Sunday, July 22, 2012

Redefining customer's need.
Sometimes the client tells you his or her need explicitly, either by explaining it in conversation during your sales process or by defining it in the statement of work of the RFP the client issues. The trouble is,Sometimes the client is wrong.
For example, suppose the manager of a telemarketing operation contacts you because she's unhappy with the sales volume her group is producing."We need a course on closing techniques,"she tells you. "can you do that for us?"
Well,you can do it, but after observing the company's salespeople in action, you realize that what they really need is a course on telephone courtesy. These people are so aggressive that they cross the line into rudeness. The best question is, what do you propose?
The best course is to communicate with the potential client, discuss your conerns or your observations, and try to educate and inform the decision makers before you write your proposal. But Sometimes you can't. Sometimes,when you're dealing with a formal RFP released in quantity to many potential vendors, or when you're dealing with a consultant who has written the RFP, or when ego or politics or governmentally mandated procurement rules get in the way, you have to respond to the client's need as it's stated, even if that's not appropriate. And Sometimes you must be sentitive to the client's or consultant's need to save face.

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