I was talking to a potential client about her needs for retail sales training. She had read some of my blogs. She had watched my videos.
“What I’m really looking for,” she said, “are closing techniques. My team just doesn’t know how to close a sale like I do. My employees spend lots of time educating each customer, and yet they still don’t buy.”
That’s because customers have changed.
For most of retail history, the manufacturer created a product, and their sales representatives sold it to retailers by giving them all the technical aspects of their product line.
The retailer would train their employees on all the product features, so when the ignorant customer - and I mean that in a good way - came into the shop, the salesperson would tick off all the reasons to buy that particular product. Those on the fence would be subjected to a variety of closing techniques...
“So, Mrs. Prospect, you say it is too much. How much too much is it for you?” Answer: $1000. “One thousand dollars. And how long do you think you’ll use the product?” Answer: Ten years. “So that’s only about $100 a year, about $8 a month, or about twenty-five cents a day. Isn’t your happiness worth 25 cents a day?”
It's like arm wrestling with someone always on the losing side.
And some retailers are still using such techniques.
Let me tell you something: it’s no longer 1960.
While I’ll give you that this could work in a few cases, it won’t work in many.
Why?
According to several studies, as much as 70-80% of the buyer’s journey has been completed before they reach your doors. Customers frequently have more product information on the specific item they are looking for than your employees could be expected to know about every item in your store.
Product information is no longer the reason shoppers are coming into your store. They think they know exactly what they are looking for and want to be affirmed in their choice.
They are unaware that there might be a better option, a better choice - specifically for them - that they may not have discovered in their search. That's the only role your employees should focus on and where they can alter your sales.
Today, the retailer must understand that the employee role is more of a catalyst that adds to the customer's journey and ultimately ends in a sale.
If you’ve hung your hat on product knowledge all these years as the main advantage your store has over a competitor - that’s gone.
The only way to sell to this new customer is to develop the soft skills to engage a customer with an open heart.
Do you want to close a sale? You need to develop the skills first to get a customer to let you into their world so you can understand what they are trying to fix, solve, or replace.
That’s because no one enters a store and says, “The sky’s the limit!”
You have to earn their trust, develop it, and not lose it at the very end with some 60s-era closing technique.
As long as you intend to get the customer to buy from you today, everything should lead naturally to a close.
In Sum
Customers are looking to upgrade their lives with their purchases from your retail store.
Don’t look backward for closing techniques.
Learn to be a natural, trusted advisor who sells side-by-side in partnership with your customer.