How do you sell when times are tight and people are nervous? A down economy creates an opportunity for smart salespeople to grow their business and even thrive.
So, what can you do? Now is the time to take a hard look at your sales efforts and see how you can adjust your strategy to maximize opportunities.
Here are 5 strategies to help you sell in a down economy:
1. Maximize each lead.
In an economic downturn, buyers take even longer than normal to research potential purchases. A prospect may need more hand-holding and solid, reliable information to make a decision. They are looking for facts, figures, testimonials, and case studies to verify that you can do what you say you will do. Be prepared to spend a little extra time educating prospects, answering questions, and reassuring them they are making the right decision.
2. Nurture your current customers.
We all know it takes more time and money to get a new customer than keep an existing one. Your firm may have less money to spend on acquiring new customers. So, spend more time marketing and selling to the people you already know. Contact customers just to let them know you care. Offer them something free or provide them with an extra little perk. For instance, give a business owner a calculator and tell him how you can improve his bottom line.
3. Remember the end of the buying cycle.
You may find that you need to focus more than ever on closing the sale when prospects are actually ready to buy. You can supply additional information to give prospects that extra push to make the purchase. For instance, a financial company can give details about its stability and track record. Or, you can provide white papers, buyers guides, checklists, or evaluations to show why your product or service is a sound financial decision.
4. Give prospects what they want.
If you haven't already, now may be the time to consider and on-demand system for marketing and sales. You can contact prospects and customers with communications that are more meaningful, industry-specific, and speak to the challenges of your target market. It allows you to nurture existing customers, cross-sell customers, and send specific, customized information to prospects. For instance, if you know that customers who lease from you also purchase insurance, you can send a cross-sell promotion to those customers. Or, you could send a series of mailings to prospects that contain information only about the products or services that interest them.
5. Appeal to common sense over emotion.
Buyers are looking for rational, practical reasons to buy your product or service. Spontaneous purchases of luxury items are replaced with more deliberate, cost-conscious purchases. In the past, you may have been able to appeal to desire to "keep up with the Joneses" or just because it's cool, but now consumers (both businesses and individuals) are looking to justify the purchase as essential, or a good business decision.
The bottom line: keep doing what you're doing. Now is not the time to panic and drastically change your sales efforts. Continue your sales and marketing efforts – just find ways to adjust your approach to address the needs and concerns of your customers and prospects.
Other People's Money
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As many of you probably know, I'm not only a marketing strategist, but also
the CEO of a juvenile products company called CuteyBaby. A couple of weeks
ago...
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