Last week I asked you to complete my market research survey,and you were not among the 16% who responded (that is a pretty good response rate). Those people are enjoying in-depth examples and logical insights to improve their business (and saving $84 over Amazon’s price on information that is worth tens of thousands applied to your organization). ...
You might have been busy last week, so the survey is still open this week. (I won’t be making this offer forever.) Take a few minutes to visit the page: http://tinyurl.com/2owm6j. You’ll enjoy the material I have prepared for you.
I'm back in town for a while, and have a lot to be thankful for: Sales Performance Consultants, Inc., has grown 400% this year, thanks to "Sales and Marketing the Six Sigma Way," and the people and companies who asked us to help them implement its ideas. There have been some excellent and fascinating results, which you’ll be hearing about soon.
I hope you also have had a rewarding year.
This week's article was originally published on MarketingProfs.com a couple of years ago. Dozens of people have told me they really enjoyed its savvy insights about selling. It is entitled "Three Question Strategies to Make Your Sales Funnel Flow Faster, and How to Use Them."
I hope you enjoy it too.
Until next time, we hope you enjoy your Thanksgiving holiday!
Michael J. Webb
November 20, 2007
www.salesperformance.com
__________________________________________________________________________
Three Question Strategies to Make Your Sales Funnel Flow Faster, and How You Should Use Them
When your company is well synchronized with market needs, prospects buy and money flows. Unfortunately, few companies can maintain a constant flow. Salespeople churn out demonstrations, samples, and proposals. Marketing departments churn out newsletters, ad copy, and brochures. But not enough prospects close.
What makes the sales funnel flow faster? The key is coordinating your sales and marketing efforts—aligning everyone in your organization according to the questions you ask your prospects at different stages in your relationships with them. These questions form the logical connection between the work of sales and the work of marketing.
Marketers need to know the questions that salespeople ask of customers at different points in the selling cycle, so they can provide the correct types of support to make selling easier. Likewise, salespeople need to know when to turn to marketing expertise to build customer knowledge and awareness, especially when customers are not ready to buy.
If you don’t have enough prospects ready to buy, review and refine your questioning strategies, then realign your sales and marketing organization around them. Following are three question strategies you can use to make your sales funnel flow faster, and some examples of how to sales and marketing can work together to move customers through the sales funnel.
Strategy #1: Problem/Solution
The problem/solution question strategy emerged to address the old adage, "You can't sell the solution, unless you've sold the problem first." For example, Michael Bosworth's Solution Selling® (Irwin, 1995) offered techniques for motivating prospects by uncovering their pain. Another variation, the "how, how much, what bottlenecks" questions, were popular in computer sales training in the 1980s. These questions help crystallize and dollarize problems and solutions when needs cut across departmental lines or when lifecycle costs count.
If the customer has exactly the problem you can solve, but isn’t consciously ready to buy, problem/solution questions can help you show that the fit is right. But don’t use them
when your customers are not in decision-making mode and need information. These questions will make them uncomfortable. You will seem to be justifying the sale at the expense of understanding that your customer is not ready to close, and your relationship may be undermined.
Strategy #2: Objectives, Strategies, and Issues
The second type of question gets at your prospects’ business and departmental objectives. What strategies will they use to achieve those objectives? What issues and/or challenges do they face? Stepping back to get a broader view, you can scope out people's perspectives (including decision makers’), as well as departmental politics and priorities. You can build relationships, steer clear of time-wasters, and start generating a consensus, even before you start “selling.”
Of course, simply asking, "What are your business objectives?" won't work very well. Asking questions that reveal some preparation is a different story:
"I read in your company’s newsletter that your department received a quality award. Nice going! And your annual report said quality was one of your president's key objectives for this year. Tell me, what did you do here to earn that recognition?"
This approach adds value to the relationship, since you show that you know something about the customer’s business when you ask the question. In their book, "Beyond Selling Value" (Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2002), Dan Kosch and Mark Shonka describe how to ask these questions and leverage the information they provide. Clearly, prospects want relationships with suppliers they trust. Trust can make the sales funnel flow faster. You can earn that trust by taking the time to understand their business.
