Selling - Why it Pays to Be an Unpaid Consultant
by Landy Chase, author of Competitive Selling: Out-Plan, Out-Think, and Out-Sell to Win Every Time
Over the last twenty-five years I have heard more than my share of bad ideas
when it comes to effective selling.
Here is the worst one that I have ever come across:
“Don’t be an unpaid consultant”.
I was recently reminded of this when I was asked to participate in a phone
conference involving one of my clients. The company had a number of their senior
executives together for a meeting, and they asked me if I would be willing to
join their group for a teleconference during my lunch hour.
Here’s the “catch”, if you prefer to think of it that way: there was no offer of
payment for my time; this was “free work” in the form of giving advice. Yes, I
was being asked to be the Unpaid Consultant. And, as always, I welcomed the
opportunity.
You see, I strongly disagree with the idea that you should avoid being an
“unpaid consultant” when you are in sales. In fact, in my opinion, you should do
just the opposite. You should strive, every day, to be the Unpaid Consultant.
Here’s my rationale.
Customers form their strongest relationships with people who give the most
value. In today’s selling environment, what you sell -- be it a product or
service -- is, in itself, the least valuable thing that you offer. In fact, it is
probably viewed by most buyers as a commodity. Whether you are a car salesman, a
financial advisor, a copier rep, a lawyer, or a plumber, customers can get what
you sell from dozens of other people who offer the same thing. In a me-too
world, good advice -- ideas that help customers to make better decisions --
trumps, by a wide margin, the value of your “wares”.
Which brings me back to sales people. The highest compliment that a customer
can ever pay you is to confer upon you the title of “Unpaid Consultant”. To want
your opinion when they are not buying. To value your knowledge enough to want to
take advantage of your expertise.
Examples: If you sell automobiles, to get your opinion on which of a
competitor’s two models is a better choice for a child going to college. If you
sell newspaper advertising, whether you would recommend radio or cable
television as a better investment for reaching a target audience. If you sell
printing, your thoughts on whether a new ink is appropriate for a packaging
project that doesn’t actually involve you.
The point is this: people don’t ask for input from those whose opinion they
do not value. When a customer asks for your advice under these circumstances,
the message is loud and clear: they view you as an expert. Give the request your
very best effort, every time. I assure you, you will be rewarded many times
over.
Among my vendor relationships, there is a small group of vendors whose advice
I place a high value on. These are also the people with whom I do eighty percent
of my business. One of these is my CPA.
I have utilized this same professional for my business for over ten years.
She is in private practice and lives five hundred miles from my office. Yes, I
could find another CPA who is local to help my business -- in fact, I could line
them around the block seven or eight times. I could also save money by doing so
-- her fees are higher than most of those in her profession.
So why do I swear loyalty to her? It certainly isn’t because she provides
bookkeeping services and prepares financial reports. That’s a commodity -- any
CPA firm provides that.
No, what I value is her mind -- her ability to analyze my business and make
recommendations that help me to manage it. To me, this is irreplaceable. Yes,
much of her time with me is billed, but many times her advice is unbilled, as
well. She is a very good sales person (she cold-called me to get my business)
and has excellent interpersonal skills. She is a good listener, and even puts up
with my annual whining during tax season. In other words, she understands the
value of being the Unpaid Consultant. If I changed my CPA relationship, I would
not have her to work with anymore -- and that idea distresses me greatly, as you
will see.
A couple of years ago, her business had grown to the point that she sent all
of her clients, including me, a form letter informing us that she was going to
have to trim her client list to lessen her workload. In other words, some of us
were going to have to go.
My reaction to this announcement? Sheer panic. I called her immediately. I
begged to make the cut! I pleaded. I stammered. I reminded her that I have a
simple business and am easy to work with and always pay on time and …
and…and…you get the idea.
She laughed and assured me that I had nothing to worry about; her focus was
on reducing her workload with more complex businesses that were taking a lot of
her time. Relieved, I hung up the phone.
Then I thought -- WOW. I am the customer, and here I am begging this vendor:
please, please - continue to take my money!
Does this describe the relationship that you have with your customers? How
valuable are you to them? Do they depend on you for giving them direction, or
are you an order-taking commodity?
In my business, every time that a sales person asks me, “what would you like
to do?” I want to say “why are you asking me? I thought that you were the
expert.” I never say that, of course, but it is what I am thinking.
Don’t ask me for my opinion; I’m paying you for yours. Be confident and
assertive. Tell me what you think I should do. In other words, be the Unpaid
Consultant.
Author Bio
Landy Chase, author of Competitive Selling: Out-Plan, Out-Think, and
Out-Sell to Win Every Time, founded his own sales training and consulting
firm in 1993 and has clients in more than sixty industries on five different
continents. He has delivered more than two thousand paid presentations as a
professional speaker and holds the Certified Speaking Professional (CPS)
designation from the National Speakers Association, the highest earned level of
excellence in the industry. He lives in Charlotte, North Carolina.
For more information please visit www.LandyChase.com.
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