building a value propostion

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From Walking Catalogue To Trusted Adviso Professionalising The Sales Function Building A Value Proposition Presented By: Peter Gilbert

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Page 1: Building A Value Propostion

From Walking Catalogue To Trusted AdvisorFrom Walking Catalogue To Trusted Advisor

Professionalising The Sales Function

Building A Value Proposition

Presented By:

Peter Gilbert

Page 2: Building A Value Propostion

Brain Break 1: Brain Break 1:

The Fire Hydrant

Page 3: Building A Value Propostion

Program OutcomesProgram Outcomes

This workshop will equip you with some of the insights and tools , required to become a trusted advisor by: Providing insight into the

customer’s key business issues Asking high impact questions to

clarify the scope of each issue Focusing on the relevant business

drivers Communicating the value of your

solution

Page 4: Building A Value Propostion

AgendaAgenda

1 The evolution of selling & the forces driving change

2Understanding business drivers and their relevance to building value propositions

3Building your first value proposition--- “The elevator pitch”

4 Building more complex value propositions

5 Creativity in building value propositions

Page 5: Building A Value Propostion

The Changing Sales EnvironmentThe Changing Sales Environment

The Changing Sales Environment

Page 6: Building A Value Propostion

What are the market forces that are driving radical change in

business to business buying / selling relations?

What are the market forces that are driving radical change in

business to business buying / selling relations?

Page 7: Building A Value Propostion

What’s Driving Change?What’s Driving Change?

The usual suspects

Commoditisation Competition Pricing pressure Capacity excess High selling costs Mergers & acquisitions

The usual suspects

Commoditisation Competition Pricing pressure Capacity excess High selling costs Mergers & acquisitions

. . and some newer ones

The internet Consolidation of

suppliers Continuous

improvement instead of the RFP process

. . and some newer ones

The internet Consolidation of

suppliers Continuous

improvement instead of the RFP process

Page 8: Building A Value Propostion

Four acquisition mega-trendsFour acquisition mega-trends

supplier consolidation increased

sophistication: new supplier

segmentations

total lifetime cost concept

superior economics of continuous

improvement over RFP

Page 9: Building A Value Propostion

Consequences of purchasing trends

superior economics of continuous

improvement over RFP

total lifetime cost concept

increased sophistication: new supplier segmentation

supplier consolidation

enterprise commitment/action required – not just

sales team

business chain value – not just

solutions

customers box you in

higher stakes: “all or

nothing”

Page 10: Building A Value Propostion

How do trends like these change the way that

customers acquire products and services?

How do trends like these change the way that

customers acquire products and services?

Page 11: Building A Value Propostion

Leveragesize

Partner

Shop around

Managerisk

Strategic or cost

importance of supplier’s product

Hi

Lo HiDifficulty of substitution

or of obtaining alternatives

Supplier Segmentation Matrix

Page 12: Building A Value Propostion

What These Purchasing Trends MeanWhat These Purchasing Trends Mean

even complex services will be increasingly commoditised and bought transactionally

customers are becoming ever smarter and more aggressive about capturing a bigger share of the value their suppliers create

relationships that seemed protected and locked-in are being questioned and are under threat

metrics driven, continuous improvement relationships have the best chance of resisting the new purchasing pressures

new enterprise relationships are supplanting traditional major account relationships

Page 13: Building A Value Propostion

Brain Break 2: Brain Break 2:

The Alsatian Syndrome

Page 14: Building A Value Propostion

Pick Your Battlefield CarefullyPick Your Battlefield Carefully

Where you and your organisation choose to fight your sales battle, will have a profound effect on the form, structure and nature of your value

proposition.

Page 15: Building A Value Propostion

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Entry

CommodityValue

Solution Value

BusinessValue

Time

Level 4StrategicValue

Sales - Return on InvestmentSales - Return on Investment

Productivity

Low

High

Page 16: Building A Value Propostion

Selling LevelsSelling Levels

Level 1 Level 2 Level 3

Focus

Orientation

Political

Finance

Relationships

Level 4

Event Process System Outcome

Transaction SolutionValue /

InnovationRelationship / Partnership

Ignorant Aware Agile Astute

Price Cost of OwnershipReturn on Investment

BusinessValue

Operations(Transaction)

Management(Trust)

Executive(Political)

Business(Partner)

Make the list

Make the sale

Make the Rules

Set the StandardEngagement

Status Considered Competitive Preferred Dominant

Page 17: Building A Value Propostion

AnalysingResults

Project Implementation

Select SuppliersNegotiate Contracts

Prove theConcept

Evaluate & Shortlist Products/Suppliers

Initiate a Project

Forming Corporate Initiatives

Corporate PlanningAssess Problems /

Opportunities

IdentifySuppliers

TrackingResults

Vendor

Problem Solver

Strategic Resource

Solution Provider

Relationships & Role in the Decision Process

Page 18: Building A Value Propostion

What Is A Business Driver?What Is A Business Driver?

