Why ‘Thank You’ Beats ‘Yes’ In Strategic Selling

Strategic selling is about collaboratively finding ways to solve others’ problems. This is materially different than convincing prospects to buy what you’re selling. Successful closes of those sales happen when prospects say ‘Yes’ to what you’re selling. Successful closes of strategic sales happen when others say “Thank you” for your help in solving their problems – whether it’s your solution or someone else’s.

Let’s back up to Bryan Smith’s persuasion framework from The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook:

 

Selling is reasonably straightforward. You’re right. Your prospect is persuaded and is happy to be persuaded. There is nothing wrong with normal selling. It is a perfectly acceptable and valuable method of persuasion.

Strategic selling is different. Done right, it’s a combination of co-creation, consulting, testing and selling. It requires you to:

 

  • Think and act like a co-creating partner – in it together to solve the other’s problem. One of the inherent assumptions here is that the other has a problem that needs to be solved or an opportunity they need help taking advantage of. Partners help each other in need. They don’t sell unneeded things.
  • Be open to any possible solution from any possible source. If you really care about the people you’re pretending to serve, you have to put their needs ahead of your own. Remember Macy’s Santa Claus in Miracle on 34th Street sending Macy’s customers across the street to Gimbals for better deals. Partners are open to any solution. They don’t just sell their own products or services.
  • Utilize two-way conversations, not presentations. Partners are interested in their partners’ circumstances, hopes, needs, and ideas.

 

People say “Yes” when they are persuaded. People say “Thank You” when they feel encouraged and valued.

Let’s relook at the basic steps of strategic selling with that in mind, adapted from some of the ideas in Miller and Heiman’s book, “The New Strategic Selling

 

1.        Set the single strategic selling objective

Start with one single, specific, measurable, time-lined, outcome-focused objective. In strategic selling, this should be other-focused, leading with the problem you’re trying to help them solve or the opportunity they can take advantage of.

2.        Identify the decision-making influences involved

  • Economic decision-makers give final approval.
  • Users use the product or service and their success is tied to it so they focus on impact.
  • Technical decision-makers screen out options.
  • Coaches help navigate the organization and identify other decision-making influences.

 

Note while some can say “Yes” or “No,” all can say “Thank you.” Further, those whose mindset is:

 

  • “Growth,” want to make things even better.
  • “Trouble,” see problems that must be solved to survive.
  • “Even keel” think things are fine as is (and are hard to influence.)
  • “Overconfident” think things are fine (and are hard to influence now.)

 

Generally, they all seek business results (good for the organization) and personal wins (good for them personally.) But, watch out for missing pieces of information, uncertainty about information, any uncontacted influencer, influencers new to the job, reorganizations.

 

3.        Develop a strategic selling strategy

This is about getting the right people in front of the right influencers and decision-makers with the right message and information at the right places at the right time over time. The key to this is spending time and resources with people you can best help and not with those others can help better than you can.

 

4.        Outline the proposition

Lay out the positioning, communication and the framework for your solution.

 

5.        Discuss the proposition

Test and consult with influencers and decision-makers to improve the proposition together.

 

6.        Propose the solution

Marry your collective final proposition with decision-makers’ specific needs and mindset.

 

7.        Close and follow up

The key tactical difference between selling and strategic selling is in steps 4-7. Where selling is about getting to “Yes.” This variation of strategic selling is about listening carefully to come up with your current best thinking as the proposition in step 4 and then iterating together to build momentum leading to the best solution for them, resulting in a “Thank you” for your help, no matter which product or solution ends up being best.

Read More Articles

Why You Should Have More, Not Fewer Meetings | Meeting Effectiveness for Leaders

Meeting effectiveness is not about having fewer meetings. It is about having the right meetings, with the right people, for the right reasons, done in the right way. When leaders…

Read Article
The Artistry in Communication: Where Leadership Comes Alive

Executive communication is often taught as a process of alignment — aligning messages with culture, strategy, operations, and tactical missions. That’s necessary but not sufficient. The artistry lies not in…

Read Article
How Mission Briefs Accelerate Progress by Clarifying Direction, Resources, Authority, and Follow-Through
How Mission Briefs Accelerate Progress by Clarifying Direction, Resources, Authority, and Follow-Through

Teams fail when direction is fuzzy, resources are ambiguous, or authority is blurred. Too often, leaders assign tasks without enough context for teams to make smart, independent decisions. The result?…

Read Article
High Stakes Landmines for Technology Executives

By Jeff Scott with George Bradt High-stakes onboarding landmines are everywhere for new technology executives, but few are as deadly—and as fixable—as a misaligned role. Being the right technology leader…

Read Article
Preparing For The Next Point Of Inflection With Contingency And Capability Plans

The next point of inflection is coming whether you’re ready for it or not. Your success as a leader doesn’t hinge on your ability to predict the future, but on…

Read Article
The Baked Ziti Approach To Making The Implicit Explicit

Sometimes it’s best to hint at things implicitly so others can interpret as they see best. Sometimes it’s best to explain things explicitly so others can follow precise directions. And…

Read Article