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When You Don't Have the Best Product on the Market: Motivating Yourself and Customers

Here's a lesson from a salesperson, a lesson we all
frequently tend to forget.

    Ron Campbell tested high in intelligence and even
higher in sales skills. His positive, high-energy outlook
impressed the interviewers at Industrial Solutions, and
both his former employers raved about his ambition and his
honesty. Bright, talented, upbeat, ambitious and ethical:
those were the qualities that won Ron his dream job. And
those were the qualities that caused him to quit in disgust
less than a year later.

    I met Ron while I was consulting with Industrial
Industries, immediately after he'd been hired. Twenty-eight
years old, he'd moved from a $33,000 per year sales rep
position with a mom and pop operation to a "Professional
Sales Career" with a Fortune 500 giant, where the average
first year earnings were $67,000, and someone with Ron's
potential could make well over $100,000. Then there was the
company car, expenses, and a benefit package tempting
enough to make me or anyone else question the joys of self-
employment. As a result, Ron's infectious grin became a
near-permanent fixture on his face.

    When I arrived each morning at 7:30 AM, he was
already in the training room, studying hard. When I left,
sometimes as late as 7:30 or 8:00 in the evening, he'd
still be around, usually picking the brain of anyone who
had anything to teach him. In his second month on the job,
the division manager asked him to deliver a motivational
presentation at a key sales meeting. Even the veterans were
impressed.

    I figured he'd be a memory in 18 months. Cynicism was
practically a job requirement at Industrial Industries. I'd
seen too many of those who should have become the best and
the brightest crushed by the realities of selling for such
a demanding company. Ron seemed particularly vulnerable.

    The day I finished my contract with the company, Ron
volunteered to drive me to the airport; he wanted a chance
to pick my brain. I gave him my card.

    "Everyone around here has been raving about your
potential," I said. "But if things ever get too rough,
please give me a call before you do anything that can't be
undone."

    He thanked me, but assured me that he considered this
job the chance of a lifetime. "I'm lashing myself to the
saddle on this bronco," he said, reminding me that while
Ron was from New Jersey, his sales manager was from Texas.
"It can buck, it can even bite, but there's no way it's
going to throw me."

    The call came eight months later. He told me he was
quitting the next day.

    "Their prices are just too high," he explained. "I
just can't sell their machines."

    "Ron, you can sell anything you choose to sell."

    "I can't sell this stuff. Not in amounts large enough
to meet their ridiculous quotas."

    "How many of the others are making their quotas?"

    "Some of them. Most of them, I suppose. But the
company puts so much pressure on the reps to make their
numbers, who knows what they're telling the customers? I
sell clean, and I don't sell enough. And I don't feel good
about what I do sell. I get prospects to trust me, then use
that trust to talk them into buying something they wouldn't
have bought on their own. That's what selling is all about.
And that may be fine if you've got the best product in the
marketplace . . ." His voice trailed off.

    "But," I said, finishing the thought, "not everybody
can have the best product in the marketplace."

    "That's the problem."

    "That is a problem, Ron. But aren't you the guy that
told a division meeting that in Chinese the word for
problem is the same as the word for opportunity?"

    "Crisis. The word for crisis is the same as the word
for opportunity."

    "You're quitting your job tomorrow, Ron. The job you
told me was your chance of a lifetime. If this isn't a
crisis, it will certainly do until one arrives."



    So how did Ron fill this particular glass. Well,
first of all I talked him out of quitting the next day.
Then, as we often teach salespeople to do, Ron turned
himself into the ultimate value-added feature, the final
benefit that lifted his products above the competition.

    He's become a major resource, developing an expertise
his customers no longer feel they can do without. "His
machines may not be quite as reliable as his
competition's," one of them admits. "But he knows more
about that type of milling than anyone in the industry. The
free information we get from him more than offsets the cost
of the occasional problem his products may encounter. He's
indispensable. Besides, when there is a problem, Ron's on
it: practically before the machine stops humming."

    I recently spoke with Bill Swetland, a customer
service rep with Industrial Industries, Ron's company.
"When one of Ron's accounts has a problem," Bill said, "he
fights for them harder than they'd ever fight for
themselves . . . Sometimes I wonder who he's working for."

    "But that's part of what they're buying," Ron
explains. "They're buying me. That's what they are paying
for and that's what they get. I make sure I'm worth the
extra money our products cost and then some."

    Because he's free from doubt about the value his
clients will be receiving, Ron can sell honestly. He can
tell the truth to his customers and to himself and still
close any deal. He sells to more customers and he sells
more to each customer. And his referrals are astonishing.

    How good a deal are your customers or your bosses or
your people getting when you get them they buy into what
you're selling? And what can you do to make it better?



 



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