There’s a statistic out there that buyers have, on average, progressed 57% through their buying process before they engage a salesperson. That "average" piece seems to have been lost, and a commonly held-belief now is that this 57% is a fact in all cases.
How you act before and after "the 57%" is a matter of choice, not a function of averages. Buyers buy different things, and sellers sell differently. You get to choose. But first, let’s explore the differences.
As we researched this topic, we spoke to many of our great customers to see what they had observed. Here’s their buyer’s point of view:
As evident from these examples, there is a lot of variability in how buyers need to engage before buy, so let’s look about how you might deconstruct that.
If you engage early with the buyers in their buying cycle you will be more successful. Being a buyer isn’t as easy as it might seem. Understanding and articulating their own needs and then finding the best solution can be a stressful exercise. The greater the organizational impact, the more stressful it gets. Buyers need help.
The two axes on this graph are cost and intellectual property (IP) intensity. As they increase, so does organizational impact. Buyers then need help in establishing criteria, evaluating options, and choosing a solution. The engaged salesperson can create value for their customer and gain more control of the deal.
There are also two other factors that matter: risk and frequency. Organizational risk is higher when choosing a CRM system than it is when buying copier paper. The buyer performs greater diligence and needs more guidance. Also, greater frequency translates to greater familiarity and less need for help. I buy copier paper more often than I buy a temperature control system so I know how to make the copier paper purchase on my own.
In the chart above you can see in the top right quadrant, our buyer is more likely to engage the supplier early, because a business process infrastructure project is usually high cost, contains a lot of IP value and a bad decision carries significant risk.
Conversely, there is less IP value in purchasing utilities (e.g. electricity). The difference when buying office equipment is even more striking; cost, IP. and risk are typically low and frequency is high, so buyers are less likely to need a seller to guide them.
Here’s the thing: If your solutions don't fit into the bottom left quadrant, your buyers likely want to engage with you (or your your competitor) much earlier in their process, and there are many things you can do to influence the outcome.
Author of Amazon #1 Best-seller Account Planning in Salesforce, Donal Daly is CEO and Founder of (his fifth global business enterprise) The TAS Group, the global leader in Smart Sales Transformation. Combining his expertise in enterprise software applications, artificial intelligence, and sales methodology, he continues to revolutionize the sales effectiveness industry. Feel free to download The TAS Group's latest publication, Battling the 57%: Deconstructing the Buyer Seller Dance.
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