C-Level
Selling - Know Where to Hunt and When
A 3 Step Process
Building your market size and your market share from the
ground up is a simple task that every sales person
should do in his/her region. What you want to have is a
good visual, that you can easily update, that will shout
out to do’s with the best chances for closing, that fit
into your schedule.
Based
on the previous articles of this series, hopefully
you’ve been gathering some intelligence from meetings
with existing customers, old and/or lost customers, new
prospects and/or competitors customers. But even if you
haven’t begun your meetings, you’ll still be able to get
this planning document started. And having something is
better than keeping it stuffed somewhere in your head.
A visual map – no matter how crude - of your journey to
your sales destination makes selling much easier, more
fun and very profitable.
Here
are the 3 steps of how to start building your
Opportunity Matrix
1.
Use an Excel spread sheet. Start with existing clients
and list them down the left column. If an existing
client has other buying divisions or locations give each
it’s own box or row – even if they don’t currently buy
from you.
Across the top row, list all the products and services
you sell. Include new or potential products as well. Use
categories of products/services if there are similar
items i.e. different sizes or colors.
Enter
the percentage of their total purchases of this item
this customer buys from you if they also buy the same
from competitors and/or do some themselves. If you
don’t know, guess a percentage and place a “?” next to
it. This will alert you to find out more. Keep
reminding yourself that it is OK not to know, but it is
not OK to pretend to know.
Leave
blank all the services and products this existing client
doesn’t buy from you, but could. Later we will fill
these with other information. Put “N/A” through those
boxes that don’t apply at all. If you prefer use
dollars or quantities, but keep it a simple visual. Now
repeat the above for all your existing customers.
Clients: / Service (1), Service (2), Product (1),
Product (2), ...
Review this chart with your customer team. That is all
the people in your company who touch this customer -
Customer Service, Engineering, Tech Support, Operations,
and Senior Managers. It can be done as a group or
one-on-one. Many times these people know more or have
easier access to the client’s people than the sales
person. They can be a wealth of information about
what’s going on inside your clients’ organizations.
Later they can be used as a great source for
introductions to C-Levels and other influential people.
You’ll want to do this team review at least twice a year
for each client. However, you’ll update this report
every 4-6 weeks and review it with someone, preferably
your boss and/or subordinates.
2.
Now list all the old or lost customers down the left
side. Indicate who they buy it from now and how much in
the boxes. Leave the other boxes blank, but indicate
(N/A) what doesn’t apply.
3.
Then list competitors’ customers that you’ve never done
business with. List the accounts down the left as
before, and in the boxes write who the competitor/s
is/are and/or “?s” if unsure. Note products or
services they don’t buy from anyone, but could, or do it
themselves. Include prospects that you know buy, but
you don’t have any information about. Finally list
those that do it all themselves. Keep in mind also that
some of your competitors can be customers as joint
venture partners for services they don’t do or have too
much volume to handle.
This
is your Opportunity Matrix. Every box without an N/A is
a potential sale or work being done internally (which
can be a potential sale eventually) for all the products
and services you have available. At this point we are
not using a time horizon. This will come later. For
now you just want to know could they or will they need
what you sell someday.
In
the next part of this series, I will show you how to
phase all of these opportunities no matter how busy you
are. I will discuss setting up 4 marketing categories
and 4 selling categories. Then we will assign action
items of varying energies to handle each possibility of
your market potential based around the time you have
available for selling.
And
now I invite you to
And
now I invite you to
Bonus Tip: FREE
E-Book “Getting Past Gatekeepers and Handling Blockers”.
Just click this
C-Level Relationship Selling Link . Sam Manfer
makes it easy for any sales person to be successful and
feel comfortable connecting with and relationship
selling C-Level leaders.
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