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![]() When Was the Last Time You Tried to Buy From Your Company?By Wendy James, Managing Editor Business and Technology 360
If the answer is "not recently" or "actually, never", you may be well served to test the buying waters as a potential client would. Their perspective is often radically different. In my experience, a customer's perception of how easy a company is to buy from has little to do with how good their products or services are, but on how well prospective customers feel their needs are discovered and known by your frontline sales staff, and how well they are responded to. In other words, ‘How much do you know about me, the customer'? This is real customer experience, the real sales proficiency, and the frontline reality is often very different from senior management's perception. In a recent mystery shop for a financial services client, for instance, management was shocked to discover that while frontline sales staff were very effective and inviting in their greeting of potential customers, very little was done to ascertain needs, and that subsequent product presentations were almost entirely feature-driven, with mention of benefits consequently on target only by accident. The result? A fall-back sales argument centered on price, that when successful (which wasn't often, because there was little attempt at closing the sale) served only to lower margins. This is hardly a path to growth, or profitability. So what do you look for in assessing your potential customers' buying experience? In a retail setting, for example, the following are important elements: Physical Premises:
Greeting & Engagement:
Probing/Needs Discovery:
Presentation:
Objection Handling:
Close:
Thank you:
Follow-up:
Overall:
In my experience very few organizations will consistently achieve high marks on all these elements. As a result many sales opportunities walk into their business every day, and then walk right on through to the competition without being captured. It's the stuff heartburn is made of. So do yourself a favor. Try and buy from yourself. See how well you do. See where you fall short. After all, the only sales experience that counts in the end is the customer's. How to Mystery Shop your business: The purpose of these mystery shops is to gain a preliminary understanding of the overall sales approach and capability of your frontline staff, to render concrete and informed findings that you can use to improve your customers experience within your organization. In each case, the mystery shopper must enter your business as a potential customer, interested in purchasing your product or service. None of your staff or administrative personnel should be aware that these mystery shops are taking place; this ensures that the sales approach experienced can not be influenced by advance knowledge. Once the mystery shop has been completed I recommend documenting your findings and sharing them with all staff in your organization. This is a necessary first step to create the customer experience you want, and provide a road map to increased sales and customer loyalty. How to go about it You can do it yourself, hire an outside consultant or enroll a colleague, friend or family member to mystery shop on your behalf. The key is, the person or persons doing the mystery shopping, must have a set of criteria establish in order to score the buying process of your organization. The data gathered is always enlightening, sometimes surprising, and often shocking to business owners. Let's face it, we all live in our own ‘fantasy' of how well we take care of a prospective customer or client. I've included a sample of a weighted scorecard that you can customize to suit your business.
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