A high-pressure sales approach often makes leads and prospects uncomfortable. Potential clients want to be courted without feeling the pressure from a persistent sales pitch. Sales expert Bob Burg believes “a low-pressure—even no-pressure—[sales] approach will ultimately result in far more sales (not to mention greater career satisfaction for its practitioners).” Furthermore, Edward C. Bursk, a former editor of Harvard Business Review, describes low-pressure selling as “not driving the prospect into a buying decision, but letting him reach the decision himself.”
This is difficult for salespeople, who often face quotas and have consider their commission and take-home pay. Balancing low-pressure pitches with a healthy career is important. Here are five ways to establish buy-in and close sales without making leads feel pressured or intimidated.
Your biggest competitive advantage comes from being able to fulfill your customers’ most important needs better than other vendors. Therefore, in order to maintain your competitive edge and have prospects organically choose you, be proactive about building the product or service your clients need and want.
As soon as you identify your customers’ most critical needs, leverage that feedback to profitably improve your products. Make this a regular business process.
Salespeople yield significant influence with product design, engineering, and marketing. Use your client-facing experience to help build a customer-centric brand that will naturally pull in buyers.
In sales, nearly half of all the leads you identify may be qualified customers who are not yet ready to buy. For shoppers who prefer to purchase at their own pace, email drip campaigns deliver the information they need in a timely manner to help prospects reach a favourable purchasing decision.
Using drip marketing, you can complement the buyer’s journey. This allows you to handhold customers through each stage of their decision-making process before finally pitching your services.
According to marketing strategist Janelle Johnson, there are six types of drip campaigns:
Regularly optimize the content and timing of each email. Over time, you will be able to develop a solid schedule for when you will deliver messages to leads and what to include each time.
To exhibit more traits that appeal to buyers, adopt a different role entirely. With prospects, act as a consultant instead of a sales representative, recommends sales manager Mark Stoddard. Work collaboratively with potential customers to identify what they actually need from the engagement. Stoddard says, “Once you learn to understand and diagnose the problems your prospects are facing, you can problem-solve together. The value of your product will be much more apparent to the prospect, sometimes without even a need for a pitch.”
Some brands accomplish this by leveraging content. Extend customers a helping hand by sharing tips or tools that empower them to be better at their jobs. Three categories of content to create are:
This serves as an initial touchpoint with prospects. Examples include:
Share educational content that will help prospects become more familiar with what your product or service is capable of doing for clients. Examples include:
3. Decision Content
At this stage, customers are almost ready to make their final decision about whether to purchase or pass. Let your content do the talking for you; in-depth materials work best. Examples include:
Some prospects need to see it to believe it. Propose a free trial that offers all the functionality the client needs to be completely swept off their feet. Make it either a time-sensitive offer in which the customer only has access to your product or service for a week or a month—just enough time to tinker around with your tools and extract enough value to make their purchasing decision a no-brainer. Alternatively, provide an access-limited account in which customers pay for premium features and upgrades. In this instance, select features would be free to users for a lifetime.
The Case for Free Trials
In a blog post, entrepreneur João Romão explains the three main reasons companies should offer free trials to leads and prospects.
Of course, the work does not stop when you acquire a free trial user. To turn trial users into paying customers, you need to teach them how to take full advantage of your tools. Activate your users by walking them through how to use your product or service and apply it to their business. Email and in-app messaging typically work best to engage users and get them onto your platform. Online marketing and conversion rate enthusiast Steven Macdonald outlines eight steps for converting free trial users into paying customers through email marketing.
The Soft Sell with Retargeting Ads
The most successful soft-sellers employ targeted ads to deliver content and information prospects need to progress through each stage of the sales cycle. With retargeting, brands guarantee that their ads will be viewed by audiences that recently interacted with their website.
Through the three main phases of the sales funnel, sales teams ought to promote different types of creatives that align with how far along buyers are in their decision making process.
Smart salespeople work closely with their colleagues in product to build apps, tools, and services customers actually need and want. They also team with marketers to craft and deliver email marketing campaigns. To close more contracts, successful sales reps collabourate with clients to problem-solve together and share advice and content to help prospects excel at their jobs. Using free trial offers, they bring buyers one step closer to purchasing. With retargeting, sales teams are able to remain top-of-mind, allowing buyers to discover new information at their own pace.
Ultimately, the best sales teams focus primarily on delivering happiness and value to potential clients who, organically, convert into loyal paying customers.