A business driver is any source of pressure (either a problem or an

opportunity), that is impacting on an executive and/or the company, and

creating a need for change.

Page 19: Building A Value Propostion

The Customer’s Business DriversThe Customer’s Business Drivers

FinancialPressure

OperationalPressure

Customers

CompetitionBusiness Partners

Suppliers

Making, Selling, Delivering Products Right Skill Mix? Reorganise Regulatory

“Nightmare Competitors”

Niche Players Potential Threats

Militant customers Satisfied Customers Delighted Customers Loyal Customers Retain Customer Base Grow the Customer Base

Revenue Cost Metrics of Industry Shareholder Equity Financial Analysts

Sell With Sell Through Impact “Co-opetition”

Quality JIT One Stop Shopping Share Information Problem suppliers

Business Unit

Executive

Page 20: Building A Value Propostion

The Compelling Reason to BuyThe Compelling Reason to Buy

Analysing the customer’s business drivers Why does the customer have to act? Something that matters to someone with influence? What is the deadline for the customer to make a decision? What will be the measurable impact on the customer’s business?

BusinessInitiatives

Business Drivers

Business Profile Critical Success Factors

Consequences Payback

Problems Opportunities

How customers define and prioritise their “needs”

Compellingreason to Buy

Page 21: Building A Value Propostion

The Value PropositionThe Value Proposition

Defines your unique business value

Specific to the customer

Creates a specific or measurable business outcome

Sets the customer’s expectations

Assures your ability to deliver

Solution

BusinessProfile

BusinessDrivers

BusinessInitiatives

Capabilities SolutionDifferen-

tiation

UniqueBusiness

Value

Page 22: Building A Value Propostion

Critical Success FactorsCritical Success Factors

BusinessInitiatives

Business Drivers

Business Profile

CSFs

Business Initiatives

Business initiatives are the projects, programs, or plans that address the business drivers.

CSFs

CSFs are things that must happen or resources that must be in place to ensure the success of the initiative.

Page 23: Building A Value Propostion

Understanding the Customer’s BusinessUnderstanding the Customer’s Business

Business Drivers

BusinessInitiatives

Business Drivers

Business Profile

CSFs

Business drivers are the internal and external pressures that create the need for change.

Business Initiatives

Business initiatives are the projects, programs, or plans that address the business drivers.

CSFs

CSFs are things that must happen or resources that must be in place to ensure the success of the initiative.

Compelling Reason to Buy‘Selling Event’

Compelling situations that cause the customer to make a decision or a change in their current situation.

Page 24: Building A Value Propostion

Examples of Business Drivers, Initiatives and CSFs

Examples of Business Drivers, Initiatives and CSFs

Example 1 Example 2

BusinessDrivers

Initiatives

CriticalSuccessFactors

Customer satisfaction metrics falling

Losing customers

Repeat sales to customer base are slowing

Train employees to deliver higher levels of services

Customer involvement in design of new services

Web-based Premier Service Plan

• Re-engineer service offerings and introduce Premier Service Plan

Opportunities exist to double branded goods exports to East Africa during the next year

Customers demand quality products and competitors are gearing up to take advantage

Understand quality, logistical and legislative requirements

Overcome the logistical / manufacturing capacity constraints

Develop brand awareness in East African markets by mid-year

• The Integrated Export Initiative

Page 25: Building A Value Propostion

Brain Break 3: Brain Break 3:

It Is Better To Be Wrong Than To Be Confused!!

Page 26: Building A Value Propostion

§ You will be able to ______________ resulting in _____________________

by implementing our _____________________. We delivered similar

results at ____________________ which resulted in __________________.

§ By changing from _________________ to ________________, you will

affect __________ which means ____________________. We will track the

value delivered by _______________ and report it back to you _________.

