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For a successful business, you need a viable business idea, the skills to make it work and the funding. Discover whether your idea has what it takes.

Forming your business correctly is essential to ensure you are protected and you comply with the rules. Learn how to set up your business.

Advice on protecting your wellbeing, self-confidence and mental health from the pressures of starting and running a business.

Learn why business planning is an essential exercise if your business is to start and grow successfully, attract funding or target new markets.

It is likely you will need funding to start your business unless you have your own money. Discover some of the main sources of start up funding.

Businesses and individuals must account for and pay various taxes. Understand your tax obligations and how to file, account and pay any taxes you owe.

Businesses are required to comply with a wide range of business laws. We introduce the main rules and regulations you must comply with.

Marketing matters. It drives sales and helps promote your brand and products. Discover how to market your business and reach your target customers.

Some businesses need a high street location whilst others can be run from home. Understand the key factors from cost to location, size to security.

Your employees can your biggest asset. They can also be your biggest challenge. We explain how to recruitment and manage staff successfully.

It is likely your business could not function without some form of IT. Learn how to specify, buy, maintain and secure your business IT.

Few businesses manage the leap from start up to high-growth business. Learn what it takes to scale up and take your business to the next level.

Essential guide to selling your products or services

Selling your products and services to other businesses is not easy but the right approach can make a huge difference to your chances of winning new customers and making sales. Whether you are selling products to lots of businesses or pitching to win a big contract, you’ll need to work on your sales technique and find effective ways to close a deal.

The starting point is to find out about the customer and their needs. You’ll need to convey your USPs and demonstrate the benefits that you can offer that set you apart from your competitors. Good sales technique will help you overcome objections and close the deal.

Developing a sales strategy

Planning your approach

Getting access

Asking questions

Selling the benefits

Handling objections

Closing the deal

1. Developing a sales strategy

Ensure you know as much about your target audience as possible

  • Check you understand what your target customers do, what products they need and why, what key benefits they require and when, where and how they buy.
  • Keep an eye on key trends in your market, such as changes in buying patterns and the activities of competitors.

Decide which customers in particular you want to target

  • Be clear how much each potential customer is worth to you. This allows you to determine the time and effort you should put into selling to each one.
  • Aim to focus most of your efforts on customers who will provide the most profitable business. Only sell at a loss if you're absolutely sure that the deal will bring in more (and profitable) business from that customer in the long term or could attract new business from others.

Ensure you are clear about your unique selling proposition (USP)

  • Your USP is the unique customer value that your offering can bring and is why customers buy from you rather than your competitors.
  • Offering the lowest price for your product or service can be a USP, but it is dangerous to compete on price alone.

Decide which sales methods to use

  • A mixture of methods might well be appropriate.
  • Effective sales methods include face-to-face, email, telesales and ecommerce.
  • Selling face-to-face is best for high-value sales and for complex products or services that require demonstration or explanation.
  • Email, telesales and ecommerce are more cost-effective options, especially for lower-value products.
  • You might use an intermediary, such as a retailer or wholesaler, to enable you to sell goods to individual consumers. In this case, you will need to focus your sales efforts on selling to the intermediary.
  • If you want to sell your product or service overseas, you might wish to consider using a sales agent.

Establish your sales forecasts

  • Map out monthly sales targets for the year ahead.
  • Try not to be over-optimistic. Initial sales of a new or untested product or service may take longer than expected.
  • Monitoring actual performance against your forecasts can help you identify potential problems and areas for improvement.

Remember the importance of generating repeat business

  • It is far cheaper to sell to existing customers than to generate new business.
  • There is a wide range of CRM software available to help you keep records of dealings with customers, including free versions.

2. Planning your approach

Identify decision-makers and other individuals who influence purchasing decisions

  • Your aim is to talk with individuals who have both the budget authority and the need to buy your product.
  • Look at a company’s website and social media sites to get information about the business and who you need to talk to.

