Product Pusher or Solutions Provider?

Saturday, December 7 2024
product pusher or solutions provider

Do you ever get a knock at your door and when you open it, a person is standing there with a phony smile and a limited time offer? They will begin their spiel about how great the opportunity is and how it is a real deal. It’s this image that leads some to believe that most salespeople cannot be trusted. They just want to sell you something. If you are a salesperson, you should ask yourself do people see you as a product pusher or solutions provider?

Too often we hear Sales Managers say, “My team is talking to their customers/prospects about the feature of the month.” Product pushers.  How could you possibly know if your customer is interested in the feature of the month if all you do is talk?

Focusing on Solutions

According to Psychology Today, active listening is an important component of emotional intelligence, so as a salesperson, asking questions and listening to people’s answers positions you as a solutions provider.

Salespeople with a “solutions provider” mindset engage their customers in a two-way dialogue because they know monologues are boring, and as a salesperson, they do not learn anything.  The benefits of two-way dialogue are that:

  • You build trust by asking questions
  • Active listening leads to understanding

And the real advantages are:

  • You collect valuable details that will help you provide the right solution
  • You are controlling the conversation
  • The right mix of open and closed-ended questions uncover further details

Keep in mind that:

  • Open-ended questions generally start with the five w’s: “What will your business look like six months from now?” or “How is the current method of delivery affecting your business?”
  • Closed-ended questions help you get to the point and generally produce a “yes” or “no” response: “Do you currently have a VP of sales?”
  • Questions help uncover concerns. These go straight to the real issue although first you need to have a sense of the issue: “What happens if you don’t fix it?”
  • Feeling-finding questions are more about your prospect/customer’s opinion than the facts: “Do you feel that will make a positive difference?”

Ask yourself: Am I a product pusher or solutions provider?  If you believe you are a product pusher, the good news is that now you are aware of it.  For the second key question, consider the acronym WAIT: Why Am I Talking?  Knowledge is power and listening allows you to acquire knowledge.