Developing a Customer Strategy

  1. 8.1 Discuss the meaning of a customer strategy

The greatest challenge to salespeople in the age of information is to understand realized and unrealized needs and improve responsiveness to customers. In fact, a growing number of sales professionals believe the customer has supplanted the product as the driving force in sales today. This is especially true because many of today’s customers no longer care where or from whom they buy. They are a new generation of aggressive, Internet-empowered customers. They are “new experts.” They are confident and determined because they are equipped with purchasing firepower unavailable to any previous generation. They employ three power tools to get their way.

  1. Instant comprehensive information from the Internet about all products and services sold online and offline.

  2. Immense choice in every segment of commerce—a wide variety of options and prices in every local community and from every corner of the world.

  3. Real-time price comparison at the moment and location of purchase on increasingly advanced technology.1

Jerry Acuff, author of Stop Acting Like a Seller and Start Thinking Like a Buyer, encourages salespeople to develop a customer strategy that adds value. Acuff says, “In order to think like a buyer, salespeople must understand the new buying processes and focus on what the customer is looking for.”2

A photo of Jerry Acuff

Jerry Acuff, author of Stop Acting Like a Seller and Start Thinking Like a Buyer encourages salespeople to develop a customer strategy that adds value. He says, “In order to think like a buyer, salespeople must understand the buying process and focus on what the customer is looking for.

Source: Jerry Acuff

Adding Value with a Customer Strategy

A customer strategy is a carefully conceived plan that results in understanding the customer’s perceptions and maximizing customer satisfactions and responsiveness. One major dimension of this strategy is to achieve a better understanding of the customer’s buying needs and motives. As noted in Chapter 1, information has become a strategic resource (Figure 1.2). When salespeople take time to discover realized and unrealized needs and motives, they are in a much better position to offer customers a value-added solution to their buying problem.

An illustration lists the characteristics of consumer buyers and organizational buyers.

Figure 8.2 Differences Between Consumer and Organizational Buyers

Source: Solomon, Michael R.; Marshal, Greg W.; Stuart, Elnora W., Marketing: Real People, Real Choices, 6th ed., © 2009, p. 139. Reprinted and electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

Every salesperson who wants to develop repeat business should figure out a way to collect and systematize customer information. The authors of Reengineering the Corporation discuss the importance of collecting information about the unique and particular needs of each customer:

Customers—consumers and corporations alike—demand products and services designed for their unique and particular needs. There is no longer any such notion as the customer; there is only this customer, the one with whom a seller is dealing at the moment and who now has the capacity to indulge his or her own personal tastes.3

The first prescription for developing a customer strategy focuses on the customer’s buying process (see Figure 8.1). Buying procedures and policies can vary greatly from one buyer to another. This is especially true in business-to-business selling. If a salesperson fails to learn how the buyer plans to make the purchase, then there is the danger that the selling process will be out of alignment with the customer’s buying process. Keith Eades, author of The New Solution ­Selling, says:

An illustration shows the strategic/consultative selling model with four strategic steps.

Figure 8.1

Today, one of the greatest challenges to salespeople is improving responsiveness to customers. A well-developed customer strategy is designed to meet this challenge.

If we haven’t defined how our buyers buy, then we make assumptions that throw us out of alignment with our buyers. Misalignment with buyers is one of selling’s most critical mistakes.4

The second prescription focuses on why customers buy. This topic will be discussed in detail later in this chapter. The third prescription for developing a customer strategy emphasizes building a strong prospect or account base, which is discussed in Chapter 9.

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