Bill, a rep for a software firm, was on track to sell a large deal to a manufacturing company. He had known the CEO for more than 10 years, and in fact considered him a friend. He even attended his daughter’s wedding last year.
But the deal had recently stalled. Bill had gone through the normal process, educating the stakeholders about the technical merits and ROI. That list of stakeholders, however, seemed to grow every day. Beyond the executive leadership and IT teams, Bill was now expected to meet with plant managers, HR, and - most recently - a team that would be using the software.
Ten years ago, this would have been a simple deal; Bill would have presented to the CEO, and if he liked his proposal he would have signed the contract. While that still might happen in select cases, the trend has moved away from single buyers, even at the CEO level. All complex solutions are scrutinized heavily for adoption, on-going use and ultimately the return of value for the investment. End-users – and their manager and their manager – are increasingly driving the decision process, in addition to any other function that may be peripherally impacted. It’s now the seller's job to round up support for not only the solution, but the need for change in the first place.
In the world of complex sales, the concept of one, absolute decision maker buyer – the economic buyer – is dead. Yes, the budget will come from somewhere. But, as in Bill's deal, even the CEO won’t move forward without the support of his team. Every company has seen too many bad projects, bad decisions, and bad implementations, to justify a purchase without full support.
Today, every decision is seen through the lens of fear and risk. Prudence and personal risk management have become a central goal. This means getting the buy-in of a host of people across the organization.
The rise of the consensus sale has brought four critical challenges to sales organizations:
The reality of consensus buying is significantly impacting sales organizations – the sales leaders, field reps, and sales enablement teams who are trying to make the number. The best modern sellers are armed with a new toolset, skillset, and mindset to effectively align all the buyers on the problem AND the solution.
To get ahead of this trend and gain access to our findings, contact us today.