1 insight selling and the challenger sale - a primer
Post on 24-Dec-2015
229 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
1 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
INSIGHT SELLING and the CHALLENGER SALE
A primer
2 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Get a primer on insight selling and the characteristics of the challenger sale
Saves you at least3 days of hard work!
3 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Executive summary
Customers don’t need you the way they used to.
Over the last three decades, B2B selling has evolved from a transactional (product-price) approach, to a relationship-based process, and to a solutions-based model. Today, this way of selling is being challenged by procurement-savvy teams that cut the grass under your best sales reps’ feet.
p. 5
Solutions selling has been the holy grail for a long time…
Solutions selling is largely driven by suppliers’ attempt to escape a dramatically increasing commoditization of their products and services.
p. 6
… but it has increasingly become a burden to both customers and suppliers
Selling ever bigger, more complex, disruptive, and expensive solutions requires a lot of “discovery” time and effort, from both sides. The result is a “solutions fatigue”: traditional, time-tested sales techniques have become a burden to both customers and suppliers, and an alarming number of half-completed deals remain on the table. This has lead customers to react and engage with suppliers in a very different way.
p. 7
Can one type of sales rep make a difference?
Among different profiles of sales executives, the one that has a much higher chance of being successful today, particularly in complex sales, is the “Challenger”. This is the one who uses a deep understanding of a customer’s business to serve them and to teach them, pushing their thinking, and providing different views on how to manage and compete.
p. 8
The characteristics of Insight Selling
Insight Selling is about targeting customers that can act quickly and decisively, teaching them something new and provocative about how to compete in their market. Messages are tailored to the specific metrics and economics of the company and its key individuals. All along, the Challenger is in control of the sales, pressuring the decision making cycle.
p. 9
The Insight Selling conversation in practice
The best sales conversation present the customer with a compelling story about their business first, teaches them a new perspective, connects this with their reality, and then leads to how it can be realized via unique differentiating capabilities.
p. 10
4 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Executive summary
The advantages of Insight Selling
By proactively proposing a solution tailored to specific customer needs and leveraging your unique capabilities, you are more in control. You are likely to gain faster widespread buy-in, to increase your chances to win the deal, while gaining the loyalty and respect of your customers.
p. 11
Think about the possibilities
Insight selling gives you a “Blue Ocean” way of competing where you are in the lead of customer proposals and you play by your own rules.
p. 12
Winning at Insight Selling requires specific capabilities
Insight selling requires ad-hoc resources, processes, and tools in strategic planning, marketing (insight & ideas generation), sales and HR. Only a handful of large, often international, players are capable of hosting these capabilities in-house, particularly in terms of insight generation and the relative ability to create innovative proposals underlined by a deep industry and customer knowledge.
p. 13
How can you build these capabilities?
Choosing the right build, buy, rent and partner model depends on the economics of your business, the breadth of your target markets and your ability to enter an adjacent business in a sustainable way.
p. 14
Partnering Partnering with a management consulting firm could be the most effective shortcut to building insight-selling capabilities.
p. 15
5 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Customers don’t need you the way they used to.
The problem
Over the last three decades, B2B selling has evolved from a transactional (product-price) approach, to a relationship-based process, and to a solutions-based model. Today, this way of selling is being challenged by procurement-savvy teams that cut the grass under your best sales reps’ feet.
The new reality
Armed and skilled customers make you come short in the sales cycle
• In the current economic environment, B2B customers have learned to buy with greater care and reluctance than ever before.
• With increasingly sophisticated procurement teams and the help of procurement consultants, B2B customers can readily define solutions for themselves.
• According to a recent study*, nearly 60% of a typical purchasing decision – researching solutions, ranking options, setting requirements, benchmarking pricing, etc. - is completed before even having a conversation with your sales teams.
• To win a deal, you have to get ahead of the RFP. But even if you can, it is increasingly no longer sufficient. It is very likely that you will not get away of the RFP process and that you will have to play by rules set by your customers, or its procurement consultants.
• Relationships continue to be key, but good relationships are more the result and not the cause of successful sales.
Our legacy
B2B used to be about relationship, product, and solution selling
• Since the 1980’s, best practices in B2B selling and marketing moved away from the traditional transactional and then relationship-based approach to a more solutions-oriented one.
• Sales reps have become experts at discovering customers’ needs and at selling them “solutions” based on a relatively complex combination of products and services.
• Part of the deal is to find and nurture an “anchor” within the customer organization who can help navigate the company and drive the deal to completion.
• The whole process is focused on attaching your company’s solution to a customer problem, on justifying why it is better than the competition, and on providing “evidence and reference” to the expected benefits.
