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Preventing the Price Objection
by Dave Kahle
"Your price is too high!" The infamous price objection.
Wouldn't sales be a great profession if we could somehow wipe it out
and never hear it again?
Unfortunately, that will never happen. Too many of the people
with whom we deal are paid to get the best deal they can.
And that means asking for a better price, even when they
know they are getting a great deal. And, human nature being
what it is, it's only natural for many people to try to get
the best price that they can.
That being said, it is still possible to reduce the number
of times we hear it, and, perhaps more importantly, it is
possible to reduce the intensity of the comment.
In other words, we may still hear it, but many of our
customers won't mean it as intensely as they once did.
While we can't control our customers, we can control
our behavior. And many times it's our behavior that
prompts the customer to ask for a discount. By changing
our behavior, we can impact the customer. Here are five
specific strategies to help you prevent the price objection,
by focusing on our behavior.
1. Look like you are worth more.
Our appearance impacts the customer's subconscious view
of our value. If we look like we don't value ourselves,
it's natural for the customer to assume the same about our product.
I will never forget a salesperson for one of my clients
who came to see me, concerned about the pressure his
company was putting on him to get results. He chewed tobacco
and had the yellow teeth and spots on the leather vest he wore to
confirm that. A wrinkled pair of blue jeans topped a pair of dusty
cowboy boots. He looked like a reject from a consignment shop.
His appearance screamed "cheap."
If you look confident, competent and successful, you send
the subtle message to your customer that you, and your
offering, is worth a little more. You just look like
you are less likely to discount your price in order to get the order.
Practically speaking, that means to dress like your customer,
only a little better. Project a demeanor of a successful,
confident salesperson.
2. Believe in your price/value relationship
Do you believe that your offer represents a good value to the customer?
If you don't, it will be difficult for you to convince the customer of it.
You don't have to believe that your product is the best or that your company
is the best. You just have to believe that it is a good value, giving the
customer his or her money's worth. More people buy Ford's than buy BMWs.
It's not about being the best; it's about a good value.
This can be difficult if you, in your personal life, are a bargain shopper.
If you refuse to pay the asking price for anything and won't buy it if
it's not on sale, then you'll have a difficult time convincing your
customer to pay the full price for what you are selling.
Your core beliefs will influence your behavior, and be
communicated to the customer in a number of subtle ways.
To counteract that tendency, carefully examine the offer you
are making from the customer's point of view. Do whatever
it takes to convince yourself that it is a good value to the customer,
worth every penny the customer will pay.
3. Don't inadvertently sow the seeds.
Sometimes we can blindly sow the seeds of discontent with
our stated price by our poor choice of language. For example,
when we say things like, "This is our retail price,"
"This is our rack rate," "This is list price,"
or other such terms, we immediately convey to the customer that
there are other, lower prices, available.
We have inadvertently encouraged the customer to ask for a discount.
The word "price" doesn't need an adjective to describe it.
4. Don't advertise your willingness to discount.
Sometimes, in our eagerness to make the sale, we advertise
our willingness to make price concessions in order to secure
the business. We say things like, "We'd be happy to
discuss pricing with you." Or, "We may be able to
do better." Or, "If you give me the last look, I
may be able to sharpen the pencil."
I was shopping for office space. As I looked through one
location with my realtor, I asked the listing realtor what was the lease rate. He told me, and in the same breath said, "But we're willing to work with you on that."
After hearing that, why in the world would I accept his
original terms? He broadcasted his willingness to discount,
and I'd be foolish not to take him up on it. By broadcasting
your willingness to get the deal, you encourage the customer to
ask for price deviations.
5. Be careful about ever discounting.
If you discount your prices in response to a customer's request, on even one occasion, you have conveyed to the customer the idea that your quoted price is not your final price. Now, forever in the future, the customer will remember that you can discount when pressed. He will, therefore, press for discounts.
If, however, you never discount from your quoted price,
you convey that there is some integrity in your pricing,
and that you are quoting him your best price from the beginning.
It's OK, on some occasions, to walk away from a piece
of business rather than to discount in order to get it.
The net impact is that the customer respects your pricing,
and is less likely in the future to ask for a discount.
If you get almost every deal, your prices aren't sufficiently high.
You need to lose some in order to gain the customer's respect as well
as a sense of where the market price is.
I've often thought that the idea of asking for the opportunity
for a "last look" which most salespeople strive for
and proudly proclaim as proof of a good business relationship
is merely another way of saying that you'll discount the most.
Why would the customer give you a "last look" if he
wasn't expecting you to discount some more?
It's so easy to complain about the customer and the constant
pressure to reduce our prices. It's the thoughtful salesperson
who understands that our own behavior can often be the cause of the
price objection. Change your behavior, and you'll improve your
results.
Dave Kahle offers a variety of resources that can help your business stay competitive in changing times. To learn you can reach Dave by phone at 800-331-1287 or send him an email request.