According to the Oxford Dictionary a value proposition is: 'An innovation, service, or feature intended to make a company or product attractive to customers.' In its simplest and broadest form, that’s exactly what it is. Whether you sell products or services, you want them to stand out to your prospects and ideally have more potential ‘value’ for them than whatever your competitors are offering. It's interesting that the definition specifically refers to marketing, not sales strategy. Why? Perhaps it's because when we think about value propositions, we think about them at market level, designed as headlines to attract potential customers.
In summaryIn a complex sale with multiple stakeholders, each person involved will have different needs. Your value proposition won’t be the same for each of them, or even any of them.Are you selling effectively? find out. |
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The value proposition challenge for sales professionals
Potential is the key word here. The challenge for professional sales people, particularly in complex business to business sales, is to be able to uncover from a prospect those underlying needs that the high level value proposition is designed to solve and then position the solution so that the customer sees that it clearly meets the need they have identified.
This isn’t new. The problem is, with complex sales and multiple stakeholders, the people involved in making the decision will all have different needs and your value proposition won’t be the same for each of them, or even any of them, which needs to be reflected in your sales approach.
Let’s take our business as an example. If Huthwaite International is selling a global implementation for SPIN or negotiation skills it’s not unusual for us to be working with sales, Human Resources, Learning and Development and finance directors during the sale. Now, as a company, we’ve got a clear view on what the value proposition is for SPIN and negotiation skills - they are research-based, we can demonstrate return on investment, we can train it in 35 languages across 6 continents and we can train coaches.
That’s useful to know, and it’s all true, but it doesn’t help us to create value for our solution if, for example, one of the key needs of the Learning and Development director is to have easy to access reports on the progress of people through the e-learning modules, or if it's really important to the sales director that the training can be delivered virtually for people in remote places.
Our challenge, when building value for what we do, is to make sure that we ask the right questions to uncover those specific needs rather than pushing what we see as our market-level differentiators on our customers.
At its core, that’s what the SPIN model is – a questioning and listening model for business to business sales that shows people how to move away from a push style of persuasion to a pull style.
A two-stage framework for creating a value proposition in your sales strategy
Being persuasive through pulling means doing the legwork up front. We call this process Persuasive Case Analysis and we cover it extensively on our sales training programme but if you haven’t been on a SPIN programme here are a few simple tips from Huthwaite to challenge your thinking before your next client meeting.
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Pick a specific product or service that you offer e.g. Print On Demand services
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Identify a customer type in your prospect organisation e.g. IT Manager
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Identify one key feature that differentiates your service e.g. Quick delivery guarantee
Now answer these questions
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What problems would my client need to have for this key feature to be useful? E.g. Suffering from tight deadlines or last minute client changes to documents. In other words, you are saying 'if they don’t have this problem, then there will be no value for this feature.'
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What are the consequences for the customer of not addressing the problem? E.g. Expensive overtime payments, missed deadlines, decrease in customer satisfaction scores.
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What are the potential needs that the customer you are meeting might have in relation to the problem of, in this case, tight deadlines? Try not to make these just the opposite of the problems. Think broader. E.g. Meeting deadlines may be a need, but perhaps the greater need is increasing confidence in being able to provide customer satisfaction.
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What is the value or pay-off for the customer in meeting the need? What's in it for the business and what's in it for them personally? E.g. If they had increased confidence in customer satisfaction then they might have smoother implementations, improved revenue streams, less hassle from the CEO etc.
What you have now is a useful framework to guide your questions to try to uncover needs you can solve. Your first job is to find out if the problems you have identified exist, and if so, to get to a stage where the customer is expressing the need to you so that you can state how you can meet it.
Bear in mind that one service (e.g. Print on Demand) can have several 'features', so you will really need to roll your sleeves up and go through this process for each of them. It really is that granular and to do it properly takes time. It’s because of the effort it takes to do this properly that we always encourage clients to share their completed PCAs as sales resources, updating them over time as the sales team give feedback on customer needs that they are coming across. This can really strengthen sales teams and build a common approach to sales across the business.

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