She  made the telephone call, scheduled the appointment and everything seemed to go  well.
She wrote a thank-you note after the appointment and after that,  made a follow-up telephone call to the client.
The client wanted a demo.  The demo was a success. The client asked for a proposal. Wow. Time to  celebrate.
But then something unexpected happened.
A competitor  came in and offered the same product for a lower price. The client bought from  the competitor.
What happened? How could this have been  prevented?
The Missing Elements
First: It is critical to start -  from the beginning - building trust and value - value, value and more value.  Value is defined as "quality relative to price." Quality includes all non-price  attributes involved - both attributes of the product and associated customer  service.
Value is a critical way of differentiating your company from  competitors. The challenge is to convince prospects that they will be getting  VALUE that is greater than the price they are paying.
One definition of  trust: "Firm reliance on the integrity, ability or character of a person or  thing."
Four Ways to Build Trust
(1.) Create realistic client  expectations - Help the client to understand exactly what you will do for him or  her. What will create extra charges? How and when will you be billing the  client? Living up to the expectations you create helps your clients feel they  can trust you..
(2.) Help the client to understand the process - If s/he  understands how you and your office works s/he can then know what to expect and  when to expect it.
(3.) Never over promise - It is tempting to  promise whatever the client requests without consulting a schedule or finding  out if it is doable. Over promising often causes broken agreements and thus  broken trust. Better to under promise and over deliver.
(4.) Don’t allow  interruptions at meetings - If you take interruptions during meetings with  clients it makes them feel they are not important to you. (One sales rep who  left her cell phone on during a meeting actually answered a call from another  client during the meeting. Not a smart thing to do.) Eventually you erode the  good will and trust that you had with them.
Why Opportunities Can Be  Missed
The reason sales people miss the opportunity to build trust with  their clients is simple: many sales reps feel conflicted about selling. In some  cases, our parents looked down on salespeople, so we feel vaguely guilty when we  have to sell. There is that vision of the used car salesman wearing the purple  jacket and the yellow tie with the green shirt and asking: “What do I have to do  to get you into this car?”
Why Hard Selling Has Gotten Harder
The  goal of the sales process is to close deals—isn’t it? Not if you want to build  trust. The focus of trust-based selling isn’t the transaction, but the  relationship.
The salesperson looking for that first phone-call sale may  be disappointed and/or not successful in the long run. Building a good  relationship is critical, if you want to keep the customer. The customer must  feel s/he can trust the salesperson and most consumers do not want to buy when  high-pressure sales tactics are used.
The truth is that clients want to  trust us—to believe that we care about them and their interests. They want to  believe we are trustworthy.
How can you PROVE you are trustworthy and  provide value?
TESTIMONIALS written by real people at well-known  businesses prove that your company can be trusted and that you provide real  value FASTER than anything you can tell the prospect.
When you say something  about yourself or your product, it’s not nearly as effective as when other  people say it. When others say or write positive statements about you or your  product, it’s proof. That is the essence of the testimonial. And it’s okay to  prompt customers about what you want them to say – IF what you want them to say  is the truth.
You can ask for testimonial letters from happy customers,  but in order to speed up the process, send a testimonial request letter (or  email with permission) and fax-back form. You can download (copy and paste) one  free at http://www.telephonesales.com/Testimonials.htm
The principles of  building trust starts with the knowledge that if we consistently behave with the  best interests of the client and the relationship, we will get more than our  share of sales because we are fulfilling the highest desire of a client—to find  an expert who can be trusted.
If this is not truly your attitude—that you  really want to help people with the product or service you provide, be prepared  to lose clients to your competitors.
About the Author:
Born  and educated in Virginia, Ann spent 10 years in the Court Reporting business in  Washington, D.C. before beginning a successful sales career in 1980 for an  office equipment dealership in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
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