| Hub You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Sales > The Pre-Proposal Proposal |
|
Hub You - The Pre-Proposal Proposal
10 Reasons to Send a News Release that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about.News releases are definitely the workhorse of promotion and publicity efforts. properly drafted timed, and followed up on with the media, a release can get the word out on your product or service. Here are a few opportunities that could warrant a release for your business:1. Talk about your mistakes! Don't be embarrassed, everyone makes them. If you're willing to pass on what you learned, the media may just be interested.2. Get involved in a charity and announce your business' support.3. Take a poll of the quirkiest aspects of your clients' behaviours. Ask them about the most unusual uses of your product.4. Got something particular you can comment on that's hot in pop culture or the news? Put your professional two cents in!.5. Launching a new product that will change an industry is also a great reason to try your hand at a communiqu?.6. What time of the year is it? If it's the holiday season, think of how you can leverage it to your advantage.7. Look up your subjects of expertise in Chases' Calendar of Events. Chases, is a This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. S Needs Based Selling - Reading Your Customer's Mind No matter whose sales system you subscribe to and follow, everyone of them has a stage or step where you propose your goods and services to the prospect. Oftentimes, in our anxiousness to be responsive, and because we believe by submitting a proposal we are actually speeding the process along, our thoughts run to a place where we believe we are in a position to final close, not merely trial close.... there is no subsitute for paying attention.– Diane SawyerWALKING into the local grocery store the first week in January, I nearly tripped over a pallet of Slim Fast. I smiled at this excellent piece of “prophetic marketing” – knowing what the customer wants before she wants it.The owner of this store knows that with each New Year nearly every American resolves to lose weight. The diet related products are in place on New Year’s Eve. And he follows this marketing strategy all year long. In February, ice chests will line the high traffic areas within their stores. Outdoor accessories are on display weeks before spring arrives. School supplies are on the shelves by the end of June. This business owner anticipates each season months before its arrival.How can you adapt prophetic marketing to your business? What seasons do your customers follow? Are they sports oriented? Do they own a boat? Do they follow the hunting seasons? Answering questions about your customers’ seasonal inclinations will offer clues that enable you to anticipate their personal needs. Early on in my sales career a very street smart sales manager taught me a lesson about proposal submissions and I want to share it with you now. One day after visiting one of my prospects and returning to the office, I burst into the sales room out of breath and in high spirits. The sales manager could see the excitement and asked what was up. I told him one of the prospects that had been on my prospect list for nine months had asked me to submit a proposal. Of course throughout this period there were continual questions about what the next step would be, its timing and when would the account actually order from us. Just like you would, I was feeling a fair amount of relief that the account had finally moved to a stage where they were considered a serious prospect. Also, you can imagine the angst felt by carrying a name on the prospect list that appeared to the sales manager as wishful thinking! At least now my posture with the prospect appeared solidified and there was proof the account situation was “read” accurately. As the sales manager listened intently to my explanation of what happened during the call that motivated the proposal request, his facial expressions indicated he was not as convinced as I that this was the time to present a proposal. His skepticism and lack of enthusiasm was killing me, after all it was I who had first-hand knowledge of the account and the sales situation. I wanted to be responsive and he was not encouraging me to submit a proposal. That’s when he enlightened me on the concept of a pre-proposal proposal; the notion that we should take appropriate action depending on the situation while still being responsive to the prospect. You see, his experience suggested that any prospect sitting on a list as long as this one did, merited a modified set of thinking to proposal submission. He was not anxious to see a huge amount of energy spent creating an elaborate proposal when something less sophisticated would do the job just as well. His view of the situation was radically different than mine about how elaborate the proposal should be. In his mind, my lack of sales experience and street savvy precluded my ability to stand back from the situation long enough to see the entire forest. I was only concentrating on a tree – the tree called proposal creation. As a sales manager, he could see the situation from a different vantage point. His contention was, before moving to any form of a proposal, we should ask a few questions about the situation first. For example, have all the decision influencers and makers been made fully aware of the interest in the product or service. If not sure, we need to ask those questions before pressing ahead. What is the purpose of the proposal? Is it for budgetary purposes? Is it the first, last and only proposal they request of you, or for that matter from any of your competitors. If you are not sure, or if during the course of a long sales process the influencers and decision makers have changed, you had better find out before submitting your