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Answering Service Related Articles
Uncover More Opportunity:
Ask Great Questions
By Suzanne Bates
“It’s not you, it’s me,” is a
classic, cliché breakup line and a bad one, at
that. “Me, me, me” is what most business people
talk about during any courtship. My company, my
product, my service is the leading, the best, the
only, the blah, blah, blah.
It’s interesting that the
secret to success in business is not the word “me,”
but the word “you.” Count the words in the average
conversation or sales letter, chances are the words
“I” and “my” are heard many times more often than
the words “you” and “your.” Yet all people want to
talk about is them!
Salespeople can set themselves
apart and uncover far more opportunity if they begin
every conversation by focusing the “you” point of
view. “How do you see it?” “What’s your take on
this?” “How would you like to see this resolved?”
Try asking a question without using the word you!
It isn’t easy. Switching into “question mode”
forces a salesperson to use the word “you,” which
leads to opportunity.
A lot of people believe they
are asking good questions--but if they were to
videotape mock sales or business conversations, they
can see their questions are not productive. The
mistake they make is not going deep enough to
uncover real issues, challenges, and needs.
Consider this: If an office was
in need of a new copier, they would shop around and
look at a few different models, at a few different
stores. Which one would they end up buying? The
model from the sales representative who finally
asked, “What do you really need? How much will you
actually use the copier?” That salesperson might
not have had a huge elaborate pitch, but they asked
the right questions and made the sale.
Whether a sales representative
for a copier store or a partner at a firm trying to
land a big client, the salesperson needs to ask
great questions. They not only find out what people
want, or get a whole picture of their point of view;
they send the strong impression that they actually
care about the customer. There is no influencing
the outcome, until the customer believes the
salesperson is listening and cares about them.
Questions also lead to a deeper
level in conversation. If a conversation is allowed
to breathe, one will find out about the deeper, more
important needs or desires. Often, the “presenting”
need is not the big one – questions will help
uncover the real trouble.
After taking this step it’s far
easier to precisely tailor a presentation for the
audience. By taking the time to truly understand a
customer, the salesperson will not have wasted
anyone’s time and will have formed the basis for an
on-going relationship.
Questions also imply that a
salesperson has the answers and expertise. If they
know what to ask, they must know the answers.
Questions help avoid the hard sell. If the right
questions are asked, the other person articulates
the needs and solutions. The salesperson doesn’t do
the work; the customer does. When a customer is
doing the talking, they are more likely to buy.
They reaches their own conclusions. They don’t feel
pushed.
Perhaps the most important
quality to questions is they help develop stronger
relationships. When questions are asked, people
believe the asker is genuinely curious. They are
more interested in the sale, because the salesperson
is interested in them.
Good questions encourage people
to open up. This is one of the most powerful assets
in selling ideas, products or services. Open
questions work best in this phase of conversation.
These are Who?, What?, When?, Where?, Why?, and
How?
In preparation for the next
important meeting, write down a list of questions to
ask. Anticipate what the other person’s needs or
concerns will be, and tailor the questions to that.
Many people prepare for an important meeting by
buffing up on their specialties, by practicing their
routine speech about what they’re good at. A
salesperson will stand out from the rest if they go
into the meeting or presentation with a list of
questions that delve into what the other needs or
thinks.
Here are a few examples of
great questions:
-
What could we
do to make this a good meeting, well worth your
time?
-
What are your
goals?
-
What is the
biggest challenge you’re facing right now?
-
What is it
costing you in time/money/resources?
-
What would be
an ideal outcome?
-
Is there
anything else we need to talk about today?
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