(*) CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 2011, – Panel of 1,400 companies
6 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Solutions selling has been the holy grail for a long time…
The problem
Nature ofrelationship
Supplier reacts to purchase orders Supplier viewed as a trusted advisor
Sellingskills
Strong knowledge of product portfolio Boardroom-level engagement with customer
Customerexpectations
Quality product / service at good price Strategic insight on the customer’s business
Product Selling
Solutions Selling
Silo-Based Product Sales
Product Bundling
Advice & Service Wrap-
Around
Needs-Based Product
Customization
Customer Process
Enhancement
Fully Integrated
Partnership
Most companies have the ambition to be positioned as solutions providers
Solutions selling is largely driven by suppliers’ attempt to escape a dramatically increasing commoditization of their products and services.
The product-solutions selling continuum
A shift to solution selling results in customers’ expecting you to actually “solve” a real problem and not just to supply a reliable product. This implies that you not only understand the customer’s underlying problems or challenges as well if not better than they do themselves, but also that you can identify new and better means of addressing those challenges, articulate clear benefits form using limited resources, and determine the right metrics to measure success.
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
7 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
… but it has increasingly become a burden to both customers and suppliers
Consensus-based sales
• The payoff of complex solution is uncertain and C-level executives increasingly require the widespread support of their teams in a large purchase decision. This leads to even longer selling efforts to align the interests of all involved parties.
The problem
Increased risk aversion
• The uncertainty of a pay-off in large and complex deals pushes executives to ask for a shared-risk and reward agreement. Here the lead KPI is the performance of a customer’s business, not the one of the supplier’s product or service.
Greater demand for customization
• A solution approach implies that customers look for an offer that is tailored to their needs. They see customization as part of the solution, and do not intend to pay a premium for it. To the sell-side, this implies longer times and higher efforts and costs.
The rise of third party consultants
• Customers increasingly rely to a neutral third-party to “extract maximum value” from the purchase decision, i.e. help them reduce the risks, costs and complexity linked to the solution. Needless to say, this adds pressure to the sales rep and can extend the sales cycle.
Selling ever bigger, more complex, disruptive, and expensive solutions requires a lot of “discovery” time and effort, from both sides. The result is a “solutions fatigue”: traditional, time-tested sales techniques have become a burden to both customers and suppliers, and an alarming number of half-completed deals remain on the table. This has lead customers to react and engage with suppliers in a very different way.
1 2
3 4
Customer buying trends
Customers have been taking initiatives and four major trends are emerging
Solutions Fatigue
The solutions-based discovering process has become a burden• What is keeping you up at night? What are your
competing challenges?
• The problem with providing an answer to these questions is that it can often take the feel of a protracted ping-pong match between the supplier and the customer.
• The customer explains their needs, the rep summarizes their understanding, the customer confirms whether or not the rep got it right; a proposal is made, the customer reviews and amends it, and on and on.
• This requires a huge amount of customer involvement at an early stage… before they see any value.
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
8 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
7%
The Relationship Builder
• Builds & nurtures strong advocates in the customer organization.
• Generous in giving time to help others.
• Gets along with everyone.
12%
TheProblem Solver
• Highly reliable in responding to internal and external stakeholders.
• Detail oriented.• Ensures that all
problems are solved.
17%
TheHard Worker
• Always willing to go the extra mile.
• Doesn’t give up easily.
• Self-motivated.• Interested in
feedback and development.
25%
TheLone Wolf
• Tends to follow own instincts instead of the rules.
• Self-assured.• Difficult to control.
39%
The Challenger
• Always has a different view.
• Has a deep understanding of the customer’s business.
• Loves to debate.• Pushes the customer.
INSIGHT SELLING
Can one type of sales rep make a difference?
Sales Profiles
Complexity of sales
Among different profiles of sales executives, the one that has a much higher chance of being successful today, particularly in complex sales, is the “Challenger”. This is the one who uses a deep understanding of a customer’s business to serve them and to teach them, pushing their thinking, and providing different views on how to manage and compete.
Top performers
In complex environments, the Challenger is by far the profile that is most likely to succeed. The Relationship Builder is highly unlikely to succeed in complex sales environments.In environments with low complexity, the most successful profiles are the Hard Worker and the Lone Wolf.
Searching for a solution
The highest percentage of top sales performers is found under the Challenger profile
High
Low
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
9 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
The Characteristics of Insight selling
Insight selling
Insight Selling is about targeting customers that can act quickly and decisively, teaching them something new and provocative about how to compete in their market. Messages are tailored to the specific metrics and economics of the company and its key individuals. All along, the Challenger is in control of the sales, pressuring the decision making cycle.
Solution Selling Insight Selling
Target customer
Has a clear vision and established demands.
Is agile, has emerging demands, or is in a state of flux.
