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Showing posts with label Selling Services and Intangibles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Selling Services and Intangibles. Show all posts

Monday, 5 September 2016

Marketing Services - What are the real differences in selling products and services?

“ My business is different – it’s a service”.

This view is expressed by many in the professional and service sectors in business.

Surprisingly there is not a great deal written for these sectors despite the growth and significance of the services sector in the UK.

But what are the key differences between marketing and selling intangible service compared to physical products?

I have conducted many programmes for banks, building societies and financial services as well as a plethora of industrial services. As a result I have come to one clear conclusion.

If you ask a group of five sales professional services executives what the differences are between selling products and services you will get at least 50 opinions!

A conventional approach to the question might generalise the differences and products as follows..

A service organisation will usually have the following ( informally if not formally)
Sales
• Marketing
• Finance
• Operations/expertise
• Human Resources, L and D


However a service business will not usually have the following management functions:
Production
• Engineering
• Buying
• Security
• Distribution
• Quality Control
• Research and Development

This is perhaps how some of the literature tells you what they perceive as the differences between services and products.
In reality there is considerable overlap between marketing services and products and this overlap will differ from business to business.
Selling skills essentially focus on the interactive communication between client and provider and can easily be adapted into selling services.
Many sales trainers would argue that that ALL sales executives are selling services in any case, since what buyers buy are the benefits not the features or facts of your offering.


For example YOU SELL:
The sizzle not the steak ( product)
Holes not the drill bit ( product)
Security not the policy document (service)
The design not the drawing ( service)

The challenge of all selling is to match your offer to the needs and wants of your client – the process of communication differs little between products and services- although the language and jargon will be a little different
.
For example services often charge ‘fees’ rather than prices, a high street bank will ‘lend’ rather than sell money.

Many of the perceived differences between services and products are just that perceptions.


It is fair to say that services do differ from products, such as Corn Flakes or baked beans, but not in all respects. B2B can learn a lot from FMCG and vice versa, and services can learn from both!





However we should also accept that there are also some real differences between marketing and selling services compared with products.


These differences have the following characteristics:-

1. Services tend to be intangible.
All services have a degree of intangibility. When buying a product, a customer can measure it against a specification or sample. On the other hand, when a client buys a service, (s)he buys a description. With the rise of quality standards ISO 9002 etc and specific trade codes of practice such as NICE, COSH, FSA, some element of measurement and quality can be introduced but it is not possible for a client to know what they will receive until the service is rendered. Consequently trust becomes the dominant factor of all transactions involving a sales service executive.


2. The service provider is often the service.
A product salesperson tends not to be part of the product unless (s)he offers some technical expertise.
Product salespeople are often perceived as company representatives conveying the image of the supplier, and the product that is offered has physical dimensions and specifications which are unique to it alone. On the other hand a services salesperson is inextricably part of the service offered. For example, an architect sells their expertise to a client rather than the blue prints. The architect is the service.

3. Services are often difficult to standardise.


Since the supply of a service is usually inseparable from the service provider, standardising services is difficult because individuals vary widely in personality, attributes, skills, and knowledge. Although certain services can be standardised in some of their routines, most services that are rendered are ‘one-offs’ and customised for each client. Therefore, any assessment of quality before the prospective client purchases the service becomes difficult.

4. Services are perishable.
Services cannot be stored or built up for some future date as demand occurs.
In many services the key resource is TIME, and nobody has yet come up with a way of storing that!
Perishability of services causes many problems.
Fluctuations in client demand make it impossible to build up stock in slack times and similarly in good times a services salesperson can’t make 'hay while the sun shines'. Some problems can be covered by using additional temporary staff or subcontractors or outsourcing but this perishability characteristic causes serious challenges for service providers.

The implications of these real differences between services and products are seen when the client is evaluating the service offered.
The client tends to look more closely at:-
• Quality of personnel
• Expertise in the client’s market
• Ability to keep project deadlines
• Fee levels
• Range of services
• Size of the services provider relative to the client
• Location of the supplier’s office
• Reputation and track record


Acknowledging these differences, however, will not preclude the use of most techniques employed in marketing and selling products.
They can be adapted with little bother to match the requirements of the services sector.
In the same way that the accountant uses standard techniques and approaches to obtain a financial picture of a business ( e.g. P  and L, Balance sheet and Cash Flow statement), marketing use classic models such as the 4’P’s , 4’C’s 7’P’s etc. to produce a marketing picture of a services company and develop strategies and tactics for it. Selling will offer both step processes as well as approaches to develop relationships.

