ytranch08
New member
It happens ALL the time. Customers will come in to get the best price you offer, then head over to another dealer, show them what you offered, and the other dealer will beat your price. This is the reality of things.
What you need to do is be able to "listen" to words the customer uses. References. Hear what they are saying and read their body language.
From this, you'll be able to tell whether to waste your time on them, or if they are a serious buyer.
There is a book called 'S.P.I.N Selling' that I would recommend you reading. If you study it (the book); you'll be able to tell who's buying and who's B.S.ing.
I had a customer who came in to my store to purchase a round baler. I closed on the deal quick. When it came time for him to pick up the unit, he went over to look at it, then started to whine about missing parts, etc. I then quoted him a new baler.
After my mechanics showed him the baler and how to use it, he back out of the sale. There was nothing wrong with the baler, he just wanted it to be field ready. How can a baler be "field ready" when the customer hasn't even taken the unit out to the field to use it?
You have to learn from the lost sales.
It's nothing you acutally did wrong- you have to add value to your product and services.
What you need to do is be able to "listen" to words the customer uses. References. Hear what they are saying and read their body language.
From this, you'll be able to tell whether to waste your time on them, or if they are a serious buyer.
There is a book called 'S.P.I.N Selling' that I would recommend you reading. If you study it (the book); you'll be able to tell who's buying and who's B.S.ing.
I had a customer who came in to my store to purchase a round baler. I closed on the deal quick. When it came time for him to pick up the unit, he went over to look at it, then started to whine about missing parts, etc. I then quoted him a new baler.
After my mechanics showed him the baler and how to use it, he back out of the sale. There was nothing wrong with the baler, he just wanted it to be field ready. How can a baler be "field ready" when the customer hasn't even taken the unit out to the field to use it?
You have to learn from the lost sales.
It's nothing you acutally did wrong- you have to add value to your product and services.
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