Before making contact, be clear what you want to achieve

  • For example, do you want to make an immediate sale or set up an initial "getting to know you" meeting?
  • Some large companies and public sector organisations invite selected suppliers to tender for business. Your aim will be to ensure that you are invited the next time they are buying your sort of product or service.

Prepare your pitch

Tender for contracts successfully

Make sure you know when new opportunities arise

  • Build relationships with potential customers.
  • Check the trade press online.
  • Register to receive alerts on public sector opportunities.

Check that you meet potential customers' requirements

  • Large customers may only buy from large suppliers. Subcontracting to one of their existing suppliers may be a more realistic opportunity.
  • You may need to formalise the way you manage your business. For example, by having a structured quality management system and written policies on issues such as diversity and inclusion.

Decide whether it is worth bidding

  • Bidding can be expensive and time-consuming.
  • Try to get guidance from the customer. For example, how many other suppliers are being asked to bid?

Make sure any bid you submit matches what the customer is asking for

  • Read the tender carefully and make sure you understand how they are going to decide which supplier to choose.
  • Check that your bid covers everything they have asked and includes any documents they require.
  • Make sure you meet the deadline.

3. Getting access

If you are telephoning a customer, follow a few basic rules

  • Ring at the right time - arrange a time to call via email.
  • Get the crucial first 30 seconds of your pitch right. If you fail to prepare your opening carefully, you have little chance of interesting the customer in what you have to offer.
  • Check you are speaking to the right person. Ask what involvement he or she has in making purchasing decisions.
  • Always get your customer’s name and give your own, too.

Get receptionists and assistants on your side

  • Be friendly, not pushy. Ask them to help you. Make a note of their name and use it the next time you call.
  • Part of an assistant’s job is to prevent unwelcome sales calls getting any further. Explain the benefit the customer will get from taking your call or giving you an appointment.

When you make contact with decision-makers, treat them considerately

  • Check that you are talking at a convenient time. Be ready to keep your call short.

Engage the customer’s interest

  • You need to establish right away that you are not wasting the prospect’s time.
  • Introduce yourself and establish the basis for talking. For example, "Did you receive my email?" or "X suggested I call you".
  • Briefly outline the key benefit your product has for this particular customer.
  • Ask if the customer is interested in what you have said so far. If the answer is yes, go on to ask more questions. If not, ask if your product or service might be of interest at a later date.

Be prepared to be persistent, particularly if you do not already have a relationship

  • If you get an immediate brush-off, try to keep the conversation going. For example, if you are asked to put something in writing, say that you would like to send something tailored to the customer’s specific needs.
  • If customers say they need to think about it, ask what their concerns are.
  • Stay focused on what you want to achieve. If you want a meeting, ask for one. Suggest a time and a place. Customers are less likely to cancel meetings on their own premises.
  • Use each time you make contact to build your understanding of the customer. Record useful information including details of the customer’s circumstances and needs. For example, about budgets and the names of decision-makers.

Use email during the sales process, especially if a client is not keen to talk on the phone

  • Telephone contact can help to advance a sale but some people dislike being put on the spot.
  • Using email to negotiate can be more effective with some clients.
  • Always put everything in writing, even after telephone conversations, so that both sides understand what is being offered, the costs and terms as well as the timeline.
  • Check with the client which of their colleagues need to be copied in to emails so that the right people get the information they need.
  • Try not to bombard the client with emails; agree a timeframe for sending information and getting their response.

4. Asking questions

Whether you are selling face-to-face, via email or over the phone, asking questions is essential if you want to understand your customer’s needs. Do not attempt to sell at this point.

Make the customer want to answer further questions

  • Start with questions to which you know the answer will be yes. For example, "Are you interested in reducing your production costs?"

Find out the customer’s situation

  • Use open questions that cannot be answered with a simple yes or no. For example, "How do you plan to reduce your production costs?"
  • Ask questions that uncover problems the customer may be experiencing that your solution will address.
  • Then explore the value of finding solutions to those issues, before showing how you can address them.
  • Try to establish what the customer’s business would be worth to you.
  • Show your understanding of the customer’s field of business. For example, "Now that you are getting orders abroad, distribution must be more of a challenge."
  • Encourage the customer to ask you questions.

