There is nothing better than helping a client through the provision of a service that you just know is going to help them. It is a case of all the interests being aligned. I remember watching the movie “In Good Company” (to be fair not a brilliant movie, but a great sales scene). In the movie, Denis Quaid is the senior salesperson teaching a young up-start how to sell. They get a really good sale and Denis seems very pleased because the customer has got a good deal. “You believe in this, don’t you?” asks the young up-start. “Of course, why else would you do it?” replies a slightly startled Denis. There is real truth in this and yet we all come across businesses and salespeople where you sense the objective is just to make money rather than seeing making money as a by-product of providing a really useful service that adds value. The business I have recently started up and am now focusing much of my attention on is www.springleads.com and I do not mean for this blog to come across as an advert for this business, but I want to use it to explain exactly what I mean by alignment.
My background is in sales and my career break came through my cold-calling efforts at PricewaterhouseCoopers. I was very good at it and went around the country training others across the firm on cold calling. It is something that I enjoy enormously and have a passion for. With all of the mentoring I have done recently, I know that the big issue many start-ups face is having to make many cold calls just to find the few customers that would be interested in talking to them. The most effective salesperson in a startup tends to be the CEO, and yet the most precious resource they have is their time. Cold-calling for them is not a good use of their time. www.springleads.com provides that service for them and for any other company that needs a large number of calls being made. So how did we set about differentiating between other call centres? Again through understanding the pain that start-ups have, we were able to realize that having a setup fee and a minimum order number of hours acted as a barrier to many cash-strapped start-ups. As such, we set up a cost structure where there would be no setup fee and a flat £15 per hour. Of course, this is a plug for the business, but I hope it illustrates that when you are starting a business, it is important that you have (or you rapidly acquire) knowledge about the problem you claim to be solving. The other lesson is that you have to make money from the activity whilst still providing an enhanced service. So your cost structure has to demonstrate not just the needs you have – but also the needs of your client. Ensure your personality and experience are aligned with your business and that most critically your business structure is aligned with the needs of your customers.
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