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Bringing a Sales Opportunity Back From the Dead

  
  
  

Dave Kurlan is a top-rated speaker, best-selling author, sales thought leader and highly regarded sales development expert.

I've provided examples before of bringing seemingly lost opportunities back from the dead.  That may be the reason a client asked me to help bring one of his company's deals back from what might be a near death experience.

I'm not going to reveal the details of this opportunity (yet) but opportunities like this usually have some common themes.

  • it wasn't sold the right way
  • incumbent involved
  • much competition
  • purchasing driving the process
  • not the leading choice
  • may have failed to reach the decision maker
  • compelling reasons not uncovered
  • process based on price
  • higher priced product

If the deal was a man, he would have already coded out and the team of specialists would be on the way to the hospital room right now in an attempt to resuscitate the patient.  They would try everything, including paddles, to bring him back.  The patient, half-way to the other side, might just like it over there, where heaven is just a stone's throw away.  The doctors experience a whole lot of resistance from dying patients who lack the desire to return to earth.  On the other hand, if the patient is a fighter and wants to come back, the doctors have a chance of creating a miracle, courtesy of the array of tools they have at their disposal.

Get the picture?  The deal is a dying patient with no will to live.  Unless you approach it that way, you'll fall in love with your strategy, use the wrong tactics and waste your time trying to save a deal with a do not resuscitate order.  Instead, acknowledge the odds, find out whether the deal can even be resuscitated, and if there's any chance at all of bringing it back, have every possible tool available at your disposal.

The doctors have a litany of things that can go wrong and they know, without hesitation, what to do if any of those things actually occur.  You must anticipate every possible objection and have every possible question ready to lure those objections out so they can be questioned, addressed, challenged and overcome.

Let's play doctor.

(c) Copyright 2008 Dave Kurlan
 



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Posted by Dave Kurlan on Wed, Sep 03, 2008 @ 09:41 PM

COMMENTS

Dave, 
 
As always you lead me to think through what we do when we sell and what we do when we teach sales training here at Anthony Cole Training Group. Here is what I've learned about the common themes: 
 
 
 
It wasn't sold the right way: Deals are never sold the right way but they are always bought the right way. 
 
 
 
Incumbent involved: There is always an icumbent, they will always get last look and they will always win a tie. 
 
 
 
Much competition: I've always like to play sports where there is just one other competitor. Invitational meets and events never have any appeal. 
 
 
 
Purchasing driving the process: Purchasing drives nothing but to work in the morning and home at night. 
 
 
 
Not the leading choice: If I'm not the leading choice why am I there? 
 
 
 
May have failed to reach the decision maker: When I have failed to meet the decision maker it is because I have failed to get there. 
 
 
 
Compelling reasons not uncovered: The prospect hardly ever has a compelling reason to buy sales training and management development. My job is to find out what the tipping point will be so they will be compelled to fix something that I can fix. 
 
 
 
Process based on price: If it is based on price - I should have left long ago. 
 
 
 
 
 
Higher priced product: Good for me. 
 

posted on Tuesday, September 09, 2008 at 2:59 PM by Tony Cole


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