 3. Demonstrating Capability 4. Obtaining Commitment Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien . Preliminaries / Opening : . Preliminaries / Opening Introduce yourself How you begin conversation Eg: How are you? Nice Weather? Is that a picture of your daughter? Keep these questions and this phase short. One or two, and don't let them go on. Investigating : Investigating Finding out facts, information, and needs. Eg: How much do you see your company growing next year? How do you keep track of how much work your managers are accomplishing? What is your current work order system? Very important &Crucial in large sales In fact, the most important selling skill. Demonstrating Capability : Demonstrating Capability Sell Benefits rather than Features and Advantages. You must show customers that : you can solve their problem You have a solution That it makes sense to do business with you Obtaining Commitment : Obtaining Commitment Getting an agreement to proceed to a further stage of the sale. First check that you've covered all of the prospect's key concerns. Then summarize your benefits. Finally, propose the next appropriate level of commitment. Obtaining Commitment: Closing the Sale : Obtaining Commitment: Closing the Sale What is closing? Huthwaite’s definition of Closing: A behavior used by the seller which implies or invites a commitment, so that the buyer’s next statement accepts or denies commitment. A Glimmer of Light : A Glimmer of Light Closing techniques worked when the sale was small . Closing techniques failed when the size of the sale increased . Consider the psychology:Closing is, in effect, putting pressure on the customer to make a decision. As this decision increases in size, the pressure tends to have a negative affect. Eg: A young man courting a young woman. The alternative close of “shall we sit here or shall we sit there?” works because the decision is small. However, the same young man may have a considerably lesser success rate with the alternative close of “my place or yours”. The decision this close implicates is a much larger one. Closing and Decision Size : Closing and Decision Size Before the training took place Huthwaite measured three things: Transaction time : How long did each sale or attempted sale take? Number of closes : How often did the seller use a closing behavior during the transaction? Percentage sale : What percentage of the transactions resulted in a purchase? Low-value items: The effects of closing training: Decreased the transaction time . The number of closing behaviors increased . The success rate increased High-value items:The effects of closing training: Decreased the transaction time . The number of closing behaviors increased . The success rate decreased. Two Conclusions : Two Conclusions By forcing the customer into a decision, closing techniques speed the sales transaction. Closing techniques may increase the chances of making a sale with low-priced products. With expensive products or services, they reduce the chances of making a sale. Four possible outcomes of a sales call: : Four possible outcomes of a sales call: Orders Advances Continuations No-sales Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Orders : Orders Where the customer makes a firm commitment to buy. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Advances : Advances Where an event takes place, either in the call or after it, that makes the sales move forward toward a decision. Typical Advances might include: A customer’s agreement to attend an off-site demonstration A clearance that will get you in front of higher level of decision maker An agreement to run a trial or test of your product Access to parts of the account that were previously inaccessible to you Continuations : Continuations Where the sale will continue but where no specific action has been agreed upon by the customer to move it forward. “Thank you for coming. Why don’t you visit us again the next time you’re in the area?” “Fantastic presentation, we’re very impressed. Let’s meet again some time.” “We liked what we saw and we’ll be in touch if we need to take things further.” No-sales : No-sales Where the customer actively refuses a commitment. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Obtaining Commitment: Four Successful Actions : Obtaining Commitment: Four Successful Actions Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. Checking that key concerns are covered . Summarizing the Benefits. Proposing a commitment. Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. : Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. Successful salespeople give their primary attention to this action. Successful salespeople do an outstanding job of building needs during the Investigating stage. If you can convince customers that they need what you are offering, then they will often close the sale for you. Checking that key concerns are covered. : Checking that key concerns are covered. Sellers who were most effective in obtaining commitment from their customers would invariably take the initiave and ask the buyer whether there were any further points or concerns that needed to be addressed . Summarizing the Benefits : Summarizing the Benefits In a larger sale, summary will almost always be a helpful way to bring key points into focus just before the decision. Proposing a commitment. : Proposing