Everyone wants to sell their offerings for more. But sales teams are torn.
Corporate says, “We need to sell value. What we offer is worth more than what we're getting.” And customers respond with: “We can’t spend that” or “Your competitor's price was better”.
Here’s the reality: value selling is hard. To do it right, you’ve got to face seven hard truths head on:
It’s shocking how many sellers don’t keep up with their competitors' offerings. How can you differentiate yourself if you don’t know this information?
What Can You Do?
If your key differentiator isn’t something that the customer needs, they won’t pay more for it. It isn’t a benefit if customers don’t value it – it’s only a “feature”.
What Can You Do?
Various decision-makers have different strategies, budgets, and motivations. When you blindly assume that similar customers have similar values, you waste everyone's time.
What Can You Do?
If you enter the conversation midway through the buying process, you are a column fodder. Even if you are not, the customer is not likely to derail their decision-making. Remember, other vendors have already anchored them with decision criteria and price. If your competitors know your offering well, they’ve probably already downplayed your unique qualities.
What Can You Do?
Customers take a leap of faith when they pay a higher price. They will have to support their decisions to stakeholders, putting their jobs and reputations on the line. Customers need to feel comfortable with your delivery. You must prove that you know their needs and challenges intimately. Trust can be built by putting their needs first, creating a viable product, and demonstrating a clear business case.
What Can You Do?
When you meet with customers, you are more than just the face of the products. Customers need to do more than just trust your products – they need to trust you. After all, YOU are the person who meets with your customers and are the expert on the product. You are also the one with the expertise that makes their jobs easier by solving problems, servicing your offering, and bringing forth new information.
What Can You Do?
Even when you sell on value, you still need to justify the price for the customer’s ROI. Consider how much your customer is willing to pay for benefits.
In theory, that’s how much more you can charge, but… there’s other factors: budgets, spending authority, competing priorities, and pressure within the organization.
What Can You Do?
If you’ve really sold your value, your customer might be willing to collaborate with you on this step.
To reiterate, value selling is HARD.
We don’t recommend attempting this alone. Leverage sales leaders, marketing and product teams, and peers. Ask for information and materials. Collaborate and brainstorm while continuously asking for customer feedback. Reach out to us for more ideas on engaging customers around value.