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Home arrow Articles arrow Persuasive Presentations arrow Persuading Customers with Benefits
Persuading Customers with Benefits
Every professional salesperson knows the difference between a feature and a benefit. We have a twist on how to present them more professionally in today's consultative selling environment. To learn how to persuade and get customer buy-in, read on.

First of all, think of a feature as a “fact”. Examples include:

“We have 24/7 customer support.”
“Our factory is the largest in the world.”
“This product has a lifetime guarantee.”

All of these statements are facts. Now what about the benefits? Most  salespeople explain benefits like this:
“Since our customer support is 24/7, you never have to wait for a  representative to answer your  questions. For example, your technical  staff may be working at 2 a.m. and they can still call our  customer hotline. What a great advantage this is to you! No more waiting in the  que during peak business hours for you…yada, yada, yada.”

Hey, why insult your customer’s intelligence? He checked out a long  time before you got to the third sentence, anyway. Why? Because most  salespeople tend to, as the songwriter Randy Newman sang, “Talk too  much.”

So your strategy should be to add a brief benefit after the feature.
Here’s what that would sound like:
“Because our customer support line is open 24/7, you’ll never have to  wait when there’s a problem—saving you valuable time and reducing your  stress.”

Now the customer has heard two benefits he can sink his teeth into! A  benefit is the “What’s in it for the customer” positioning statement.  The customer’s actually listen to those—if the benefits aren’t too
long. (After all, customers have short attention spans, remember?)

Third step is what I refer to as the “check in”. During this step, you  ask your customer how he feels about the feature followed by a benefit.  This is when you find out how important the particular idea is to him,  proactively avoiding any upcoming objections that may be thrown your  way.

After you have stated your benefit to the customer, ask the customer a  question, such as:
“How important is this to you?”

Now wait for a response. If the  customer says he likes the feature, you can now wrap his quote into
your value-closing proposition. If the customer tells you that it’s not  important, than you can focus on the next feature-benefit you have to  sell, do a check-in again, and repeat the process.

Try this on your next call. You’ll find it works beautifully.

 (c) Renee Walkup, SalesPEAK, 678 587-9911 www.salespeak.com

 
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