a commitment. Asking for the commitment is not what successful sellers do. In all the other stages of the sale, asking behaviors are much more successful than giving behaviors. At the point of commitment, successful sellers don’t ask–they tell. Most natural and effective: Suggest an appropriate next step to the customer. Slide 29: CUSTOMER NEEDS IN SALE INVESTIGATING QUESTIONS COLLECT DATA Slide 30: NEED DEVELOPMENT Slide 31: Types of needs Implied needs Explicit needs Slide 32: VALUE EQUATION Relationship between the size of needs and cost of a solution Problem> cost of solving=sales Problem<cost of solving=no sales THE SPIN STRATEGY : THE SPIN STRATEGY S-Situation questions: These questions collect facts and background data Experience speaks while asking them Chances of buyer getting bored Bottom line: Always do u homework before you give your call. SPIN : SPIN P-Problem questions Strongly linked to Sale success-especially small sales. Experience goes along with these questions. It provides a base in the large sales They usually help in covering the implied needs. SPIN : SPIN I-Implication questions. Helpful in large sales. Implications are the language of decision makers, and if you can talk their language, you’ll influence them better. If not asked properly these questions can create a negative impact. SPIN : SPIN N-Need pay off questions. These help in developing Implied needs into Explicit needs. Success in dealing with existing customers. Need Pay-Off questions reduce Objections. Need-payoff Questions are important because they focus attention on solutions, not problems. SPIN MODEL : SPIN MODEL Initially, Situation Questions are asked to establish background facts. Next, quickly move to Problem Questions to explore problems, difficulties, and dissatisfactions. In smaller sales we could offer solutions on the spot but we need to hold back in large sales. Once the problem is justified by the buyer, we need to ask need-payoff questions. Features and Benefits: The Classic Ways to Demonstrate Capability : Features and Benefits: The Classic Ways to Demonstrate Capability FEATURES Features-Facts, data, or information about your product or services. In larger sales, Features have a negative effect. Features are low-power statements that do little to help you sell. BENEFITS : BENEFITS Research says two types of benefits: Type A benefit (Advantages) Type B benefit (Benefits) Type A benefits are helpful in smaller sales Type B benefits are helpful in any size of sales. FEATURES, ADVANTAGES, AND BENEFITS IN THE LONGER SELLING CYCLE Slide 41: Advantages usually run out of steam Selling New Products Demonstrating Capability Effectively Don’t demonstrate capabilities too early in the call. Beware Advantages . Be careful with new products. PREVENTING OBJECTIONS : PREVENTING OBJECTIONS Features and Price Concerns Treating Symptoms or Treating Causes? The Sales-Training approach to Objections. Preventing objections from your customers Objections early in the call. Objections about value. PRELIMINARIES: OPENING THE CALL : PRELIMINARIES: OPENING THE CALL First Impressions Conventional openings : Relate to the buyers personal interests. Make an opening benefit statement. MAKE YOUR PRELIMINARIES EFFECTIVE TURNING THEORY INTO PRACTICE : TURNING THEORY INTO PRACTICE The Four Golden Rules for Learning Skills Rule 1:Practice only one thing at a time. Rule 2:Try the new thing at least 3 times. Rule 3:Quantity before quality Rule 4:Practice in safe situations. SUMMARY : SUMMARY FOUR STAGES OF A SALES CALL Preliminaries Investigating Demonstrating Capability Obtaining Commitment Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
selling_spin_tequniques DR HAYTHAM stimulations Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 450 Category: Product Traini.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: October 21, 2009 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: dnp_mahendra (12 month(s) ago) can i get a copy of your presentation ? thank you very much . Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide 1: S P I N SELLING Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien MBA. Marketing USA 00971503377862 stimulations@gmail.com Spin Selling : Spin Selling Is a 'hurt and rescue' approach. -You find their problem and 'hurt' them by exposing the terrible things that might happen (spot the use of tension). Then you ‘rescue’ them with your product. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Types of questions : Types of questions SPIN Selling proposes there are four types of questions, thus SPIN stands for : Situation ( questions ) Problem ( questions ) Implication ( questions ) Need-payoff ( questions ) S P I N Situation questions : Situation questions Data-gathering questions about facts and background not to be over used. Minimize the small talk and focus on finding background detail that can be used to make sense of the buyer's business situation. This is about understanding the wider context before you zoom into the details. Problem questions : Problem questions ~ Explore problems difficulties, and dissatisfactions in areas where the seller’s product can help. Ask about the buyer's pain and focus the buyer on this pain while clarifying the problem Inexperienced sellers generally don’t ask enough . Ask questions to uncover problems which your product can address. Eg: If you