The vocabulary of the services businesses is special. They may take ‘instructions’ rather than orders, and liaise with ‘clients’ rather than customers.
But the unifying part of all business products and services is the customer. All businesses whether offering services or products should be about anticipating, identifying and satisfying customer requirements profitably. Be it a service or a product, we are all marketers and salespeople under the skin.


Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Marketing Perception Reality #AWEUROPE 2014 and Aragon 1647


“ Things don’t pass for what they are, but for how they appear

No it was not said by Sir Martin Sorell of WPP at Advertising week Europe at the BAFTA site in London’s Piccadilly but I guess could have been.

No , theses are the words of Baltazar Gracian in1647.

In his little pocket of courtly wisdom Gracian continues “ Few look within and many are content with appearances.

It’s not enough to be right if your face is wrong.”

Similar advice could have come from Self development  experts like Anthony Robbins or one of the contemporary Mindfulness experts doing the rounds nowadays.

The One minute Courtier.

Gracian’s little Pocket Book came out well before Ken Blanchard's  The One Minute Manager.

Much of what social media is about is appearance. – About your Social profile.

The modern phobia of FOMO, Fear of Missing Out would be recognised by the courtiers in 1647 desperate to being on message with the most recent courtly goss.

Fear Uncertainty and Doubt (FUD) similarly would be familiar to the courtiers.











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Tuesday, 15 October 2013

Education the Sales suicide - the dangers of driving a coach and horses through the customer's opinions

Unlike USA Presidents ,Professional Salespeople put themselves up for election every call not  once before the presidency of a second term.

The current unedifying scenes of 'kicking the can down the streets' of Washington in the public/ private negotiations on  Capitol Hill over president Obama’s budget is an excellent example of how business negotiations should not emulate.

 Verbal fiscal fisticuffs such as these are a very high stakes game.

The gamble and the risk to the global economy have significance well beyond the borders of the USA herself.

How you argue matters is  often seen as a measure of  the educated person to some.

Yet Mark Twain viewed  education a cauliflower as merely a 

"cabbage with a college education."

A college education is a wonderful thing .

Learning to argue is a rigorous and robust way to study and test academic  notions.

However it maybe  worth remembering  the American nationally syndicated radio talk show host Dennis Prager who is quoted as saying

“ One of the great mind destroyers of college education is the belief that if it's very complex, it's very profound.”

 Sometimes such an education is hugely detrimental to otherwise talented sales professionals.

How as well as when you use that education in a sales conversation is critically important.

The customer may not be correct commercially. 

They may not be correct technically but never forget they are the customer .

 They pay for your goods, they pay for your services.  They ‘buy into’ you and me

Coach and horses giving rides at the "Apple Day" at Fulham Palace , London
When handling sales resistance such as price , bad past experience, minor technical objection, resistance to change, ‘happy with present supplier’ avoid the temptation to drive a coach and horses through the client’s opinions.

When you over emphasise the large size of the holes or gaps in their argument as you see them it can feed your competitive spirit

 You may win an argument but likely as not lose the business .

If you really need to expose weak points or "holes" in an argument of a buyer, figuratively drive the horses and carriage very gently through them like the pace of the video link below. Or best of all avoid them altogether

( Click)   Driving a coach and horses


  
Years ago on the Children’s TV programme on the BBC called "Cracker-Jack they held a quiz where children accumulated prizes which they had to hold onto. If they dropped a prize they were out of the game.

If they got a question wrong they were given a cabbage to hold. Three cabbages and you were out.

Will the Republicans drop their cabbages or the President his cauliflowers ? Their educated people on both sides of this argument but maybe some skill-full selling is needed and some prayers.


I guess we will find out this comingThursday


Related links








Thursday, 31 January 2013

8 core trends in Customer Experience for 2013


The Customer Experience

At the last TACK conference we had the pleasure of hearing one of the country's experts in the Customer Experience , Gillian James from TMI UK.

Gilliam James of TMI  in full flow
 I took some notes of her brilliant presentation and have made some reflections of my own to what Gillian brought to us .

Take a look at an Apple store and although it will still have Harry Selfridge’s edict about let the customer 'touch' and 'experience the stock' unlike the  Edwardian store they have done away with the cash till.

The thinking being “ Why do we need a checkout ? A checkout adds no value”

We have returned to a world where we are allowing the customer to buy emotionally. It’s all about 'love' as Gillian of TMI says.

Well that may be fine for retail but what’s that got to do with B2B?

Here are some thoughts:-

·       Relationships are even more important in B2B because as often as not we are charging a price premium.

·       The commercial world is blurring distinctions between customer, consumers. There is a an invisible connectivity going on.

·       Our company’s need to be less ‘corporate’  and appeal to people more.