Info requirements
What need is the customer seeking to address?
What unrecognized need does the customer have?
Engagement timing
After the customer has identified a problem that the supplier can solve.
Before the customer has pinpointed a problem.
Focus of the conversation
Ask, understand the customer’s need and find a “hook” for your solution.
Offer provocative insight about what the customer should do.
Flow of information
Asking questions so that the customer can steer you through the purchasing process.
Coach the customer about how to buy, and support it through the process.
Insight vs Solution Selling
Traditional solution selling is based on finding a hook to a recognized need. Insight selling challenges the customer and makes it aware of unknown needs.
TEACH
TAILOR
TAKE CONTROL
TARGET
• Targeting based on the potential for change, not to buy. Focus on customers that can act quickly and decisively, that are not paralyzed by structures or relationships that hamper change.
• Firms where demand is emerging, pushed by organizational or market/industry drivers.
• Delivering insight that reframes the way customers think about their business and their needs.
• Teaching customers something new, thought provocative, and valuable about how to compete in their market.
• Communicate sales messages in the context of the customer, focusing on customer value drivers, economics and performance indicators.
• Messages are tailored to different types of functions and individuals within an organization.
• Using control, diplomacy, and empathy, the Challenger pushes the customer out of its comfort zone, focusing on the value added, not on price discounts.
• Challengers pressure the customer’s decision making cycle to reach a decision more quickly and kill ‘indecision inertia”.
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
10 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Insight selling in practice
Build credibility: “I know your world”
Surprise with a new perspective, making them wanting more
Leverage Fear Uncertainty & Doubt via data based on value drivers
Make the customer see the challenge /opportunity as their own
Present the capabilities required to seize the opportunity
• Present industry challenges experienced by similar companies.
• Introduce your assessment of the customer’s key challenges.
• Leverage benchmarking.
• Introduce a new perspective that connects challenges to either a bigger problem or a bigger opportunity than the one the customer ever realized.
• Lay out the business case why the new perspective is worth considering.
• Leverage data that directly connects to the customer’s economic drivers, i.e. present ROI in terms of solving the challenge, not on buying a solution.
• Paint a picture of how other companies went down the same road by connecting the pains in the story to the pains in the customer organization.
• Point by point review of the specific capabilities the customer would need to grow, to save money, or to mitigate risks.
Demonstrate how your solution is better than anyone else’s
• Introduce the capabilities that are truly unique to your organization and that can help the customer seize the opportunity and/or face the challenge.
1 2 3 4 5 6
ReframeWarm up Rationalize Bind emotionallyPresent what’s
neededWhy your solution
is unique
Insight selling
The best sales conversation present the customer with a compelling story about their business first, teaches them a new perspective, connects this with their reality, and then leads to how it can be realized via unique differentiating capabilities.
The insight-based sales pitch
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
11 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
The advantages of Insight selling
Insight selling
By proactively proposing a solution tailored to specific customer needs and leveraging your unique capabilities, you are more in control. You are likely to gain faster widespread buy-in, to increase your chances to win the deal, while gaining the loyalty and respect of your customers.
Helps me avoid potential land mines
Helps me navigate alternatives
Offers unique, valuable perspectives on the the market
• Supplier is easy to buy from
• Supplier has widespread support across my organization
Educates me on new issues and outcomes
Provides ongoing advice or consultation
Helps me quantify financial value
• Portrays a realistic picture of purchase costs & difficulties
• Helps me improve my professional standing and meet KPIs
• Advocates for me within the organization
• Demonstrates a high level of professionalism
• Supplier adjusts to our unique needs and specifications• Proactively
accelerates decision making
• Remains readily accessible
• Excels in diagnosing our specific needs
• Collaborates with other suppliers
• Helps me shorten the buying cycle
• Matches communication to my preferences
Weakest drivers of loyalty
Greatest drivers of loyalty
Weakest drivers of
loyalty
Greatest drivers of
loyalty
END USERS AND INFLUENCERS
DECISION MAKERS
After the deal
Insight selling strongly drives customer’s loyalty
Before the deal
You proactively pitch to your own unique strengths
• With a pitch tailored to the specific interests of the company, those who most benefit from it become your internal advocates and allies within the customer organization. They help you sell your proposal to the different stakeholders.
Increase and accelerate widespread support
Increase your chances of winning
• As you are being proactive, you are more in control of the sales process, guiding the customer on how to make it happen.
Accelerate time to decision
• Much of the heavy lifting is done before individual reps go in front of the customer, considerably reducing “solution-fatigue”.
• As you craft a proposal that combines customer’s challenges and your unique capabilities, you are less likely to go through a competitive bid, incl. the formalities of the procurement department and/or third parties.