proposal. Has enough information been collected about the account through an analysis or survey of present conditions which establish that a real need exists. If not, or if a perceived need can be developed, it might be best to back up a step or two and get solid data so that you can make informed recommendations in your proposal. What thoroughness and completeness is required in the proposal at this time? Ask yourself if a simple two page letter proposal or hand written quotation is sufficient. Are you sufficiently confident that should a full fledged proposal be created you will be in receipt of an order shortly thereafter. Who will review the proposal? If this is for a recommender as opposed to the final decision maker, certainly a slimmed down version might do the trick. Returning to the story, my sales manager assertively pointed out that based on the information provided, that the timing for a full proposal was not justified. In his judgment a letter proposal was the right thing to do. Over his recommendations I created an elaborate proposal anyway. My pride of creation and editorial genius were spread all over it! Then the day came to present the proposal in person. By the way, you should do this in person whenever geographically possible as it gives you an additional opportunity to qualify, ask questions and get the instinctive sense for the sales opportunity. The proposal was presented. Guess what the response was that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about. This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. Su Why You Should Run Away From An Ad Agency That Talks About Branding (Before Your Wallet's Empty) name on the prospect list that appeared to the sales manager as wishful thinking! At least now my posture with the prospect appeared solidified and there was proof the account situation was “read” accurately.So why should you run away from any ad agency that talks about branding?Simple. The ad agency doesn’t know the first word about results.And if you want to INVEST in advertising instead of GAMBLING in advertising, you really can’t afford to listen to the “Branding or Name recognition” madness.Branding is a disservice to the buying public. It’s like having a lamp and hiding it under your bed. The light doesn’t help you. The light doesn’t help your family members and friends.When you’re branding: service to the customer becomes second to bragging or being creative for the sake of being creative. Got Milk? Really? Got Milk? Really. So what?What Is This Hot Babe Doing In Your Commercial?And Don’t Tell Me The Old “Sex Sells”Ok so you’re selling a camera. Why do you want that hot babe with super-hot legs playing tennis in your commercial. You know what Rosser Reeves calls this hot babe in your commercial, he calls it a vampire. It doesn’t help sell your product, actually it’s draining attention from your product.Is Your Advertising A Gamble As the sales manager listened intently to my explanation of what happened during the call that motivated the proposal request, his facial expressions indicated he was not as convinced as I that this was the time to present a proposal. His skepticism and lack of enthusiasm was killing me, after all it was I who had first-hand knowledge of the account and the sales situation. I wanted to be responsive and he was not encouraging me to submit a proposal. That’s when he enlightened me on the concept of a pre-proposal proposal; the notion that we should take appropriate action depending on the situation while still being responsive to the prospect. You see, his experience suggested that any prospect sitting on a list as long as this one did, merited a modified set of thinking to proposal submission. He was not anxious to see a huge amount of energy spent creating an elaborate proposal when something less sophisticated would do the job just as well. His view of the situation was radically different than mine about how elaborate the proposal should be. In his mind, my lack of sales experience and street savvy precluded my ability to stand back from the situation long enough to see the entire forest. I was only concentrating on a tree – the tree called proposal creation. As a sales manager, he could see the situation from a different vantage point. His contention was, before moving to any form of a proposal, we should ask a few questions about the situation first. For example, have all the decision influencers and makers been made fully aware of the interest in the product or service. If not sure, we need to ask those questions before pressing ahead. What is the purpose of the proposal? Is it for budgetary purposes? Is it the first, last and only proposal they request of you, or for that matter from any of your competitors. If you are not sure, or if during the course of a long sales process the influencers and decision makers have changed, you had better find out before submitting your proposal. Has enough information been collected about the account through an analysis or survey of present conditions which establish that a real need exists. If not, or if a perceived need can be developed, it might be best to back up a step or two and get solid data so that you can make informed recommendations in your proposal. What thoroughness and completeness is required in the proposal at this time? Ask yourself if a simple two page letter proposal or hand written quotation is sufficient. Are you sufficiently confident that should a full fledged proposal be created you will be in receipt of an order shortly thereafter. Who will review the proposal? If this is for a recommender as opposed to the final decision maker, certainly a slimmed down version might do the trick. Returning to the story, my sales manager assertively pointed out that based on the information provided, that the timing for a full proposal was not justified. In his judgment a