ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Sales

Selling Commodities

Author : Dave Kahle

"How do you create a perceived value to differentiate yourself from the competition, when you are both selling a commodity?"


That's a question I'm often asked in my seminars. It uncovers a problem that is spreading to almost every industry. The rapid pace of technological development and our ultra-competitive global economy means that no one can keep a competitive edge in their product for very long. Develop a hot new product or service, and before you can take your first check to the bank, a competitor has a hotter or cheaper version. As a result, customers are more and more inclined to view your product or service as a commodity - no real difference between you and the next guy.


This complicates life for the salesperson. In some cases, you are selling exactly the same thing as your competitor. I spent a number of years selling for a distributor who sold, for the most part, exactly the same products as four or five competitors. Many of my clients work in this arena. Lumber distributors (a piece of lumber is a piece of lumber), industrial fasteners (a screw is a screw is a screw), petroleum (87 octane gasoline is 87 octane gasoline) etc. The list goes on and on.


In other cases, your product may not be exactly the same, but the customer views your product as a commodity with no real differences between what you sell and what your competitor offers. How much real difference is there between Coke and Pepsi after all?


Regardless of the situation in which you find yourself, the problem for the salesperson is the same - getting the business in the face of the customer’s perception of your "me too" product or service.


So, what do you do? This. To put it simply, you must detail and communicate the important ways your offering differs from your competitors.


That's easier said then done. To do so effectively, you need to spend some time thinking and preparing. And that means that you must carefully consider the two most important elements of the sale - your offering, and your customer. In this column, we're going to focus on one part of that equation - your offering.


Granted, your product may be exactly the same as the competition, but the totality of your offering may be dramatically different. I use the word "offering" to indicate every aspect of the purchasing decision - not just the product. For example, the customer buys the product from a company - yours or the other guys. The customer buys it from a salesperson - you or the competitor. Your company and you are part of the "offering." In addition, there may be differences in your terms, delivery, your customer-service capabilities, your follow-up, your return policy, your value-added services, etc. All of these are part of your "offering."


The product may be identical, but everything else about your offering may be different. For example, let's say you are contemplating purchasing a new Taurus. You have identical price quotes from two dealers. The product is the same, and the price is the same. However, one dealer is close by, the other across town. One dealer has a reputation for great customer service; the other has no such reputation. The salesperson for the first dealer is the brother of an old high-school friend, while the salesperson for the second dealer is a bit cocky and pushy. The first dealer has a clean, comfortable establishment, while the second one is cramped, cluttered and dirty.


From whom do you buy your Taurus? Stupid question. Of course you buy it from the first dealer. Not because of any differences in the product or the price, but because of differences in the offering. Got the idea? There is a whole lot more to a decision to buy then just the product or the price.


Your first job is to identify those differences. Here are some very specific steps you can take today.


ONE:    Think about everything that is associated with the product when a customer purchases it. Create several categories, and label columns on a piece of paper with the names of those categories. For example, the first column could be headed with the word "company," the second with the word "salesperson," the third with "terms." Continue in this way, identifying every aspect of the offering and placing each of those components at the top of a column.


TWO:    Now, consider each column one at a time, and list all the ways that your offering differs from your competitor's in that column. For example, your company may be locally owned as opposed to your competitor's branch of a national company. Or you may be physically closer to the customer, or larger, smaller, newer, older, etc. After you've exhausted one column, move onto the others, filling in the details as you go.


THREE:    This exercise will typically reveal dozens (and in some cases hundreds,) of specific, detailed differences. Far too many than you can easily communicate to the customer. So, your next step is to pick out those differences that are most important to your customer. Keep in mind that often what you see as important may not be viewed that way by your customers.


At one point in my career, I worked for a company that celebrated its 100th year anniversary. That was unusual. No other competitors had been in business nearly that long. The company decided to make a big deal about it. A history of the company was written, brochures printed, even murals depicting significant moments in the company's history were painted on the walls of the corporate office. We all thought it was important.


Our customers, however, didn't care. After respectfully listening to our boasting, their response was some form of "So what?" In other words, our 100 years didn't mean anything to them. In no way did it make their jobs easier, simplify their lives, or make them more important to their companies. What we thought was important turned out to be irrelevant from our customers´ perspective.


Don't make the mistake we made. Instead, take the time to critically analyze your list, and eliminate those items that are not important to your customer, that don't impact their jobs or make a difference to them. You should be left with a handful of items.


FOUR:    One more step to the preparation. Translate each of those items into statements of benefit to the customer. For example, your company may be local, while your competitor ships from 50 miles away. So what? What does that mean to your customer? You could translate that item of difference into a benefit by saying something like this: "As opposed to some other suppliers, we're just 15 minutes from your plant. This means that you can get quick delivery of emergency shipments, as well as rapid response to any problem that might develop. So, you'll have potentially less downtime in the plant, and of course, less stress and pressure on you."


Now that you've professionally prepared, you are ready to communicate those differences to your customer. You need to point them out in an organized and persuasive presentation.


Prepare a sell sheet with each of the differences noted as a bullet. Next to each bullet, have a few comments that capsulize the benefit statements you prepared. Then, meet with your customer, lay the sheet down in front of him/her, and talk down through it, explaining each point as you go.


Treat it like you would any other well-done presentation. Be sensitive to your customer’s reaction, and ask for feedback as you work down through the list. Say, "How does that sound?" or "Does that make sense to you?" and emphasize those things that seem to be more important to your customer. Then, leave that sheet with your customer.


I'm always amazed at the number of salespeople who are confounded over the customer's perception that their product is just like the other guys, when those salespeople have done nothing to show the customer how it is different.