But these questions can also have a drawback: sometimes they are so open-ended it can take a long time for the salesperson to find what they are looking for. And time is often in short supply.
====================================================================================
Are You Interested in Sales Process Improvement?
I'm Interested in Learning About You.
Click the following link for an Offer You Can't Refuse! http://tinyurl.com/2owm6j
====================================================================================
Strategy #3: Synchronization
Synchronization questions are key to effectiveness. Marketing and selling never work when you ask your prospects to take actions they are not ready for. If the problem you solve is not on a decision maker's radar yet, that person will not recognize the value of your products and services.
Synchronization questions make you focus on learning the decision maker’s priorities. That person’s business life, like yours, is rife with problems. Which ones require attention now, and which can wait? What are the alternatives, the pros and cons? Who else should be involved, and why? How trustworthy is the available information?
These questions engage prospects where they are. Good salespeople always try to get into that "sweet spot." They know that when a prospect sees the salesperson putting the
prospect’s best interests first, the prospect will share all kinds of strategically important information. Then they move forward together… through the sales funnel.
You know it takes time to build those kinds of relationships. How can you make the funnel flow faster?
Making Your Sales Funnel Flow Faster
Suppose a prospect is stuck because the right people are unclear on the importance of solving certain problems. They would want to hear case studies revealing the dangers and what happened to companies who did nothing, right? Who could provide that information?
Or, suppose that the prospect is considering a "roll your own" approach. Would this prospect be interested in the details, risks, and rewards of what is actually involved? Who could provide those details?
Are these value-adding questions the job of sales? Salespeople may have some of this information, yet are they the ones best suited to provide it? They are not.
Marketing departments are often asked to produce product-oriented communications and promotions in a generic fashion. These talented people work ferociously to produce newsletters that may go unread, leads that might be ignored, and collateral that may not be used. Instead, marketing efforts should focus on making the sales process easier by addressing the specific information needs of your customers in situations like these.
How should you use these three questioning strategies in your organization? First, identify the stages prospects go through in solving their problems. Next, identify where they get stuck in their journey, and why. Then jointly charge sales and marketing to devise questioning tactics that help prospects progress through those stages, especially where they get stuck. Do prospects fail to realize they have a problem? Do the risks of taking an action appear greater than the reward? Do they struggle to build a consensus? Some situations may be better solved via marketing tactics such as articles and case studies. Others are better solved via sales tactics, such as the three questioning strategies we’ve described.
Either way, you will help prospects work on the problems they actually want to solve. You’ll build relationships. And you’ll make the most of the resources you have (both sales and marketing) in ways that make the sales funnel flow faster.


2010SJ The parents of students from anhui province,Cheap Nike Shoes said ms HongYa really just admitted to the daughter of Shanghai normal university to living is a month 800-1000 yuan,jordan shoes for cheap regardless all parents give this number, but also a child before listening in Shanghai university students' parents say, are not actually 1500 yuan, so I told her daughter money saving some flowers.
Posted by: Cheap Nike Shoes | September 12, 2010 at 04:40 AM
Your articles and photos are really shock me. The pen can be a weapon! You are a talented writer with a pen, and maybe you will be a great politician with the power given from citizens.
Posted by: air jordan | October 29, 2010 at 10:20 PM
The five pictures beamed back to Earth so far show an object just over a mile long and shaped
http://www.mbtshoesuksale.com/
Posted by: MBT Shoes | November 05, 2010 at 08:35 PM
Weblogs may be a quite marketable and very rewarding instrument if employed correctly. Profiting from blogs is just a matter of grabbing the interest of an audience and never performing any actual salesmen promoting.
Posted by: Nike SB | February 22, 2011 at 10:52 PM
Many thanks for the article. I will have a link back to this information from our fresh blog.
http://cheaphatsstore.com
http://mvpcaps.org
http://caps2011.com
http://hats-club.com
Posted by: New Era Hats | July 25, 2011 at 11:38 PM