Hello
Friends,
We now come to the
middle
portion, and the events
that take
place here, are going to
make or
break, all the hard work
done.
Here the main job is to
“Follow –Up”. Yes –I know
that
follow ups can be a bit
of a bore
sometimes.
But dude, there is just
no help for it. You want to sell, you have to develop enthusiasm for follow-up
"Follow up has to be done
if you want to sell."
There was once this Sales Guru called Pup
Whose favorite dish was fish-heads in Ketchup’
“The three basic rules" he'd say
“in the science of sales any day"
“Is follow-up, follow-up and FOLLOW-UP”
In Public Sector Tendering, what happens now is that
Materials Dept. sends your file back to person who indented for it. This means
the department and the officer who required it in the first place. I am assuming that you have
built a relationship with the him/her by now. After that post in relationship selling, I am assuming that you-my readers-are using it to the extent possible. A few things have to be kept in mind when you are
participating in Public Sector selling through Tenders, of capital equipment.
1.The "Indenter" is interested to know whether the equipment that you are trying to sell will give him the service he requires or not. Even if there is a single iota of doubt, he won’t proceed ahead on your proposal. Therefore, what you need to have in dollops is confidence. Because trust me, very few people can let their inner confusion not show outside. (The indenter will be an experienced person and he will barely need to ask two or three questions to know that you have no idea of what you are speaking about.). So try to get rid of all your confusion if you have any.
2.If you are representing a foreign OEM, then your product may have done fabulous work in Brazil and Peru. Do not make the mistake of glorifying these achievements. Their presence on your experience list is enough. Maybe you are new in India and have sold only one or two units so far. Glorify that achievement. That will serve you in better steed then the South American glorious stories.
1.The "Indenter" is interested to know whether the equipment that you are trying to sell will give him the service he requires or not. Even if there is a single iota of doubt, he won’t proceed ahead on your proposal. Therefore, what you need to have in dollops is confidence. Because trust me, very few people can let their inner confusion not show outside. (The indenter will be an experienced person and he will barely need to ask two or three questions to know that you have no idea of what you are speaking about.). So try to get rid of all your confusion if you have any.
2.If you are representing a foreign OEM, then your product may have done fabulous work in Brazil and Peru. Do not make the mistake of glorifying these achievements. Their presence on your experience list is enough. Maybe you are new in India and have sold only one or two units so far. Glorify that achievement. That will serve you in better steed then the South American glorious stories.
Now, what about service? Do you have service
people in your company who are competent as well as presentable? Or, is your management only thinking about
recruiting people? Or, maybe you have already hired experienced engineers and you've sent them overseas for training? Please note that you should not tell lies and
untruths. If your product is slightly technically inferior, tell the truth. Even a person who is not
the champion intellect is more likely
to buy a slightly technically inferior product but with good service rather
then a sophisticated gizmo which requires four(4) days for someone to come over
from Koln.
Always
remember that “ what the customer is interested in knowing: is how your product
can help his organization in the subject application. He is
definitely not interested in knowing about anything else before that..not the
strict QA policy you have..not the prize
for CRM your Paris Office won..no, nor even
your recent order from Mars. This may
appear to be obvious but we sometimes fall victim to our ego's. Talk to the
point.
It maybe
so that your competitor's equipment had failed somewhere. Maybe your
accessory life is higher. Do not criticize your competitor. Do not bring these
up. Sometimes you have to be a little unethical!. But do keep a professional looking paper which
lists everything...on a plain white paper with you where your competitor's evil record is
exposed and your advantages are monetized to the extent possible. Use it
discreetly only when required. (say customer says”I heard that your
equipment caused problems in… from… You can then say its funny, look at
this..maybe I’ve got something here..Aaah here it is..I’ve never told you
anything because I don’t believe in negative marketing)
That's the end of Part II and the file goes back
to the Materials department.
Looking forward to the next time,we sign off now
Your friendly blogger
Bilbo
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