§ We can help you address __________________________ by installing

_________________ which will result in ____________________________.

We will insure your return on investment by ________________________.

business initiative specific or measurable outcome

solution

similar situation or customer past value delivered

current situation our solution

business driver specific or measurable outcome

value tracking system frequency/time

compelling event

solution specific or measurable outcome

shared risk/reward strategy

Value Proposition Formats

Page 27: Building A Value Propostion

Constructing Your Value PropositionConstructing Your Value Proposition

Customer Business Driver

Your Capability

Mutual ValueBusiness InitiativeCritical Success Factors

Unique SolutionProducts Services

ProcessesPeople

Page 28: Building A Value Propostion

©2002 Consiliat Marketing. All rights reserved. Using Consultative Selling Skills

Business and Personal Value Business and Personal Value

When you can combine business value for the customer with personal value for the individual, you create competitive advantage.

Page 29: Building A Value Propostion

Asking High-Impact QuestionsAsking High-Impact Questions

High-impact questions serve two purposes. You will use them to:

Uncover the customer’s business or personal views of theirImplied Needs and Preconceived Solutions

Deepen the customer’s view to explore Underlying Needs and Potential Solutions

Purpose: Conduct a dialogue that yields information that cannot easily be

obtained through other means

Validate your perceptions, while demonstrating expertise

Reshape the customer’s thinking of both the issue and the solution

Expose underlying priorities and issues that reveal Underlying Needs

Page 30: Building A Value Propostion

Step 1Identify clear and indisputable market trends or business drivers: that currently have or have the potential to have an effect on your Customer’s way of doing business. The better you can prioritise the trends or business drivers according to the business significance of their impact, the more attention your solution will command.

 

Currently, you’ve been experiencing:

Step 2Articulate the resulting impact of the trend / business driver on the second line of the Value Proposition template:Once you have identified and prioritised trends / drivers, analysis will yield the probable areas within your Customer’s organisation that are or will soon be feeling the pain, or will be prime for being held accountable for new unfolding opportunities. The more individuals and functions that can be uncovered, the broader the scope of your Value Proposition, the greater its receptivity. Articulate the resulting impact of the trend or driver on the second line of the Value Proposition template. If you identify a wider audience, you may decide to have a number of different versions of the same Value Proposition for these different targeted individuals.

which causes:

Value Proposition – Templates & Guidelines

Guidelines Template High Impact Questions

Articulate the resulting impact of the trend / business driver on the second line of the Value

Proposition template.

If you identify a wider audience, you may decide to have a number of different versions of the same Value Proposition for these different targeted individuals.

The ABC industry is fiercely competitive and highly commoditised. Is this causing managers and share holders major concern?

Your ROCE is significantly lower than major industry players. Why is this?

This must be placing great strain on your sales organisation? Do they have the skills and resources to sell at higher margins?

Is this causing higher levels of staff churn?

Do you have the calibre of sales management to respond appropriately to this situation?

Page 31: Building A Value Propostion

Step 3

Reduce the above thinking into a Business Driver , Potential Initiative and CSF for the Customer:

Please note that one business driver or industry trend may spawn different potential initiatives and CSFs for different functions and/or business units within your Customer’s organisation. Be sure to select a Driver /Initiative / CSF that represents a key area of activity in which favourable results are absolutely necessary for your Customer to achieve its business goals. The more pertinent your CSF to your customer, the more compelling your Value Proposition. On line three, specifically state that you will address the selected Drivers and CSF, and describe the success that can be expected. Your Value Proposition should contain a total business solution involving multiple areas and facets of the Customer’s environment to which we will contribute. Account interventions, therefore, will be larger and will take full advantage of your combined expertise, thereby decreasing the likelihood of duplication by a competitor.

 

You will be able:

Value Proposition – Templates & Guidelines

High Impact QuestionsGuidelines Template

Do you have the tools and skills to make the transition from vendor to solution provider?

Does management understand the difficulties of making this transition?

What improvements in margins might be possible, if you make this change successfully?

What are the risks of failure?

Page 32: Building A Value Propostion

Step 4Calculate the probable results of your solution on this line.

Remember, a Value Proposition is to be co-developed with your Account, but it often works best if you present an estimated number initially. This will increase your credibility as you relate real results from a similar solution being applied to other companies. Also, be prepared to ask your client the right questions. It is important to solicit and secure your customer’s involvement as early as possible in the sales cycle

 

which would yeld:

Step 5List your total pricing on this line.

You may elect to drop a footnote to itemise the different components of your solution if deemed appropriate. Note, however, that if you break your solution into smaller components, your client may be tempted to un-bundle your solution and shop its individual components out to the lowest competitive bidder.

for:

Value Proposition – Templates & Guidelines

High Impact QuestionsGuidelines Template

Did you know that the successful solution providers are achieving 20-40% price premiums over their competitors?

