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Changing the Questions

By: Dave Brock

 

Changing the Questions

We know questions are critical to our success as sales people. Sadly, we ask too few, choosing instead to pitch our products and solutions, hoping the customer has some interest in considering them, though we often don’t know why.

Most modern selling programs talk about the importance of questions, but too often they focus on the wrong questions:

  • Do you have funding for this project?
  • Who’s involved in the decision making process?
  • How will it be made?
  • What alternatives are you considering?
  • When will you make a decision?
  • What are your needs and requirements?

We can go on endlessly, whether they are BANT or other questioning approaches, we ask those questions to help us sell—but these questions and the answers to these questions aren’t very helpful to the customer.

What if we started changing our questions? What if rather than focusing on questions that help us sell, we focused on questions that helped the customer buy? What if we focused on questions that helped the customer assess their own situation, helping them identify new opportunities, possibilities to improve, identify things they may not have thought about but should.

What if our questions started looking like:

  • Why do you do things this way?
  • What problems does this create for you?
  • Is there a more effective way of doing it?
  • What would the impact be if you could change what you are doing?
  • How might you start assessing change?
  • What would be involved in deciding to change?
  • What would be involved in implementing the change?
  • What would the consequences be if you chose to do nothing?
  • What would happen if you changed?
  • What if…..

Again, here there is no end to questions we might ask, or that we might encourage our customers to ask of themselves.

What’s important is these questions are about the customer, what they want to do, why they might want to do it, how they might make it happen, what would happen if they did—or didn’t.

They are questions that help the customer think. They are questions the customer starts asking themselves and others.

The magic of this, is they start asking you questions:

  • What should we be thinking about, why?
  • What could we be doing differently?
  • How can you help us…

Questions are very powerful, that is, the right questions are very powerful.

Are you asking and provoking the right questions? Are you helping the customer ask the right questions?

Published: May 17, 2019
1199 Views

Source: Partners in Excellence

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Dave Brock

Dave Brock is the founder of Partners in EXCELLENCE, a consulting and services company helping to improve the effectiveness of business professionals with strategy development, organizational planning, and implementation. Dave has spent his career working for and with high performance organizations, ranging from the Fortune 25 to startups, including companies such as IBM, HP, Nokia, AT&T, Microsoft, General Electric, and many, many more. The work Dave does with business strategies is closely tied to personal effectiveness of the people in the organization. As a result, Dave is deeply involved in the development of a number of training and coaching programs.

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