Listen to the answers carefully and take notes

  • Check you have understood the customer’s needs by summarising in your own words what has been said.

5. Selling the benefits

Once you understand what customers are looking for, show the benefits they will get from buying your product or service.

Emphasise the benefits your product or service offers - not the features

  • Features describe what a product can do. Benefits explain what these features can do for the customer.
  • A feature is an attribute of the product or service, such as size, design or simply what it does. A benefit is the advantage it gives to the user compared to other products.

Match the benefits to the customer’s needs

  • The same product may be sold differently to two different customers, according to their priorities.
  • For example, if you are selling a car, you might stress the benefits of its safety features when selling to parents, while focusing on style and design when selling to a non-parent.
  • Try to quantify the benefits, perhaps by stating how much money a customer could save by using your product or service.
  • Stress the knock-on effects your product’s benefits could have. For example, "If your accounting software was easier to use, your accounts staff could spend more time chasing debtors."

Produce evidence to back up your claims

  • Data, research reports and testimonials all help reinforce the point.
  • Mention other customers and their comments.

Be prepared to discuss rival products

  • Provide proof of the advantages you offer.

6. Handling objections

Do not be put off by objections - they can be a sign that the customer is interested. Make sure you handle them in a direct and positive way.

Show the customer that you take the objection seriously

  • Listen carefully to find out what the customer really means. For example, "The price is too high" could mean "It's over my budget" or "I’d buy it if you gave me a discount".
  • Summarise what you understand the objection to be.

Isolate, test and address objections

  • If there are several objections, clarify what each one is before tackling them.
  • Test each objection. For example, ask: "So, if I could satisfy you that delivery would be reliable, would you place an order?"
  • If an objection is valid, address it and then ask if you have satisfied the customer’s concerns.

The most common objection to making a purchase is price

  • Try to find out exactly what aspect of price the customer is unhappy with before deciding how to respond.
  • Demonstrate the savings your product or service would bring.
  • Sell the full package you offer, including your reliable after-sales service and the fact that there are no hidden costs.
  • Explain how payment terms, credit or financing could make a deal possible.
  • If the individual you are negotiating with does not have budget authority for the level of spending you propose, ask your contact to refer you to someone within the organisation who can authorise the purchase.

Ensure you have responses ready for other common objections

  • You will soon begin to recognise what these are for your particular product or service.
  • If doubts are voiced about quality, explain how your product meets the customer’s specification and stress your quality control procedures.
  • If the customer says it has an established relationship with an existing supplier, try to make an opening for your business. Emphasise the benefits you offer and suggest the customer tries you out with a small order.

7. Closing the deal

Create a sense of urgency

  • Try to convince the customer that your product is needed now. Link a quick sale to meeting the customer’s own needs and deadlines.
  • Do not falsely state that a product will only be available for a limited time in order to get consumers to buy there and then - this is illegal.

If the customer makes buying signals - stop selling

  • Typical buying signals might be: “When would you be able to deliver?”; “What other colours do you have?”; “That would be really useful”; “This is just what we need”.
  • If you do not stop selling, you might talk your prospect out of a sale.

Take responsibility for closing the sale

  • The simplest way may be just to ask, "Can I take your order now?"
  • Take your cue from the customer. For example, if he or she asks about the price of a product, say "So is that the product you would like to buy?"
  • Propose alternatives. This makes it more difficult for the customer to say no. Ask, "Would you prefer it in green or blue?"
  • When only one objection remains, make closing the sale conditional upon removing this obstacle. For example, "If I can guarantee to bring the delivery date forward to meet your schedule, will you place the order now?"
  • Once you have asked for the sale, stop talking. Your silence encourages the customer to think things through and reach a decision.

Agree actions and confirm these in writing, including timescales

  • Confirm that you have understood correctly what the customer wants.
  • Give your customers good after-sales service, so that they will want to buy from you again.
  • Confirm your terms of trade including your terms of credit. This will minimise the risk of late payment and subsequent cash flow issues.

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