What
Is The Difference Between What Customers Need And What They
Really Want?
by Bill
Brooks, The Brooks
Group
A widely
held belief is that people buy products or services. There is
also an even more widely held misconception that people buy what
they Need. The real truth is that people buy the end result that
they Want rather than the product or service they may Need.
There is also a big difference between a salesperson being Needs
based and Needs obsessed!
To put it
differently, people will eagerly buy what they Need from the
salesperson or organization who understands what they really
Want. As the old adage puts it, a lot more beer is sold than
Bibles! There are also a lot more sugar-coated cookies consumed
than bran muffins. A
lot of 4-wheel drive vehicles are sold in West Texas. A place where people certainly don’t “Need” 4-wheel
drives…they just Want them.
Let me ask you
a perplexing question. One that lots of people have difficulty
answering. And here it is: What is the real difference between
what a prospect Needs and what that person Wants?
In observing
over 7,000 sales interactions, we discovered that prospects
actually verbalized what they wanted less than .01% of the time.
The reason for it is simple. Most people don’t know what they
Want.
Here’s why.
Wants are below the surface while Needs are above the surface. I
know I Need a new car. However, I will ultimately buy the one I
Want! The feeling or emotion behind owning it is what I Want.
Needs are totally rational while Wants are purely emotional.
Needs are based on fact while Wants are grounded on perception.
Needs are product or service specific while Wants have very
little, if anything, to do with the product or service being
offered.
A few good
questions about what customers really Want…
-
Do prospects like small talk?
Fact:
Over 74% of customers dislike unsolicited small talk by
salespeople.
Prospect Want: “We’ll talk if I want to.”

-
Will prospects
tell you they don’t want to engage in small talk?
Fact:
Less than 0.8% will tell you that it bothers them.
Prospect
Want: “I won’t tell you I don’t like you. I just won’t
buy.”

-
Do customers
trust salespeople?
Fact:
64% of all buyers say they don’t trust any of the salespeople
they’ve bought something from in the previous 24 month period.
Prospect
Want: “Salespeople I can trust.”

-
Should
salespeople change their title to “consultant” or
“advisor?”
Fact:
72% of prospects perceive words like “consultant” or
“advisor” to be slick or manipulative.
Prospect
Want: “Straightforward, professional salespeople.”
-
What do
prospects remember?
Fact:
When the average decision-maker doesn’t buy, he or she
remembers fewer than 10 words (verbatim) spoken by a salesperson
doing a presentation.
Prospect
Want: “Give me a presentation I can understand.”

-
How persistent should you be?
Fact: 74% of decision-makers feel that persistence is not an
admirable trait for salespeople.
Prospect
Want: “Leave me alone. I’ll buy from you when and if I want
to.”

-
How “data
dense” are most sales presentations?
Fact:
The average salesperson presents 6-8 features or benefits in a
sales presentation. Twenty-four hours later the average prospect
remembers one. In 39% of the cases they remember it incorrectly.
In 49% of the cases they remember something that wasn’t
mentioned at all!
Prospect
Want: “A product that does what I want it to do, explained in
my terms.”
What does
all this mean? Quite simply this: prospects and customers are
far different from the way that most salespeople traditionally
perceive them as being. The secret is to make prospects feel
good and then to be there when they feel so good that they’ll
buy! When they feel like that they’ll buy again and again.
What kind of
person talks too much?
Our survey of
1,311 decision-makers revealed one, singular answer. It was
simple and straightforward: salespeople! The solution to this is
simple. Talk less, ask more questions. Sell people what they
Want…offer them what they Need. And, as Frank Bettger wrote so
well in 1949, “They will move heaven and earth to get it.”
©2000
Bill Brooks, The Brooks Group, Greensboro, NC
For almost two
decades Bill Brooks has been one of America’s most in-demand
sales speakers. The
reason behind Bill’s tremendous popularity is that he has
successfully accomplished what other sales speakers merely talk
about. He enjoys
real-world, legitimate sales success, executive experience,
in-depth topic expertise, academic preparation, as well as the
highest speaking and consulting accreditations.
Bill is author of over 100 video and 200 audio programs,
and 9 books. He has
hosted over 300 satellite television shows.
For more information about Bill Brooks’ speaking,
training and consulting services; or learning tools, call
800-633-7762 or e-mail sales@thebrooksgroup.com
or visit his website at www.brooksgroup.com.
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