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by
Graham Denton
There
are numerous areas in a selling negotiation where the customer will be
inclined to ask. In his entertaining and useful Complete Idiot's Guide
to Dynamic Selling, sales trainer Tony Parinello singles out these:
- Price. No surprise here. Don't expect to enter any negotiation
without this variable, at some point, being put on the table. On the
other hand, don't overestimate its leverage. Parinello goes so far
as to say that price is "rarely" the reason that a prospect decides
not to buy.
- Availability.
This
includes delivery schedules. They can usually be adjusted, but be
careful. Check with production and delivery people before you commit:
"Don't promise what you can't deliver."
- Payment terms.
Financing
is the bailiwick of your financial experts. When your customer mentions
down payments, installments, or interest rates, Parinello advises
that you defer to them.
- Performance
specs. Here
he advises that you stick with what you can back up now. Don't "speculate
about what future releases or programs will be able to do." The reason
is logical. If you agree to provide the customer with a freebie upgrade,
she may simply postpone the sale until the upgrade is available.
- Service. Customers
are always asking "What if something goes wrong?" It's a reasonable
question. The answer ought to be on your contract or service agreement.
If it's not, get clarification from the home office. Don't make any
unilateral, unauthorized concessions when it comes to return, repair,
replacement, or warranty conditions.
- Penalties.
This means "consequences for late or poor performance on your organization's
part." Being willing to make concessions in this area-assuming your
service people will approve them-is a sign of your company's commitment
to the customer's success.
On
the first of these concession areas, price, Parinello offers some succinct
advice: "Don't cave in too early." In agreement with this caveat is Gary
Karrass. In fact, in his book Negotiating to Close, the head of
Karrass Seminars advises that you should "give in slowly" whatever the
particular area under negotiation.
To
illustrate, he describes his meeting with the manager of a Los Angeles
office building where he wanted to rent space. Bringing with him a list
of ten "must do" concessions, he asked first to have the outer offices
painted. Instead of saying "Fine," the manager went through a fifteen-minute
ritual of writing on her pad, punching a calculator, and leafing through
files. Then she said "Fine," and they moved on to Karrass's next
item, janitorial service.
Same
deliberate response, same delay. The manager excused herself to speak
to maintenance, and came back with the answer that Karrass wanted. But
it was another twenty minutes into the meeting, and after a string of
these delays, it was Karrass who "caved in." "She had made me work so
hard and wait so long for each little concession, she wore me down." The
manager, by giving in slowly, had improved her position. She had learned
the open secret that time is money, and she had become a formidable expert
at the considered response.
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