343 MR-JW 1 Personal..
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Transcript 343 MR-JW 1 Personal..
1
Personal Selling and the
Marketing Concept
1-1
Definition of Personal
Selling
Person-to-person communication with a prospect
Personal selling is a process of
• Developing relationships
• Discovering needs
• Matching products with needs
• Communicating benefits
Viewed as a process that adds value
1-2
Broad Concept of Product
Includes:
Information
Services
Ideas
Issues
“Hard goods”
1-3
What is the main product the
following companies offer?
Strategic/Consultative
Selling Model
FIGURE
1-4
1.1
Personal Selling in the Information Age
1-5
An evolution from the industrial economy to the
information economy
Began in the 1950s
New emphasis is information exchange rather than
producing goods
Implications for personal selling
A Shift in Emphasis
Industrial economy
Advances occur in
transportation and
manufacturing
Information economy
Advances occur in
information technology
Strategic resources are
capital and natural resources
Strategic resource is
information
Products and factories define
the business
Business is defined by
customer relations
Sales success means meeting
sales quotas
Sales success depends on
adding value
1-6
Personal Selling as an Extension of
the Marketing Concept
Move from a product orientation (peddling)
to a customer orientation (partnering)
1-7
Important Role of Personal Selling
1-8
Often the major promotional method
Firms invest in personal selling
Personal selling has evolved because:
•
Products and services are more complex
•
Competition has greatly increased
•
Customer demand for quality, value, and service has risen
sharply
Evolution of Personal Selling
Marketing era begins (early 1950s)
•
Consultative selling era (late 1960s to early 1970s)
•
•
•
1-9
Salespeople as a source of strategic information on
product/market/service
Mass markets break into target markets
Emphasis on need identification
Information sharing and negotiation replace
manipulation
Evolution of Personal Selling
1-10
Strategic selling era (early 1980s)
•
Market niches require more planning
•
Equal emphasis on strategy and tactics
•
Product positioning vital
Partnering era (1990 to present)
•
Customer, not product, as driving force
•
Emphasis on strategies that create customer value
Evolution of Consultative Selling
Transactional selling
•
Process that serves the
buyer primarily interested
in price and convenience
Consultative selling
•
1-11
Process that developed from
the marketing concept,
emphasizing need
identification
Evolution of Consultative Selling
Features of consultative selling include:
•
•
•
•
1-12
Customer is a person to be served, not a prospect to be
sold
Two-way communication identifies (diagnoses)
customer’s needs; no high-pressure sales presentation
Emphasis on information giving, problem solving, and
negotiation rather than manipulation
Emphasis on service after the sale
Evolution of Strategic
Selling
A Strategic Market Plan
•
•
•
•
1-13
Outlines necessary methods and resources
Considers areas to be coordinated
Finance
• Personnel
Production
• Marketing
Influences the sale of products
Serves as guide for strategic selling plan
Strategy and Tactics
Tactics
•
Strategy
•
•
1-14
Specific techniques,
practices, and
methods used in
customer interaction
Carefully conceived plan needed to accomplish sales
objectives
A prerequisite to tactical success
Strategy vs. Tactics Exercise
Strategy Tactic Identify the following:
1-15
Use a fact sheet comparing your
product to the competition
Analyze the features of your leading
competitors
Use specific questions to diagnose
needs
Analyze a territory to determine
those with specific needs
Selling Model
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FIGURE
1.5
1-20
Develop a Personal Selling
:
Philosophy
1
Step
1-17
Adopt the marketing concept
Value personal selling
Assume the role of a problem solver/partner
Step
1-18
2
Develop
a
Relationship
:
Strategy
Adopt a win-win philosophy
Project a professional image
Maintain high ethical standards
Step
1-19
:
3
Develop a Product
Strategy
Become a product expert
Sell benefits, not features
Configure value-added solutions
Step
1-20
4
Develop
a
Customer
:
Strategy
Understand the buying process
Understand buyer behavior
Develop prospect base
Step
1-21
5
Develop
a
Presentation
:
Strategy
Prepare objectives
Develop a presentation plan
Provide outstanding service
Interrelationship of Basic
Strategies
FIGURE
1-22
1.7
E-Commerce and the Complex Sale
Electronic
business
Complex sales involve several forms of
information technology support, including:
•
•
•
•
1-23
Electronic product catalogs
Contact management systems
PowerPoint and Excel
Internet applications
Electronic commerce
Evolution of Partnering
Buzzword of 1990s, became business reality in 2000s
“Strategically developed, long-term relationship that solves the
customer’s problems”
Relationship selling relies on a customized approach to each client
Enhanced with high ethical standards and CRM
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Example of
Partnering:
Cushman &
Wakefield
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Strategic Alliances
Formed by companies that have similar business
interests and, thus, gain a mutual competitive
advantage
The goal is to achieve a marketplace advantage by
teaming up with another firm
Highest form of consultative selling required to
build win-win alliances
Can you cite some current examples of strategic
alliances?
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Value Creation
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Value-added selling = creative improvements
that enhance customer experience
The information economy rewards salespeople
who add value at each step
When customer is not aware of value added by
salespeople, the focus may shift to price
ValueAdded
Selling
Example
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