Price is the amount of money your customer pays for a product. Value is
what your customer perceives the benefits of that product to be, and
the emotional connection he/she has to the product, the employee, and
the company, in relation to the price.
How retail associates handle and present products to her/his customer
adds - or reduces - the perceived value. This is true whether the
products are drills, luggage, or diamond rings.
I've seen a salesperson treat a $40 product as if it was priced at
$500, and I've seen a salesperson treat a $500 product like it was worth
$40. Guess which salesperson sold more?
Here are some tips for increasing a product's value when showing/handing it to your customer:
1. Create anticipation.
Start talking about the
benefits, or the emotional connection, BEFORE you present the product.
Many of you do this naturally, but everyone can integrate it into the
sales experience.
"Let me show this piece" doesn't create anticipation.
"I have the perfect product for you" does create anticipation.
So does "You are going to love this one."
2. Don't just hand your customer a product; present it.
Methods
like using both hands to hand a customer the product, using an open
palm, or holding the product out in full presentation as you hand it to
him/her communicates how valuable and special the product is. The higher
the price point, the more flair you should add to the presentation.
3. Have every customer experience the product.
This
seems like it should be a given, but it doesn't always happen. It
doesn't happen because the salespeople don't instigate it. It's our job
to put it on the product, get them to turn it on, get them to try it
out, get them to push or pull it, or whatever experiencing the product
is. By experiencing a product, it substantially increases the product’s
value and the likelihood of the customer purchasing it.
4. Don't talk about features and benefits of the product. Let the customer experience them.
This
means not going into the specifics of the value until it is in the
customer's hands. Say a product has an ergonomically enhanced handle.
Don't talk about the handle. Have the customer use the handle and then
ask them if they feel difference. This is one area that even good
salespeople can improve in.
5. Turn these tips into action.
a. Pick one or two of these value-added actions that offer you most opportunity this week.
b. Practice/role-play your value-added action with your manager or a colleague before the start of your shift.
c. Have a colleague observe you with a customer, and then tell you
one or two things you did well in adding value, and one or two things
you might do even better next time.
d. At the end of your shift, share with your manager how you added
value to a customer's product and experience, and the result of doing
so.
Not only do I hope you add value to the products your customer is
looking at, I hope adding value adds a lot more to this week’s sales.
Have a great one.
- Doug
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Source;Business Insider
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