Take control
Straligence, Adapted from CEB, The Challenger Sale, Arlington VA, 201
12 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Think about the possibilities
Imagine if you could:
• Know your customers’ industry as well as, or even better than, they know it themselves.
• Combine the strengths of a management consulting and research firm with your unique business capabilities.
• Trigger a series of workshops together with key customer executives to challenge the status quo and imagine new opportunities.
• Proactively propose insightful solutions to multiple industries and customers, widening your portfolio of opportunities and increasing your win rates.
• Keep competitors at bay by proposing solutions that strongly fit your unique capabilities with the economics and operational/growth targets of your customers.
• Turn the sales process upside-down by having customers come to you for your unique advantage instead of having your sales-reps make cold calls.
Insight selling
Insight selling gives you a “Blue Ocean” way of competing where you are in the lead of customer proposals and you play by your own rules.
Imagine if you had the insight and capabilities ofa management consulting firm in your go to market model.
13 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Winning at Insight Selling requires specific capabilities
Organizing for Insight Selling
Insight selling requires ad-hoc resources, processes, and tools in strategic planning, marketing (insight & ideas generation), sales and HR. Only a handful of large, often international, players are capable of hosting these capabilities in-house, particularly in terms of insight generation and the relative ability to create innovative proposals underlined by a deep industry and customer knowledge.
Area / Function
• Ability to define the impact of your proposal on your customer’s organization.
StrategicPlanning
Insight & Ideas Generation Machine
(Marketing,Sales, R&D, Operations, Accounts Mgmt, etc.)
Sales
Post-Sales
HR
Large national player
Small – Medium player
• Marketing and business development staff capable of supporting sales rep in the identification of new opportunities and the generation of new insight and proposals.
Capability / Requirements
• Differentiating capabilities that are clearly defined, understood and communicated.
• Target industries and customers segmented also based on needs.
• Ability to leverage insight and supporting data across industries and markets.
• Ability to generate and quantify customer-specific insight, incl. competitive, financial, operational challenges.
• Ability to quantify the economic impact of your proposal on your customer’s bottom line.
• Innovation capabilities to define a new point of view on the customer’s business, products, business model, etc.
• Performance metrics and processes that include a link to the customer’s business or operational performance.
• Processes and sales metrics adapted to insight selling.
• Recruitment process optimized to hire “Challengers”.
• Sales culture supporting insight-selling and “Challengers”.
Multinational player
14 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
How can you build these capabilities?
Organizing for Insight Selling
Choosing the right build, buy, rent and partner model depends on the economics of your business, the breadth of your target markets and your ability to enter an adjacent business in a sustainable way.
Description / Example
Buy
Rent
Build
• Acquire a specialized consultancy with the skills and resources to generate insight in the markets you compete in.
• Acquire and extend the industry databases and knowledge tools required to generate insight.
• Recruit industry professionals and consultants in view of creating a dedicated team responsible for generating insight and supporting your sales reps.
• Equip the team with the industry databases, knowledge tools, and processes required to perform their analysis.
• Partner with a consulting firm that is capable of covering your industries with rented resources and tools.
• Ad-hoc collaboration, typically on a time and material basis.
• Potential cultural mismatch jeopardizing your effectiveness and return on investment.
• Suitable if you are restricting your activities to a specific market and have a high-margin business justifying the investment.
• Time and effort required to build the team and supporting processes and tools.
• Suitable if you are restricting your activities to a highly specialized niche market.
• Address conflicts of interest cased by the core business of the partner, i.e. consulting activities with your target customers.
• Suitable for ad-hoc, large strategic pursuits, and new market / services development.
Issues, who is it for
JV / Alliance
• Relatively independent go-to-market JV leveraging the capabilities of the consulting firm and your key competences.
• Collaboration based on a shared risk-revenue model.
• Willingness of consulting firm to limit its services to your company and your markets.
• Suitable if you cover a large number of customers in multiple industries.
15 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
Partnering
Opportunity
Ad-hoc research on customer industries,
markets and customers
Co-development of insight with
your marketing, sales and
technical staff
Facilitation of innovation
workshops with your customers and your staff
Development of industry thought
leadership collateral for
sales & marketing efforts
Collaboration with your teams
on proactive proposals and on answering
competitive bids
On demand, based on your specific needs
Medium to long term partnership linked to a specific industry / market
Partnerships – Joint Venture
Sales Marketing andbusiness development supportSolution specialists
INSIGHT-BASED GO TO MARKET
Your teams
Consulting firm’s services
Collaboration mode
Partnering with a management consulting firm could be the most effective shortcut to building insight-selling capabilities.
16 ⎥ Insight Selling and the Challenger Sale - A primer ⎥ http://www.straligence.com/2012/09/24/insight-selling/
www.straligence.com
top related