How do you increase the value of your training proposition? Do what Matt Drought did and take a leaf out of Warren Buffet's book.
I'm currently reading Warren Buffett's approved autobiography, The Snowball. Released in 2008, it is a truly remarkable book and highly recommended reading about the most successful financial investor of our time. Halfway through this book is the following quote from Buffett: "It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price." This statement about price is more than an insight into Buffett's mind. It is a mantra that directly relates to selling, price, and most of all, value.
Pricing is a subject that regularly comes up in our sales training. In sales, we all tend to get a bit passionate, and more than a bit nervous, about price. Reactions include, 'What should I do when I get a pricing objection?', 'Our customers never want to pay the price we set – they think we are too expensive', and 'I always seem to lose out to competitors because of price'. Pricing objections, setting prices and establishing value are all some of the trickier sales issues.
But sense can be made of all of it with Buffett's line. Here it is again: "It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price."
Now, extend that to the product or service that you are selling.
"you have to position your solution as the most wonderful option available, and your price as fair for that option" Customers feel the same way as Buffett: for them, it's much better to feel like they are buying a wonderful product from you at a fair price, than to feel they are getting just an OK product at a knock-down price. So, the answer to all of your pricing concerns is simple: you have to position your solution as the most wonderful option available, and your price as fair for that option. We call it building value, or value selling.
Value selling is best imagined with the following analogy: imagine a set of weighing scales, because this is usually how customers assess you. On the left side of the scales is the price, on the right is value. If the price on the left is £100, then there had better be £100 worth of value on the right, because the customer will believe that is balanced, or fair.
If you can build more value on to the right set of scales, then the balance starts to work in your favour and you are much more likely to get the deal. Fair is good, for customers won't think they are getting ripped off.
But value is better
Ideally you want the right 'value' side of the scales much weightier than the left. That way customers will know they are getting a great deal, and will buy quickly before you change your mind.
Try this simple exercise when you are shopping: when you look at an iPod, a new shirt, or a holiday, work out consciously whether you think the value exceeds the price.
TK MAXX for example is a fashion house that consistently builds the value side of the scales. Shoppers can't believe their luck paying $80 for a pair of Jimmy Choo shoes that Scarlett Johansson was photographed wearing a couple of weeks prior. TK understands value selling.
So your job when selling, according to Warren Buffett who knows a thing or two about successful selling, is to focus on value.
Your job is to think of ways to build value into the sale.
Don't forget that value arrives at the ball dressed as many things – guarantees, positive relationships, after-sales service, care and consideration, future discounts, price guarantees…the list goes on.
Warren Buffett is a man who could count on one hand the amount of times he has paid a wonderful price for a fair company. Instead, he pays fair prices for wonderful companies. By living out his mantra in the way you sell, you will find that customers will want to pay you the price you want simply to get their hands on what you have.
Matt Drought is the founding director of Natural Training, a sales training company based in London and servicing the world. Natural Training focuses on developing the natural style of sales people with innovative, full immersion sales training courses. He also writes weekly on the Natural Training Blog. He can be contacted here