letter proposal was the right thing to do. Over his recommendations I created an elaborate proposal anyway. My pride of creation and editorial genius were spread all over it! Then the day came to present the proposal in person. By the way, you should do this in person whenever geographically possible as it gives you an additional opportunity to qualify, ask questions and get the instinctive sense for the sales opportunity. The proposal was presented. Guess what the response was that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about. This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. S After Your Postcard Mailing: Follow Up with Finesse w elaborate the proposal should be. In his mind, my lack of sales experience and street savvy precluded my ability to stand back from the situation long enough to see the entire forest. I was only concentrating on a tree – the tree called proposal creation.I've heard a lot of people lament the fact that they just sent out a big postcard mailing, and, alas, no one called. Hey, it's happened to me. I've sent cards that I thought were so good that I was sure my phone would start ringing off the hook. And then my little Web and graphic design studio would be so busy that I'd be booked sold for the next three months. Hooray! But, instead, nothing but silence from the phone. Which means that it's time for me to start making some other phones ring. Time to start smiling and dialing those hot prospects, clients, and anyone else who might send some business my way. The phone conversations sound like this: 1. Prospect A has been meaning to give me a call, and, hey, thanks for sending the postcard. 2. Client B got the card earlier in the week, and she has a big project coming up within a month. 3. Client C, who just put the card on the office refrigerator door, knows someone who needs me to help him with his website project.This is where building a mailing list from people you know can really As a sales manager, he could see the situation from a different vantage point. His contention was, before moving to any form of a proposal, we should ask a few questions about the situation first. For example, have all the decision influencers and makers been made fully aware of the interest in the product or service. If not sure, we need to ask those questions before pressing ahead. What is the purpose of the proposal? Is it for budgetary purposes? Is it the first, last and only proposal they request of you, or for that matter from any of your competitors. If you are not sure, or if during the course of a long sales process the influencers and decision makers have changed, you had better find out before submitting your proposal. Has enough information been collected about the account through an analysis or survey of present conditions which establish that a real need exists. If not, or if a perceived need can be developed, it might be best to back up a step or two and get solid data so that you can make informed recommendations in your proposal. What thoroughness and completeness is required in the proposal at this time? Ask yourself if a simple two page letter proposal or hand written quotation is sufficient. Are you sufficiently confident that should a full fledged proposal be created you will be in receipt of an order shortly thereafter. Who will review the proposal? If this is for a recommender as opposed to the final decision maker, certainly a slimmed down version might do the trick. Returning to the story, my sales manager assertively pointed out that based on the information provided, that the timing for a full proposal was not justified. In his judgment a letter proposal was the right thing to do. Over his recommendations I created an elaborate proposal anyway. My pride of creation and editorial genius were spread all over it! Then the day came to present the proposal in person. By the way, you should do this in person whenever geographically possible as it gives you an additional opportunity to qualify, ask questions and get the instinctive sense for the sales opportunity. The proposal was presented. Guess what the response was that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about. This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. S Sales for House Washing step or two and get solid data so that you can make informed recommendations in your proposal.In many parts of the country people wash their house twice a year with the pressure washer. Many people know that they need to clean the roof to keep the mold off and also the sides of their vinyl siding house.In other parts of the country such as out West in Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico and many parts of Texas people have stucco on their homes and they seldom wash them. Nevertheless out West you will also find manufactured homes and mobile homes that usually get washed once or twice per year.If you own a house washing company you will want to make sure that you do your selling properly. The easiest way to get a new client in the House washing business is to either put a flyer on the door of all the houses nearby after you are completed.Generally people will be watching you out their window and they may or may not come up to you ask you for a business card. But if you place a flyer are on their door handle, they will know how to contact you and generally they will stick this on the refrigerator until the appropriate time.Another thing you can do i What thoroughness and completeness is required in the proposal at this time? Ask yourself if a simple two page letter proposal or hand written quotation is sufficient. Are you sufficiently confident that should a full fledged proposal be created you will be in receipt of an order shortly thereafter. Who will review the proposal? If this is for a recommender as opposed to the final decision maker, certainly a slimmed down version