·       Clients are demanding a full end to end experience. How Amazon delivers and services complaints is as important as just having the stock at a price.

·       Business has more stakeholders and they have much more knowledge

·       Business is more competitive.

·       Customers are looking increasingly for thought leadership.


Apple don’t benchmark against others in their own industry but rather compared against Four seasons and their Genius bar.

The devil is in the detail.

Evening unwrapping the packaging is designed as an experience.

There has been a move away from pay wall , charging for licencing to taste and see for free. Look at the approaches of Software companies such as Mail Chimp, Base camp etc.



Typical spectrum of responses to recession





Recession and the new normal has also seen changes in markets  such as grocery. According to Kantar Worldpanel (30th Jan 2013)

The high end quality Waitrose growth of 8 %  4.6% market share and the lower end  value  LIDL 10%  growth market share 2.7% have done best recently and the bigger boys not so well e.g. TESCO still 30.4% market share in the last three months but a growth of only  3.3%.








Gillian gave us 8 trends to look out for in 2013 /4

I have changed her model into an octagon so let's see how the trends roll !



















1. Rise in Community

Have you noticed how stores are changing. There are becoming a space within the neighbourhood. Not only a store for whatever but a coffee shop.



This estate agent make is front of house
 look like a wine bar or restaurant






 






This estate agent has made their office
 front look like a drawing room



2. Importance of Peers

Some of us could spend 2 1/2 hours planning a trip but much of the time is now reading reviews by peers and following their recommendations.
Crowd sourcing is also to be seen other industries

In finance there is now over £0.25 BILLION lent in unsecured loans  in this way.


3. Co-creation

Customers are now involved in the creation of product. For example airline KLM got customer to suggest sandwich fillings for flights.

Sainsbury responded to a letter from a child quote wrote in asking why their Tiger bread was so called when it looked like the coat of a giraffe. The subsequently renamed it Giraffe bread ( formally known as Tiger bread)


4. By People

Customers want to relate and by related to by people even at web site. They want to feel they are dealing with a human being. We need to move away from impersonal corporate speak.




5. Transparency

Customers are demanding straight forward transparency. So MacDonald's now declare how many calories in a their burgers.
They expect Coffee stores to contribute to Corporation tax.
They dislike complicated tariff pricing for phones, texts etc.





6. Newism



We all like new !



7. Kindness- my cuppa tea

Random acts of kindness work.


Random acts of kindness can help businesses grow in surprising ways.

On the above link Peter Day talks with one woman who explains how the generosity of others has made all the difference to her company. Henrietta Lovell, the Rare Tea Lady, started her firm just before becoming seriously ill.
Through the kindness of strangers she has managed to return to health and run a prosperous company. She is now a great advocate for spreading the idea that kind gestures are an important force in the way we conduct our personal and professional lives.

8. Imagination

Use your customer’s imagination. The big idea that will revolutionise your market space is already in your customers’ minds. All you need to do is empathise — see the world and imagine the future through your customers’ eyes.



Related Links:
TMI   http:/www.tmi.co.uk/



Thursday, 1 March 2012

Selling Expertise The Top Line meets The Bottom Line

Early St Peter's Leeks
( Daffodils National Flower of Wales)
Photo of All Saints Church Fulham ,
 West London last Sunday of February 2012

Happy St David's Day


'Brothers be ye constant. The yoke which with single mind ye have taken, bear ye to the end; and whatsoever ye have seen with me and heard, keep and fulfill' - last words of the Patron Saint of Wales St David d. 1st March 588 to his monks

BBC Radio 4’s The Bottom Line hosted by business shock jock and  Evan Davis E.D..is worth listening to. Although Mr Davis was born and raised in England he bears a Welsh name - Evan.


His BBC programme  "The Bottom Line" claims that it “ cuts through confusion, statistics and spin to present a clearer view of the business world, through discussion with people running leading and emerging companies.”

That seems accurate from the programmes I have listened to. ( You can now watch it also) 

The Bottom Line is produced in association with The Open University.

The programme is broadcast first on BBC Radio 4 and later on BBC World Service Radio, BBC World News TV and BBC News Channel TV.
The episode on February 25th was SELLING EXPERTISE

 This episode that readers to this blog will find interesting since our readership plays a part in the Top line of the Profit and Loss account namely  - SALES. ( warning: don't be put off by the hackneyed intro about selling and inevitable action with E.D. walking through the revolving doors of Broadcasting House, Portland Place - the programme  proper was a quality job)

 Selling  expertise and knowledge the customer doesn't have is a challenging business.

 If consumers are in a state of relative ignorance, how can they shop around?