are selling tractors, ask about maintenance costs, breakdowns and so on. If you are selling life insurance, ask about how many dependents the person has. Implication questions : Implication questions Discuss the effects of the problem. Talk about solutions. Develop the seriousness of the problem to increase the buyer's motivation to change This is the 'hurt' of “HURT & RESCUE”. Eg: Life insurance salesperson could carefully ask what would happen to the children if the target person died or became very ill. Need-Payoff questions : Need-Payoff questions ~ Get the customer to tell you the benefits that your solution could offer. With careful questions, you can get them to the state where they are asking for your product even before you show it to them. This is a very neat 'rescue' of ‘HURT & RESCUE’, where they either rescue themselves or ask you to rescue them. Eg: The insurance sales person could ask questions that build pictures of the target person's children being safe and secure whatever curve-balls the world might throw at the family. Sales Behavior and Sales Success : Sales Behavior and Sales Success Successful Salespeople are… Not better closers Not better at handling objections Not better at using open ended questions Many believe the 3 key components to a sales pitch are: 1. Uncover needs with open and closed questions. 2. Overcome objections. 3. Close for the business. Success in the Larger Sale : Success in the Larger Sale Traditional (not necessarily effective) steps of a sales call are: Opening the call~Relate to the buyer. Investigating needs Giving benefits Objection handling Closing techniques The 4 Stages of a Sales Call : The 4 Stages of a Sales Call 1. Preliminaries 2. Investigating 3. Demonstrating Capability 4. Obtaining Commitment Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien . Preliminaries / Opening : . Preliminaries / Opening Introduce yourself How you begin conversation Eg: How are you? Nice Weather? Is that a picture of your daughter? Keep these questions and this phase short. One or two, and don't let them go on. Investigating : Investigating Finding out facts, information, and needs. Eg: How much do you see your company growing next year? How do you keep track of how much work your managers are accomplishing? What is your current work order system? Very important &Crucial in large sales In fact, the most important selling skill. Demonstrating Capability : Demonstrating Capability Sell Benefits rather than Features and Advantages. You must show customers that : you can solve their problem You have a solution That it makes sense to do business with you Obtaining Commitment : Obtaining Commitment Getting an agreement to proceed to a further stage of the sale. First check that you've covered all of the prospect's key concerns. Then summarize your benefits. Finally, propose the next appropriate level of commitment. Obtaining Commitment: Closing the Sale : Obtaining Commitment: Closing the Sale What is closing? Huthwaite’s definition of Closing: A behavior used by the seller which implies or invites a commitment, so that the buyer’s next statement accepts or denies commitment. A Glimmer of Light : A Glimmer of Light Closing techniques worked when the sale was small . Closing techniques failed when the size of the sale increased . Consider the psychology:Closing is, in effect, putting pressure on the customer to make a decision. As this decision increases in size, the pressure tends to have a negative affect. Eg: A young man courting a young woman. The alternative close of “shall we sit here or shall we sit there?” works because the decision is small. However, the same young man may have a considerably lesser success rate with the alternative close of “my place or yours”. The decision this close implicates is a much larger one. Closing and Decision Size : Closing and Decision Size Before the training took place Huthwaite measured three things: Transaction time : How long did each sale or attempted sale take? Number of closes : How often did the seller use a closing behavior during the transaction? Percentage sale : What percentage of the transactions resulted in a purchase? Low-value items: The effects of closing training: Decreased the transaction time . The number of closing behaviors increased . The success rate increased High-value items:The effects of closing training: Decreased the transaction time . The number of closing behaviors increased . The success rate decreased. Two Conclusions : Two Conclusions By forcing the customer into a decision, closing techniques speed the sales transaction. Closing techniques may increase the chances of making a sale with low-priced products. With expensive products or services, they reduce the chances of making a sale. Four possible outcomes of a sales call: : Four possible outcomes of a sales call: Orders Advances Continuations No-sales Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Orders : Orders Where the customer makes a firm commitment to buy. