Step back from selling a moment. What unrecognized messages do you send customers? People really notice how they're treated. Make them feel valued (beyond the dollars they spend), or you miss out on long-term customer loyalty. As you eliminate glitches and aggravations and they will keep coming back. Five Things More Important to Buyers than WHAT Youre Selling - INo matter what customers say they want, what theyre really looking for is something special. They cant quite describe it, but when they find it, they know. Indeed, those little details of the buying experience may appear intangible. But what you sell is usually less important to customers, almost incidentalunless they dont get what they expected. As Walt Disney said, Do what you do so well that people want to bring their friends to see you do it again. Any business able to satisfy customers in these five ways will consistently beat the competition. NOTICE: More important than what you provide, is how you provide it So much attention is paid to the WHAT, the HOW often takes a backseat. Yet its the quality of your HOW that determines whether the sale is made or lost. Buyers focused only on price are likely to be one-time visitors, but even they sometimes decide the cheapest price just isnt worth it. 1. How well theyre treatedPeople (even business buyers) care about the human touch. They want to be treated with respect and fairness. They want to feel like valued customerswhose time and opinions matter. If people cant trust you to treat them right, they certainly wont trust you with their money. Whether or not the sale occurs depends on whether the customer feels taken for grantedor taken. Equally important is how the business deals with problems or complaints as they arise. Making mistakes neednt be fatal, customers understand that. However, the willingness to fix them and minimize their impact on the buyer is crucial. Solving it immediately, with the right attitude, can even strengthen the bond. But fumbling the ball a second time simply isnt forgiven. 2. How efficiently the buying process wentFrom start to end, did each step of the sale go smoothly? Could the buyers get the answers or help they needed? Could they find what they came for (or why not)? Was the operation arranged to accommodate them? their time frame? Were prices and payment options clear and easy to deal with? Can most buyers complete the transaction without triggering number 3? 3. How much aggravation they had to endureAggravations are of two typesthose that shouldnt have happened (glitches). Or those that happen to everyone, like long waits, multiple visits, shortage of parts, etc. A buyer is willing to endure a little inconvenience, but not for long, not every time. Your job is to minimize inconveniences so they dont arisenot treat them like business as usual. Heres where the helpful, informed employees will make or break the business. First in building customer rapport, anticipating their concerns, and avoiding problems in the first place. 4. How many mind games are played on themSorry to say, the word sales gets misused too often. Selling isnt an opportunity to manipulate the potential buyer to do what the seller wants, rather than providing the buyer what they want. No one wants to feel like a sucker or to be mislead about prices, delivery dates, or terms of the sale. Even a hint of such treatment kills trust, kills their willingness to hear you out. And if a person feels tricked into buying, they wont buy again. Or they might cancel the sale afterward from buyers remorse. 5. How well the business has its act togetherStarting with the first impression, did everything about the business live up to its promise or reputation? If every part of the operation works smoothly as an integrated whole, consider the customer well served. When the parts are mismatched or full of snags, it screams small potatoes. That scares business away. Even if the issues are minor, they pull the plug on trust. Fortunately, a focus on your how yields big benefits from quick and inexpensive solutions. Get your hows in order, and youll drive the competition crazyCustomers notice when theyre treated well. Let your uniqueness shine in the how of customer-pleasing practices. It pays off in your bottom line. This is Part I of a two-part series Read Part II --Dr. Lynella Grant is an expert in visual communicationhow printed materials send signals that strengthen or undermine the words. Author, The Business Card Book and Yellow Page Smarts (719) 359-5575Off the Page Press http://www.yellowpagesage.com Local Search Resources Local Search for Local Business (719) 359-5575 |