  Heather McGregor, managing director executive search firm Taylor Bennett; Rupert Soames, chief executive of mobile energy provider Aggreko; Gavin Oldham, chief executive of retail stockbroker The Share Centre joined Evan Davis in discussion.
The panel also swapped  interesting thoughts on religion, morals, ethics in the workplace
Link to TV version


Link to  podcast audio version


May your St David's Day be a good selling day where you "...hear , keep and fulfill"

Related Links:-
Selling Services
3 Parts to your Differentiated Value Propositions

Friday, 4 November 2011

Influencing & Professional Selling Skills for Insurance Brokers

Last month I was running a course for Tack International with a group of commercial insurance brokers from a range of companies from London and South East of England . http://www.tack.co.uk/


The delegates' businesses covered commercial insurance  ranging from specialising in Property & Landlord sector, the motor bike sector to more traditional brokers. Some had been selling commercial insurance for 20 and 30 years other for just a few months which made for a lively and productive two days.

They were a stretching and lively group to work with.
The insurance marketplace is tough at the moment both on those with books on the  'renewals side' and  for those developing new business.
Our Course Objectives included


·         To reveal the results of recent research into client preferences
·         To introduce insurance brokers to the research based PRO-PAYBACK® sales process and how to apply it
·         To discuss effective techniques for those aspects of selling which present the biggest challenges to most  insurance salespeople – answering objections, strategies for unseating an incumbent competitor and winning client commitment (or ‘closing’)
·         To enable sales professionals to appraise themselves and plan to develop personal action plans to achieve and exceed their sales targets





In commercial insurance sometimes agreement is there for the asking with our clients other times you have to work hard to gain acceptance of your idea. Brokers need to be skilled influencers.




The "New Business" team in deep thought & discussion in the Spey Room at the Mint Hotel, John Islip Street, Westminster, London www.minthotel.com 
 ( Alexandr Orlov on lookout duty- Commercial Insurance is 'Simples'?!)


Sessions covered
·           Assessing your own selling style and adapt it to suit your clients
·           Apply the latest research into clients’ likes and dislikes when dealing with insurance salespeople
·           Apply a proven sales structure and process during every future sales scenario
·           Plan your calls professionally
Ricky and  scribe captain Mark set about their task for the 'renewals team'

·           Sell by setting clear objectives
·           Research and target the right prospects and customers to generate the best results
·           Gain and retain your customers’ attention
·           Ask value driven questions to fully understand your customers’ needs
New Business team 'brainstormed' and generated a set of drill down questions- one or  two 'killer questions' came out of their work and were eagerly transferred to the group's personal development action plans.
·           Apply the concept of ‘YOU Appeal®’ ensuring the customer is your focus at all times during the sales process
·           Motivate customers by applying TACK’s Offer Analysis© technique
·           Respond to and manage objections confidently and professionally
·           Deploy key strategies for winning business and gaining customer commitment
·           Close every sales conversation on a positive objective
·           Keep developing your client relationships for long term and profitable business
Ashley talks through his team's offer analysis

One of the key sessions of the programme is examining Influencing Skills. The teams worked hard on responding to some stretching tasks listing:
  •  ways  that you can be clear and direct in the challenges with /for  your clients.
  •   how your behaviour styles can be applied to influencing situations
  •  approaches  thatyou can make an impact and motivate clients
  •  actions that you can build up a ‘reserve of trust’ with a client
  •  steps that will progress the client to accept your ideas



Using work  developed by  International learning Inc.  http://www.internationallearning.com/ we recognised that 
Influencing skills come from five key factors in commercial insurance. We worked on some of the following ideas about Influencing Skills.


 Insurance  messages must be clear. With both technically sophisticated and regulated financial services the challenge of effective and clear communication is ever present.





Yet selling commercial insurance is not solely about commitment but also about the interaction and interpersonal relationships between broker and client and broker and supplier( e.g. Banks, Insurance Houses etc)





Our offer needs to be communicated with impact and be persuasive but in a conversational and business like manner




Essentially the most important aspect in selling insurance is about the Trust. Building up a bank of trust is crucial on-going task for the professional insurance broker



Getting the balance of persistence rather than 'nagging' a client is key.



In addition to  working a practical sales process  PRO-PAYBACK we also worked on practical aspects of communication skills in client meetings and other interactions such as trade shows, exhibitions, networking events and seminars in skills such as listening , questioning and non-verbal communication.




Chris, Phil and Ashley preparing for the Personal Space Exercise and Body language - note the measuring tape on the floor



Benn and Ryan check their 'fight or flight tells'




Related Links

Selling Skills for Insurance Brokers



TACK  International

http://www.tack.co.uk/

Interpersonal Styles 
http://www.internationallearning.com/