E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
Gillespie / Testani, Sr. / Ramakrishnan Lean for Sales
1. Auflage 2016
ISBN: 978-1-4822-5315-3
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Bringing the Science of Lean to the Art of Selling
E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-4822-5315-3
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
This groundbreaking book describes the Lean journey as it extends to a business area that is mission critical, yet has been virtually untouched by the Lean transformation. Lean for Sales: Bringing the Science of Lean to the Art of Selling provides sales professionals, and their management teams, with a structured, fact-based approach to boosting sales close rates and delivering improved business value to customers.
The time-tested Lean selling techniques described in this book have been proven to deliver profound results. In fact, it is not uncommon for sales close rates to see a threefold increase over current rates as a result of using the techniques described in this book. After reading the book, you will understand how to integrate the science of Lean with the art of sales to:
- Create winning sales proposals
- Use Lean selling storyboards to confirm what is truly valuable to your client and their business
- Improve sales team collaboration
- Define and qualify a client’s unique business problems and goals
- Manage sales process performance using a multi-dimensional measurement system that looks beyond sales revenue to include client value and process effectiveness
This book outlines an innovative and proven approach to creating a common language with your customers that is based on waste elimination, root cause analysis, and time to value. Making the management of the sales cycle fact-based, rather than leaving it to intuition, this Lean selling manual presents tools that will enable sales professionals, and their managers, to collect sales opportunity data early and discard those leads that will ultimately waste valuable time and resources.
Zielgruppe
Lean businesses with a sales function, small and large businesses, sales professionals, sales managers, marketing professionals, and customer relations professionals.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Traditional Sales versus Lean Selling
Art of Sales
Compelling Need for a Change in Today’s Selling Approach
Ill-Effects of the "Do Nothing" Syndrome
Traditional versus Lean Selling
Key Differences between Lean Selling and Traditional Selling
Science of Selling
Applying Lean to Sales—Fundamental Principles
Storyboarding
Time to Value
What Is Value; Lean Selling Principles
Value—A Sales Professional’s Favorite Word
Balancing the Art and Science of Selling—A Culture Change
Lean Selling Principle 1: The Principle of Collaborative Giving
Lean Selling Principle 2: Continuous Qualification to Test the Health of a Sales Project
Lean Selling Principle 3: Value Is Personal
Lean Selling Principle 4: All Sales Engagements Require a
Mixture of Art and Science
Lean Selling Principle 5: Documenting Your Customer Business Process
Enables Root Cause Identification
Lean Selling Principle 6: Aligning Your Product or Service to the Customer
Problem and Goal
Lean Selling Principle 7: Look Beyond Features, Functions, and Benefits: Capabilities, Outcomes, and Time to Value Are More Important
Challenges Created by the Digital Age—A New Service Model
Challenges with the Three-Layer Customer Services Model
The Lean Sales "Funnel" Framework Explained
Opportunity Analysis
Combining the Art of Selling with the Science of Lean-Getting Started
Reference
Client Capability Study and Identifying the Eight Deadly Forms of Lean Waste
Lean Wastes
Explanation of the Lean Wastes
Getting to the Root Cause of a Client’s Problem and Proposing the "To-Be" Process
The Cascade Effect and Lean Selling Balanced Scorecard
Understanding the Consequences of Lean Wastes—"The Cascade Effect"
Creating a Shared Understanding of the Consequences of Wastes—An Illustration
The Impacts of the Cascade Effect
Quantifying the Value—Building a Balanced Business Case
Gadget Company: Process Problems Identified and the Resulting Outcomes
Measuring the Business Impact of a Problem and Associated Lean Wastes
The Real Cost of Lean Waste (Building a Compelling Business Case)
A Balanced Business Case for a Proposed Solution
Conclusion and Time to Value Revisited
Reference
How to Build a Time to Value Proposition
Introduction—How Does All This Lean Work Help to Sell a Product?
Understanding the Client and Their Processes
Collaborative Selling
Documenting Time to Value
Applying Pareto Principle in Lean Selling
Expectation Management
Defining Value Using Lean Selling versus Traditional Sales—Reflection
Client Value Realization (A Conceptual Model)
Bringing It All Together with the Lean Selling Storyboard
Making the Final Value Proposition to the Client
The Need for Stakeholder Buy-in
Long Proposal versus a Short Storyboard
Lean Selling Storyboard Outline
Storyboarding Makes Decision Making Easier
Conclusion and a Call to Action