Glenn Mattson | The Ultimate Dashboard For High-End Producers

This system aims to help business owners how to sell in a way that people would buy. It is a five-step process that understands the behaviour people make when they buy and reference how a business sells its products/services in alignment with that behaviour.

Understand the buying process of your prospects. Glenn believes that there are the buying process which customers follow when buying, while salespeople follow the sales-process.

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System Architect: Glenn Mattson

Website: www.sandler.com

Generated as part of the www.BusinessSystemsSummit.com

System Details

Buying process of prospects:

  1. Mislead or lie to salespeople to maintain control.
    • When you sound and look like a salesperson, you will be treated like one.
       
  2. Information gathering.
     
  3. Mini lie which can either be a yes, a no, or a maybe.
     
  4. Deal with you after you gave the proposal.
    • Hide you in their voice mail.
       
    • You always have to talk to the assistant, your prospect always has a meeting, etc.
       

There's always a plan in play and someone who has a stronger plan will always win. Once you've understood your prospect's buying system, you can start constructing your selling system.

 

Step 1: Bonding rapport.

  • Have your enablement team set you up for appointment with your prospect.
    • Prepare fact sheets for you.
       
  • It has three concepts:
    • Relationship.
       
    • Qualifying.
       
    • Closing.

 

Step 2: Upfront contracts.

  • Upfront contract is vitally important to create every meeting with your prospect. It ensures that you and your buyer are on the same page.
    • Appreciate your prospect with their time.
       
    • Reconfirm the amount of time that you set up for the meeting.
       
    • Uncover your prospect's agenda and expectation of the meeting.
       
    • Share your own agenda and expectation of the meeting to your prospect.
       
    • Decision or outcome.
       
  • Relieve pressure from your prospect and allow them to say no to you if they see that you're not the solution for their problem.
     
  • Be sure that you have these three things on your upfront contract:
    • Purpose
       
    • Agenda
       
    • Decision
       
  • Adapt yourself to fit your prospect so when you speak, they hear it.

 

Step 3: Emotional drivers.

  • There are only two reasons why people take action to buy something: pain or pleasure.
     
  • There are two phases of time for each reason: now and in the future.
     
  • During the "pain right now", people spend more money to fix their problems quicker.
     
  • During the "pain in the future" is the second easiest to sell.
     
  • During the "pleasure right now" is harder to sell than "pleasure in the future".
     
  • There are three personas in your buyer:
    • The child - the buying process.
       
    • The adult - the voice who fact checks.
       
    • The parent - the one who confirms if buying is a good decision.
       
  • You should know how to speak to the child, and not the adult and parent as these two represent the intellectual side.

 

Step 4: Budget.

  • This step is basically you talking to the intellectual voices of your prospect.
     
  • Budget is a conversation about three things:
    • Do they have the ability to fund it?
       
    • Do they have the willingness to fund it?
       
    • Is there any impact in funding it?
       
  • Techniques on how to uncover budget:
    • Learn the skill on when to ask.
       
    • Fix your mindset that makes you uncomfortable asking for your prospect's budget. Be comfortable talking about money.
       
  • This step revolves around money.
    • Who signs it off?
       
    • Where is it coming from?
       
    • What's the time frame?
       
    • What are the terms?
       
  • Flush out any money issues during this phase.

 

Step 5: Decision-making process.

  • The outcome will depend on the prospect you're talking to and the amount of people involved with the process.
     
  • Keys in decision-making process to ask to your prospect:
    • Who, beside yourself, is involved in the decision-making process?
       
    • What kind of process your company go through to make a decision?
       
    • When do you want to have the solution in play?
       
    • How do you know which is the best one for you?
       
  • When you've figured out that there are other people that's part of the process, you've got to build rapport to all those other people.
     
  • Qualify your prospects.
    • Ask the ultimate contract question - this is the actual proposal.
       
    • Bring the future into the present with the question.
       
    • Get your clients to be honest with you.
       
    • It eliminates assumptions while giving clarity.

 

Step 6: Presentation/Fulfillment.

  • This step is all about how you are going to solve their pain, within their budget, in front of the decision makers.
     
  • The fulfillment has 4 steps:
    • Always review what you did.
       
    • Show them how you can resolve the problem.
       
    • Close. Dwell on the issues that they want solved. If you've covered two-thirds of your agenda, pause and confirm your disposition to your prospect before proceeding.
       
    • Make sure that when someone buys, it sticks.
       
  • This is actually the best part of the process because that's when the fun happens.
     
  • By the end, ask your prospects if they're sure about their choice. This is to have them hear the reason from themselves.

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