might do the trick. Returning to the story, my sales manager assertively pointed out that based on the information provided, that the timing for a full proposal was not justified. In his judgment a letter proposal was the right thing to do. Over his recommendations I created an elaborate proposal anyway. My pride of creation and editorial genius were spread all over it! Then the day came to present the proposal in person. By the way, you should do this in person whenever geographically possible as it gives you an additional opportunity to qualify, ask questions and get the instinctive sense for the sales opportunity. The proposal was presented. Guess what the response was that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about. This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. S Online Fundraising Business that we go ahead and get started by placing the order? Not! It seems after twenty years of owning his own business and listening to his wife plead for a fur coat he decided it was wiser to buy the coat and take that extended vacation they had been talking about.Going to the local shopping or outlet mall has proven in these past years to be a favorite pastime for many. Often, people will buy what they need, what they must have, or simply dream about purchasing items through what is known as window shopping.In addition, like most things, there has been a continual change in ways that shoppers can shop. This metamorphosis has seen the shopper go from bustling downtown shops to enclosed malls.Now, through modern technology, the shopper can simply log onto the internet and shop countless stores for that particular item and at the right price. With the click of the computer mouse that product can be delivered without the person ever having to leave the comfort of their home.With this convenient way of purchasing products that are available it was only a matter of time that this process would be transferred to the non-profit world. This system of supporting a charity is through the use of an online fundraising business. If wishing to support charitable work in this way it is important to know what is an online fundraising business a This news to a sales person is worse than losing to a competitor. This was a no decision; virtually a non-event. After that I never looked at my prospects the same way again. Sure, I’d like to believe all of them are being forthright when asked typical sales qualifying questions. The reality is, unless they are truly the only decision influencer and decision maker, they probably do not know what it will take to move your offering through their company’s decision tree. They may not even know what the decision tree looks like nor how to climb it. Here is a good rule of thumb before submitting a proposal of any sort. Always determine how far into your sales process you are, and the level of buy-in and commitment the prospect has demonstrated to your product or service. If you are at the introductory phase and your prospect asks for some prices, you can safely assume they need ball-park pricing, if for no other reason than to do some preliminary budgeting. Surely, a full blown proposal would not seem to be in order – at least not yet. If you are more advanced in your sales process the prospect probably needs a more accurate appreciation of costs, terms, conditions and perhaps even contractual issues. If you have advanced the prospect well down your sales process, completed and received agreement all the way with the required prospects personnel, then it might make sense to provide an elaborate proposal. Always remember however, that at any point in the proposal submission process document in writing what the prior sales conversations included. It is somewhat risky to introduce new concepts, thinking or data that has not been covered previously. To do so runs the risk of having the prospect come up with a whole series of new questions, and possibly objections since your proposal included information that was new. You’ll have to cover meaning and content through solid communication anyway. So doesn’t it make more sense to cover and clarify subject matter before these become committed to a written document. Incidentally, I prefer short proposals which contain little marketing and sales information in the body. Rather, these can be placed in an addendum section, or at the beginning of an elaborate proposal in an Executive Summary section. The point is spot where you are in the closing sequence and gauge your proposal to the appropriateness of the situation. Remember, a request for a proposal can be the opportunity to do a pre-proposal proposal where you go over the content, findings of your survey, justification and investment figures, terms, conditions and contractual matters. It provides you a chance to validate previously gathered data as well as validate you and the prospect have not left anything out that may be crucial in the final proposal. Certainly that is the chance to flesh out all is on track with your strategy and the way you have read the account before committing to an elaborate document. In case you are wondering about the prospect who bought the fur coat for his wife, well he felt badly because he could see the level of effort that was put into the proposal and knew he would have to give me bad news. A simple rough estimate of costs or even a pricing letter would have been sufficient in this sales scenario. Had I understood the pre-proposal concept before the sales campaign, it would have saved me an enormous amount of personal time and energy. It also would have saved the embarrassment when my sales manager asked when we would receive the signed agreement.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Grow Your Wealth With Your Own Online Piggy Banks Digital Signage Growth to Propel Marketers into Orbit Public Relations for Space Tourists
|