In sales negotiations, customer price objections can
be seductive. You want the sale and the customer is giving you an easy way to
close it: offer a discount. However, there are two essential reasons for
resisting the objections and sticking to your price:
First, closing the sale means nothing if it is not
profitable. Many fine companies have gone out of business after deciding to
offer major discounts. Profitability is a more realistic way of measuring
success than sales volume.
Second, the most satisfied customers in a sales
negotiation are the ones who pay top dollar because they appreciate the value
of their investment. Buyers perceive higher-priced items to be more valuable.
(Think Mercedes-Benz, Rolex, and Giorgio Armani.) In my selling career, the
best customers have always been the ones who have paid full price, and the most
unhappy ones have been the buyers who received a discount.
Shortly after I started my speaking and training
business, I received a call from Susan, a manager at a Fortune 500 company.
"We want you to train a large group of our key employees in negotiation
skills," she said. "I've seen your work and I think you're the
best."
I was certainly very excited, as this account
would be worth about $50,000. I was about to ask Susan where I should fax the
contract when she dropped a bomb. "You should know," she went on,
"that my boss likes somebody else, and that company is less expensive than
you are. If you lower your fee, I think we can get you hired."
I was faced with the classic sales negotiation
dilemma: I wanted the deal, but did I have to drop my fee to get it? What, I
wondered, was really going on? I could envision the following scenarios:
a. The buyer was telling me the truth. If I
lowered my fee, I might have a better chance of beating out the competition.
b. There was no competitor. The buyer was using
the "squeeze" tactic ("We can get a better deal elsewhere")
as a negotiating ruse to move my fee downward.
c. This was a test of my own negotiating skills.
The potential client wanted to find out whether I practiced what I preached,
and how I would respond when challenged on price.
d. The company had already decided to go with my
competitor. They wanted a lower number from me to give them leverage in
negotiating the competitor's fee.
What would you have done? Would you have caved in
and lowered your fee?
I admitted to myself that I didn't know exactly
what the situation was. Fortunately, I had enough prospects and clients
"in the pipeline" to justify the decision I made on what to do next.
I decided that, if I lowered my fee, the client's
perception of my services would almost certainly drop, but that if I held to
the price I had offered, I would at least send a positive message and have some
chance to do business with Susan's company in the future.
When I called my contact back, I politely refused
to play ball. "I'm really sorry, Susan," I told her. "I'd love
to work with you, but I can't destroy the credibility of my fee structure. My
other clients will be upset if they find out that I gave you a discount."
(This was certainly true.) Susan said she understood and would get back to me.
A week later, Susan informed me that they had
selected my competitor. "That's too bad," I said. "Please call
me if I can help in any way."
Two weeks after that, Susan called back and said
that management had experienced a change of heart. The job was mine.
After the first seminar, I sat down with Susan
and talked with her about the decision-making process. "Was there really
another company that your boss liked?" I asked. "Oh yes," she
said. "In fact, they wanted to do business with our company so badly, they
offered to put on the first seminar for nothing."
"For nothing!" I repeated. "That's
quite an offer. If you were so concerned about the fee, why didn't you
accept?"
"For the best of reasons," Susan
replied. "When they offered to do the seminar for nothing, our perception
of the value of their seminar was that it was worth the price. Namely,
nothing."
My seminar had been perceived as being more
valuable, thanks to my confident negotiating posture. The lesson is clear: If
you present your price with confidence, and you are willing to walk away if
necessary, the prospect will often conclude that you must be worth it. Like
everything in sales, this approach will not work all the time. But it will work
often enough -- if you are negotiating from a position of strength. To do that,
of course, you must make prospecting and new business development a part of
your daily routine.
The bottom line: Brodow's
Law says, "Always be willing to walk away from a negotiation."
In other words, never negotiate without options. For
salespeople, this means that you must have enough prospects so that you can
comfortably say the magic word: "Next!"
Ed Brodow is a keynote speaker and author of Negotiation Boot Camp: How to Resolve Conflict, Satisfy Customers, and Make Better Deals.
For more information on his presentations, call 831-372-7270
or e-mail ed@brodow.com.
Copyright © 2018 Ed Brodow. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1994 - 2024 Ed Brodow. All rights reserved.