As always, if you have done a good job of analyzing, preparing, and communicating, your customer's perception should be altered, and you gain the business. If you haven't done well at this, then your customer will continue to see no difference between buying it from you and buying from the next guy. And, if you haven't shown him/her sufficient reason to buy it from you, then he shouldn't.


From the customer's point of view, if your offering is just like the competitor's, then the customer is absolutely correct in buying from the cheaper source. However, if there is any difference between your offering and your competitors´, than the responsibility is totally yours to show the customer that difference. Follow the process described here, and you'll have far fewer customers treating you like a commodity.


Copyright 2002 by Dave Kahle

http://ezinearticles.com/members/mem_pics/Dave-Kahle_6135.jpg" border="0" alt="EzineArticles Expert Author Dave Kahle">

About Dave Kahle, The Growth Coach®:
Dave Kahle is a consultant and trainer who helps his clients increase their sales and improve their sales productivity. He speaks from real world experience, having been the number one salesperson in the country for two companies in two distinct industries. Dave has trained thousands of salespeople to be more successful in the Information Age economy. He's the author of over 500 articles, a monthly ezine, and four books. His latest is 10 Secrets of Time Management for Salespeople. He has a gift for creating powerful training events that get audiences thinking differently about sales.
His "Thinking About Sales" Ezine features content-filled motivating articles, practical tips for immediate improvements, useful resources and helpful tips to help increase sales. Join for NOTHING on-line at http://www.davekahle.com/mailinglist.htm">www.davekahle.com/mailinglist.htm.


You can reach Dave at:
The DaCo Corporation
3736 West River Drive
Comstock Park, MI 49321
Phone: 800-331-1287 / 616-451-9377
Fax: 616-451-9412
info@davekahle.com">info@davekahle.com
http://www.davekahle.com">www.davekahle.com

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. The Struggle to Decide: The Paths Customers Take to Solve Problems
  2. What is a Pitch?
  3. Going Global: Communication Across Mental Boundaries
  4. The Trusted Advisor Relationship: What Is It, and What Should It Be?
  5. Increase Customer Frequency
  6. Selling the Difficult: How to Sell What People Don't Understand How to Buy
  7. How To Improve Conversion Rates
  8. Sales Copy Tips
  9. Your Clients Buying What You're Selling
  10. Gic Number For Writing Sales Letters
  11. Long Sales Letters vs. Short Sales Letters
  12. Chicken Little And The Disintermediation Myth
  13. How To Make An Extra $100,000.00 Each Year
  14. Dropped Jaw Syndrome, Your Fastest, Most Reliable Market Test
  15. The Damaging Admission - A Persuasive Technique
  16. Successfully Selling Your Professional Services
  17. Cracking The Billable Hours Ceiling
  18. Understanding The Corporate Buyer
  19. How to Sell: Selling Tips of Master Moms
  20. Leads, Prospects, and the Huge Gap Between
  21. Do You Have Enough Prospects To Make Your Numbers?
  22. Hate Follow-Up Phone Calls To Hot Prospects Who Won’t Call You Back? Stop Calling!
  23. Sell More: How to Get Motivated Buyers To Call You First
  24. Throw Out Your "Selling" Language - Unlock Your Natural Voice
  25. Flea Marketing Lessons
More related feeds
12/1/08…something to be thankful for « Traderbill’s Financial ...
... manipulation of the commodities market by the BIG banks thru unlimited buying of commodities contracts so they could sell commodities swaps to commodities index funds which the consultants cheerfully told the pension funds to buy! ...

Bolivia Readies Charges Against Autonomy Leader - Democratic ...
As in Chile the business elites and allied truckers engage in “strikes,” withholding or refusing to ship produce to the urban markets while selling commodities in the black market at high prices that cause alarm among the poor. ...

"Volatility Trade" Biggest Factor In Sell-Off? - Trader Talk with ...
We have noted that while the "volatility trade" is still the best way to play the market, other factors also influenced stocks today: the bond blow-off (which has all the elements of a bubble) and the big drop in commodity prices are ...

Commodity Viewpoint: Her Name Is Rio...
to sell. Rio may avoid having to sell off more of the family silver -- if. commodity markets pick up after prices slumped by half in. the last five months. Rio is looking for a recovery in the second. quarter in China , and increased ...

Sell Out if You Can - Paper Cuts Blog - NYTimes.com
But he was helpless in the grip of his genius: despite the worst intentions, Poe transmuted these clichés into his own idiom so that they became literature and not commodities. Poor fellow, the classic failure of classic American ...

Gold, other commodities tumble on economic data | Business Finance ...
Gold prices briefly plunged below $800 an ounce Thursday as investors continued to sell off commodities on concerns that the economic slowdown will dramatically reduce demand for energy and... Economic downturn picking up speed ...

Exclusive - UBS considers selling commodities business
UBS has held preliminary discussions with several rival banks about selling its commodities business.

Cloudy Monopolies II:
But then TO later redefines the question as whether the cloud infrastructure business is likely to be a low-margin business based on selling commodities. Given NC's question "will the infrastructure suppliers also come to dominate the ...

» The Trend Trader
Futures Platform provide Commodity and Futures Trading News, articles and strategies. ... Commodity News Updates. Commodity News Updates. Events. Jake Bernstein’s Spread Trading Webinar- 11/22/08 @ 1:30pm PST. Our Authors ...

The Weekly Sift: Is "trillion" a real number?
It's set in the Amsterdam commodities exchange in the 1600s. You can also learn about short selling from the Eddie Murphy/Dan Ackroyd movie Trading Places. If I remember right, the film includes this pithy rhyme by 19th-century ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved