Who We Negotiate With
Saturday, October 17, 2009 at 8:41AM Final negotiation is a critical part of the sale. In fact, one can execute perfectly during the sale but at the very end leave large amounts of money on the table. Especially in today’s challenging market conditions, the end of a sales cycle can create anxiety and even desperation. When this becomes systemic company margins suffer and in extreme cases companies go out of business. Now, as sellers we cannot take the entire blame but there are some things that we can do to help this situation.
First and foremost make sure that you are negotiating with the right person. One of the challenges we face is entering a negotiation with lower level procurement people. These people are not your friends. They are usually very well trained and often very shrewd negotiators. On top of that, they do not understand nor do they care that you will bring value, or that your offering is strongly differentiated, or even that their very own company has severe business pains that will only be solved by your solution! All they care about is getting a better price.
Try to get the line of business/power people that you have been dealing with throughout the sales cycle to join the negotiation, or better still bypass procurement and negotiate directly with them. Remember that if there is a conflict between procurement and true power, power wins every time.












Overcoming Buyer Risk in Major Purchases
The first step in overcoming buyer risk is to recognize that risk is a natural emotion within a buying process. When making a purchase, most buyers go through a need analysis and budgeting phase, then a solution-evaluation phase and finally they weight the consequences and benefits of a purchase-decision. In this final phase, they experience and work through risk.
During the risk phase, buyers ask themselves questions such as: “What are the consequences of taking action?”… “What if we don’t see the results we expect?”… “What if the offering or service doesn’t work the way we expected it to?”… “What if a better alternative comes along?”
Risk is the concern that causes buyers to slow the decision down and maybe not make a decision at all. It’s in this phase that salespeople lose deals without knowing why. The salesperson may have been winning the opportunity up to that point, but because they didn’t understand the risk phase and because they weren’t looking at a potential purchase from the buyer’s perspective, they say and do the wrong things and lose the sale.
For example, the salesperson tries to mitigate the risk by saying “Don’t worry about those things, everything will work out, trust me.”… “The economy is going to rebound.”… “We need to get this signed by the end of the week or our special pricing is off the table.” Or they do things that they think will get the buyer over the risk but actually throw them into more risk – such as “drastically dropping the price” which in some cases can throw the buyer in further risk because it causes them to question the original price offered (i.e. “Why did they drop the price all of a sudden, is there something I should be worried about?”). In all these cases, the seller can seem insincere and focused on what is good for him or herself, not the customer.
The key is to recognize that risk is a positive buying signal (yes, a positive signal). It means the buyer has naturally gone through their buying process and is serious about making a purchase. They just are at the end of their process where risk naturally shows itself. The seller should smile and recognize they are close to a win. They just need to consultatively and empathetically help the buyer through the risk by doing a few simple things… recall the business issues driving the purchase, how they helped the buyer understand the scope of the issue and how they demonstrated how their solution can help address the buyer’s business issues. Then reassure the buyer that they understand the decision is a big one but that it is a good one.