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Sales Leaders Can Close Big Deals in Q4 by Reducing Customer Risk

  
  
  

According to your reps the pipeline is full of deals.  You need to close a few of the big ones in the late stages of your sales process to hit your number this year. 

How do you know if these late stage deals will close in Q4?

This blog will focus on five ways to reduce the perception of risk associated with your solution.

Risk Assessment

Q4 is difficult.  The holidays are an obstacle to getting face time with prospects and customers to secure those last minute deals.  Get ahead of this issue, by building a Q4 strategy now.

Early stage sales activity won’t get you to the number.  Neither will your efforts to move deals from stage 1 to stage 2 in the sales process.  These are important activities, but they won’t impact the number in Q4.  It is too late.

The deals you care about are the ones in latter half of the sales cycle. Listen in on the strategy sessions for these deals.  This is what you hear from the team:

  • “If Acme closes I am going to have a great year”
  • “I am going to close Acme next month” (this is the 4th month they have said this)
  • “Bob at Acme isn’t returning my calls.  I really need that deal.”
  • “We met last week and everything seems like it is on track”

Chances are that these deals won’t close this year unless you change the game. 

Why are reps overly optimistic?

During the first 3 stages of the sales process interactions are primarily positive.  The rep is focused on what the customer wants.  Once you reach the later stages, the rep typically starts asking the customer to commit to change.  This is where things get difficult.  Customers start to worry about risk.  What if this fails and my name is tied to it?  How do I know they can pull it off?  Things slow down or stall.  Your contact vaporizes. 

Try this

Flip the funnel.  Get laser focused on moving late stage deals to the finish line.  Poor and average reps focus on pitching their product and provide an unbelievable ROI.  They avoid tough conversations.  Top performers look for ways to help make it easy for buyers to buy.  They address the risk that is undoubtedly in the buyers’ minds. 

5 Ways to Address Risk

  1. Proactively discuss risk with key Stakeholders
    • Average reps avoid risk discussions.  Top performers enjoy discussing risk.  It is what separates them from mediocrity.  Top performers realize that a risk discussion is an indicator of true interest by the customer. 
    • Do not address risk at the company level.  Risk is personal.  People are afraid of being attached to a failed initiative.  In every organization there are fables about people that made a fatal decision.  You need to discuss risk with each key stakeholder and understand how to address at the individual level.
  2. Provide case studies that prove you can execute
    • Case studies help reduce your customer's fear of risk.  They relate to the problem the customer in the study was solving for.  You want to take your contact off the island.
  3. Introduce the customer to a testimonial that implemented a similar solution
    • The old cliché, “right from the horse’s mouth” is a good one.  Nothing is more powerful than a personal testimonial where you customer can ask questions.
  4. Align Executives
    • The high authority play still works.  The message becomes more believable as more authority is perceived to be behind it.  Visit the top deals with your reps.  Let them lead the conversation.  Provide reassurance that you will deliver on the promise.   
  5. Introduce Other Resources
    • Introduce the service or implementation team.  Account management or customer service resources.  Buyers know that reps are trying to make a commission check.  Hearing a similar message from people responsible for ongoing execution is powerful.

Click here to receive a copy of the Risk Assessment Tool shown below. 

This tool helps you do the following:

  1. Identify risks from the customer’s point of view
  2. Attach a ranking as to the probability of the risk occurring
  3. Assign a score regarding the potential impact of each risk
  4. Develop a mitigation plan for the risks that are highly probably and impactful

Risk Assessment Visual

Call to Action:

  1. Have each rep on your team identify the top 5 deals they need to close in Q4
  2. Take one deal from each rep and discuss the key risks from the client’s point of view.  How can you help alleviate the risk? (whiteboard session)
  3. Offer a small incentive for closing these deals in Q4 (cash is always good)
  4. Track each deal and have the team report back weekly on progress

Don’t hope that late stage deals will lose in time for you to make the number.  Take what top performers do to progress deals and spread it across your sales team. 

 

Please comment with best practices on how to make this type of meeting most effective. 

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Comments

a few other things you can do is: 
1- break the larger project into smaller segments which may avoid multiple signatures. Even if if doesn't, it is smaller and safer 
2- provide legal guarantees of performance 
3 - make them an offer they can't refuse
Posted @ Wednesday, September 26, 2012 7:26 AM by jonathan london
Jonathan, 
 
 
 
Thanks for commenting. While fairly common, I would argue that these three ideas can involve making major concessions. Sometimes they may be required, but don't let you team resort to #3 and cut price without exhausting all other options 1st.  
 
 
 
Scott
Posted @ Wednesday, September 26, 2012 8:42 AM by Scott Gruher
Good relationships with the senior level decisionmakers can tilt the selling scale in your favor. Invite the prospects senior team to come see your operation. Put them up in a hotel for a night or two and make them feel like part of your corporate family. This is a small investment that can reap substantial rewards, both at the close and for future renewals.
Posted @ Friday, September 28, 2012 12:06 PM by Leland Rolling
Leland, 
 
 
 
Thanks for the comment. I agree that Executive alignment is crucial. It is surprising how often Sales Reps don't take advantage of utilizing Execs in their sales campaigns.  
 
 
 
Scott
Posted @ Friday, September 28, 2012 2:09 PM by Scott Gruher
Please add me to subscription.
Posted @ Wednesday, October 03, 2012 6:14 PM by Jeff Litman
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