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Your Solution Is Not My Problem

by Doug Davidoff | Nov 10, 2009 4:24:27 PM

solutionsDo you have a great solution?

Do you do something different, or better yet, unique?

Great.  Now, if you want more sales, faster sales, and more profit per sale – forget about your solution.

I always know when a company or a salesperson is in for trouble.  When asked about their company, they spend all of their time talking about their solution.  They may have a great story, but what they all struggle to understand is that your solution is not my problem.

I wrote about this more than three years ago and things seem to be getting worse.  Back then, I said:

Let me explain something that is very basic – if there is not a problem, there can be no solution. Period. No questions or discussion. I’d like to request that all salespeople and marketers stop talking to me about how wonderful their solution is. When they talk to me this way, all they do is demonstrate that they clearly have absolutely no understanding of the problems that matter most to me.

 


Here’s your challenge.  If your customers and potential customer don’t understand their problems – and they don’t, then they cannot understand your solution.  Nor can they understand how your solution is any different than any other solution.  And they certainly can’t figure out why your solution is an absolute, must-have, can’t be without.  In this drought, anything less is not enough to get access to budgets.

What should you do – start talking to me about my problems.  Demonstrate that you understand me, my business, and my desired results as least as well as (preferably better than) I understand myself.  If you can’t understand me at least as well as I understand myself – how can you possibly create any value?  And if you don’t create any value, why should a prospect or customer spend any time talking with your company.

Now, you don’t need to understand every problem I have, just the important ones that align with what you do.  At Imagine, we teach selling organizations to focus on what we call “high probability indicators/symptoms.”  The likelihood is that 80% of the businesses that fit your Best Few Profile suffer problems that are 80% similar, so you don't need to invent a new wheel every time you sell.  The buying organization’s challenge is that they don’t understand their problems (think about it, if they did, they’d be getting the results they want).  What's new and unique to the buyer is standard operating procedure to you (which is why they need you).

Your job is to give the language so that the buying organization can trace the symptoms (that they are aware of) to the real problem.  Just today, I had two conversations with someone who thought they had one problem and I helped them understand that the real problem was something entirely different (while this was a surprise to them, it was SOP to me).  I spent no time whatsoever talking about my solution, and the buyers went from “looking at alternatives” to proceeding only with me.

Remember, my problem is my problem – and until I fully understand it, and understand that you understand it, you’re solution is a commodity at best and more likely an interruption.  Stand out and make your customers feel understood.