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Advances : Advances Where an event takes place, either in the call or after it, that makes the sales move forward toward a decision. Typical Advances might include: A customer’s agreement to attend an off-site demonstration A clearance that will get you in front of higher level of decision maker An agreement to run a trial or test of your product Access to parts of the account that were previously inaccessible to you Continuations : Continuations Where the sale will continue but where no specific action has been agreed upon by the customer to move it forward. “Thank you for coming. Why don’t you visit us again the next time you’re in the area?” “Fantastic presentation, we’re very impressed. Let’s meet again some time.” “We liked what we saw and we’ll be in touch if we need to take things further.” No-sales : No-sales Where the customer actively refuses a commitment. Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien Obtaining Commitment: Four Successful Actions : Obtaining Commitment: Four Successful Actions Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. Checking that key concerns are covered . Summarizing the Benefits. Proposing a commitment. Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. : Giving attention to Investigating and Demonstrating Capability. Successful salespeople give their primary attention to this action. Successful salespeople do an outstanding job of building needs during the Investigating stage. If you can convince customers that they need what you are offering, then they will often close the sale for you. Checking that key concerns are covered. : Checking that key concerns are covered. Sellers who were most effective in obtaining commitment from their customers would invariably take the initiave and ask the buyer whether there were any further points or concerns that needed to be addressed . Summarizing the Benefits : Summarizing the Benefits In a larger sale, summary will almost always be a helpful way to bring key points into focus just before the decision. Proposing a commitment. : Proposing a commitment. Asking for the commitment is not what successful sellers do. In all the other stages of the sale, asking behaviors are much more successful than giving behaviors. At the point of commitment, successful sellers don’t ask–they tell. Most natural and effective: Suggest an appropriate next step to the customer. Slide 29: CUSTOMER NEEDS IN SALE INVESTIGATING QUESTIONS COLLECT DATA Slide 30: NEED DEVELOPMENT Slide 31: Types of needs Implied needs Explicit needs Slide 32: VALUE EQUATION Relationship between the size of needs and cost of a solution Problem> cost of solving=sales Problem<cost of solving=no sales THE SPIN STRATEGY : THE SPIN STRATEGY S-Situation questions: These questions collect facts and background data Experience speaks while asking them Chances of buyer getting bored Bottom line: Always do u homework before you give your call. SPIN : SPIN P-Problem questions Strongly linked to Sale success-especially small sales. Experience goes along with these questions. It provides a base in the large sales They usually help in covering the implied needs. SPIN : SPIN I-Implication questions. Helpful in large sales. Implications are the language of decision makers, and if you can talk their language, you’ll influence them better. If not asked properly these questions can create a negative impact. SPIN : SPIN N-Need pay off questions. These help in developing Implied needs into Explicit needs. Success in dealing with existing customers. Need Pay-Off questions reduce Objections. Need-payoff Questions are important because they focus attention on solutions, not problems. SPIN MODEL : SPIN MODEL Initially, Situation Questions are asked to establish background facts. Next, quickly move to Problem Questions to explore problems, difficulties, and dissatisfactions. In smaller sales we could offer solutions on the spot but we need to hold back in large sales. Once the problem is justified by the buyer, we need to ask need-payoff questions. Features and Benefits: The Classic Ways to Demonstrate Capability : Features and Benefits: The Classic Ways to Demonstrate Capability FEATURES Features-Facts, data, or information about your product or services. In larger sales, Features have a negative effect. Features are low-power statements that do little to help you sell. BENEFITS : BENEFITS Research says two types of benefits: Type A benefit (Advantages) Type B benefit (Benefits) Type A benefits are helpful in smaller sales Type B benefits are helpful in any size of sales. FEATURES, ADVANTAGES, AND BENEFITS IN THE LONGER SELLING CYCLE Slide 41: Advantages usually run out of steam Selling New Products Demonstrating Capability Effectively Don’t demonstrate capabilities too early in the call. Beware Advantages . Be careful with new products. PREVENTING OBJECTIONS : PREVENTING OBJECTIONS Features and Price Concerns Treating Symptoms or Treating Causes? The Sales-Training approach to Objections. Preventing objections from your customers Objections early in the call. Objections about value. PRELIMINARIES: OPENING THE CALL : PRELIMINARIES: OPENING THE CALL First Impressions Conventional openings : Relate to the buyers personal interests. Make an opening benefit statement. MAKE YOUR PRELIMINARIES EFFECTIVE TURNING THEORY INTO PRACTICE : TURNING THEORY INTO PRACTICE The Four Golden Rules for Learning Skills Rule 1:Practice only one thing at a time. Rule 2:Try the new thing at least 3 times. Rule 3:Quantity before quality Rule 4:Practice in safe situations. SUMMARY : SUMMARY FOUR STAGES OF A SALES CALL Preliminaries Investigating Demonstrating Capability Obtaining Commitment Dr. Haytham Abu El Onien