We live in a world that for many has become technology
advantaged in business and life. Imagine, for a moment,
just how communication, science, art, medicine, automation,
supply chain and products have all been reinvented.
Even consumers' behaviors have been unearthed and changed
beyond recognition. Consumers have become more assertive,
demanding, highly skeptical, and more cynical, less
trusting and with less loyalty to brands and companies.
With all the reinventing and shifting in a diversity of
industries and cultures we find however, little has changed
in the process of how marketers and sales proceed to
understanding why consumers' buy and how they think.
Most marketing methods and selling techniques probe for
surface understanding and not the core emotions and
feelings of consumers' behaviors.
Marketing and sales people rely on worn-out familiar
campaigns and techniques that simply obtain less than
marginal results and then place blame on their products,
services or the economy. This become more apparent with
sales and marketing people in hot industries where demand
exceeds supply - sales skyrocket with little effort or
skill on the part of sales and marketing. Then, when supply
exceeds demand and there are too many sellers chasing too
few consumers' -- the blame sets in and the excuse making
erupts, causing products and services to fail or drop
dramatically below projections.
Change doesn't come easy when you're entrenched in deeply
rooted behaviors of which takes much courage to change.
Change means thinking differently about how one does
things, which sometimes goes against all that you were
brought up to believe in. People who hold stubbornly to
their view and can't envision a different world will fight
to maintain their current one.
To maintain a competitive edge in your business will
require stepping outside your comfort zone and the
traditional methods of conducting yourself in business. The
world has become a melting pot of various nationalities and
cultures creating the backbone of our economy. Regardless,
if you have a world vision of your business or not, the
effects of you succeeding are influenced by your
understanding of how consumers' think and how they buy.
Consumers' ask for one thing and do another. They make
illogical leaps of judgment and come to unreasonable
conclusions based on their experience, memory and
unconscious thoughts. The truth is most customers form
opinions about you before you ever get a chance to deliver
your service or product. That opinion is formed mostly
unconsciously.
Customers' are your only business and requires you to reach
beyond product features, benefits, quality and reliable
delivery methods. Sales and marketing people service their
consumers in a more efficient manner when they understand how consumers feel,
think and experience you and your products and services.
The interaction between the confidence of your marketing
message and the confidence of a salesperson in his/her
product or service sets the stage for how, when and why the
consumer will or will not purchase goods and services. When
a salesperson conveys confidence in his/her company,
product and service, it delivers subtle nonverbal cues to
the consumer. That confidence, if perceived by the
consumer, as authenticity on the part of the salesperson,
adds great persuasive power to the decision making of the
consumer.
There is plenty of anecdotal evidence and scientific brain
research showing that human emotions and the unconscious
plays a major role in consumer selection of products and
services. As our multi cultural society matures; it becomes
evident that those companies and individual who what to
advantage themselves in sales and marketing must understand
the perception and mind of other cultural groups. That will
require a better understanding of your conscious and
unconscious mind - how memory, experience, and associated
emotions exert a force on the thinking and buying behaviors
of consumers.
According to Gerald Zaltman, Professor of Marketing at
Harvard Business School -- says that 95 percent of
consumers' thinking occurs in their unconscious minds. Much
thinking surfaces through metaphors and consumers' memories,
which are much more malleable than previously thought --
which is why "confidence" adds great persuasive power.
Artificial confidence does not work, but authentic
confidence will decisively engender a winning edge every
time when a salesperson truly believes in his/her products
and services.
Fostering a shift in sales and marketing will require a
deeper understanding of how pervasive the unconscious mind
of the consumer works. Breaking into new ground requires
breaking out of traditional thinking about features and
benefits selling. You need to enter into the mental
activity of unconscious thoughts, feelings, memories,
intentions, metaphors and just how they direct consumers'
attention, influence perception and manipulate their
decisions and actions.
6 key strategic solutions for sales and marketing.
1. Metaphor making in the mind of the consumer is a
powerful fundamental that helps them make sense of
information received. When eliciting information from a
potential client. I asked him what success felt like. His
metaphor was; "Success feels like the power of driving a
Porsche down the highway at top speed." Tying his metaphor
to several service benefits closed the sale securely.
Understanding and having collected a large range of
metaphors consumers' use to think about you, your services
and products enable you to sculpt a more effecting
communication strategy and increase the potential of a
purchase.
2. Improve your mental outlook about you, your products and
services. "You Are The Message." Eliminate negative clues
by preparing yourself with the confidence of a winner. Use
friendly language and genuine enthusiasm; reflecting
energy, trust and openness will open up the consumer when
probing for their thinking and core metaphors. Assertive
and outgoing personalities, regardless of ethnic
background, will outpace those people whose characteristics
display shy and timid behaviors.
3. Design your office, retail store layout, waiting rooms,
ads and brochures that reflect the Metaphors of your
market. Example of how one Doctors office focused on
outpatients care as being more nurturing and responsive.
Patients view rooms with chairs lined up in rows as boring,
frustrating and long waits. The office was rearranged to
promote friendliness and privacy and was supplied with
several TV's and a computer. The results were a decline in
waiting time complaints and patients felt they were
receiving a better quality of care, referral rates
increased more that 18 percent and patient cancellations
decreased by 23 percent.
4. Build into your oral and written marketing/sales
communications stories using metaphors gathered from your
market.
5. Probing the mind of your customer/client requires you
uncovering the metaphors they use when thinking about
purchasing your products and services. Once you have
uncovered their metaphors you can identify some or most of
the important and hidden drivers of your customer/client
buying behaviors.
6. Develop an organizational climate and a workplace
attitude that strengthens sales and marketing creativity.
This requires breaking into more boxes and not applying the
metaphor that suggests you step out of the box. Breaking
into more boxes enables you to gather gleaning new
knowledge and will help pry you loose of conventional
thinking. How you think is more important and will produce
more productive and innovational ideas than what you think.
Don L. Price: Coaching Minds to Succeed -- Author, Sales/Marketing & Positive Change Solution Provider, International Speaker & Mental Fitness Coach http://www.donlprice.com
Invite Don to speak at your next Convention, Meeting or Retreat. Optimize your Power to Succeed with Strategic Performance Marketing/Sales and Success Coaching, for Reaching Higher Performance in Your Personal and Business Life.
-- Seminars, Keynotes, Retreats, Consulting --
http://www.donlprice.com
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