Are you aware that companies who fail to execute this type of change successfully, suffer a significant negative ROI and lost credibility?

Initiatives of this nature typically cost around R100k per thousand employees, an ROI of 50% or better would be quite feasible. Would this be attractive?

Page 33: Building A Value Propostion

Step 6The time frame is listed on this line. Care should be given to how you represent your time scales. Accelerating your time may give you advantage over a competitor who may not be able or willing to move at your speed.

 

within:

Value Proposition – Templates & Guidelines

Guidelines Template High Impact Questions

Step 7On this line, state as succinctly as possible, exactly what you are asking the customer to buy. Make sure to differentiate from your competitors in your description. The client must be able to easily describe what he/she is recommending that his/her company buy.

 

as a result of:

Step 8Ensure that you can translate time from line six into – either loss costs (Consequences) or opportunity costs. This will prevent “slippage” in your forecast. This important line item allows your ally to move forward aggressively in championing your solution.

 

This business issue is currently costing:

If it was possible to complete a pilot project and see a positive ROI within 6 months, would it make economic sense?

We could have an experienced team in place within 2 weeks and a complete installation completed within 4 weeks. Do you have the resources to absorb this type of change?

Would it be possible for your HR and finance people to give us a detailed breakdown of staff churn for the last 2 years?

Page 34: Building A Value Propostion

Step 9

Reduce the above thinking into an Economic Benefit for the Customer:

If done well, this final line may enable you to enact a performance bond or contingency fee pricing structure. If all the variables that will dictate your project’s success can be identified and weighted, it may be possible to raise a “barrier of entry” to your would-be competitors. Illustrating that you will take your profit from the Customer’s resulting incremental profit (that you will assist them in realising) is always well received. Should you choose this type of approach, you are justified in elevating your fees to accommodate the risk you will be absorbing. Even if you do not elect to do any risk-reward sharing, a results tracking approach will give your client a sense of confidence to move forward with the project.

 

We will measure the results by:

Value Proposition – Templates & Guidelines

Guidelines Template High Impact Questions

If we were able to reduce staff churn by 30% in year 1, what would the impact on your organisation be?

Page 35: Building A Value Propostion

Brain Break 4: Brain Break 4:

Never EVER Apologise To A Customer!

A simple “sorry” would suffice

Page 36: Building A Value Propostion

Consultative QuestioningConsultative Questioning

Situational

Issue

Consequence

Value

What’s wrong / What needs to be done?

So what?

How much?

What is the situation / How do you handle this?

Page 37: Building A Value Propostion

Provide Context – Get the Discussion Going Provide Context – Get the Discussion Going

Which cost issues will you be addressing with this initiative? Which of the following two issues are the most important…..? Who will you be looking to compete with in the new market sectors? How many contractors are involved? How do you feel about growth prospects for next year? How ready are you to raise the bar against the competition? What is your opinion on import substitution? Which non-core assets do you plan to dispose of this year? Once you have divested your non-core operations, where will you look for growth?

Situation Questions

Ask open ended questions to get the discussion going

Remember The Four Cs -

Customers / Competitors / Commercial / Channels

Examples:

Page 38: Building A Value Propostion

Establish the Issue – What’s wrong?Establish the Issue – What’s wrong?

What are the major challenges in executing your strategy?

What opportunities look most attractive?

How are these challenges impacting you?

Where do you need to improve?

What effect will ………………have on your business?

Why isn’t it working as you’d like it?

How are you going to protect and grow your margins?

What’s keeping you awake at night?

What’s preventing you from being more cost effective?

Issue Questions

Examples:

Page 39: Building A Value Propostion

Exploring the Consequences – So What?Exploring the Consequences – So What?

Why is this a problem?

What will happen if you don’t solve it?

What is this issue costing you?

How difficult would it be to solve the problem with internal resources?

What’s the worst that could happen?

If you don’t solve it, how will it affect your performance?

If you don’t act what do you stand to lose?

What do you gain by addressing this issue?

Consequence Questions

Examples:

Page 40: Building A Value Propostion

Determine the Value – How much?Determine the Value – How much?

How much would it help?

How would this approach make it easier for you?

How much would that save you?

Can you quantify the payback on this opportunity?

How would you assess each of these options?

Which of these potential solutions would have the greatest impact? Least Impact?

What does this option do for you that the others don’t?

Value Questions

Examples:

Page 41: Building A Value Propostion

ANY QUESTIONS???ANY QUESTIONS???