| Are Your Business Relationships Strong Enough to Survive in Hard Times? |
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By Ed Emde, Wilson Learning Whatever your industry, your customers are most likely delaying projects and looking for ways to cut costs. This is a good time to take stock of the relationship-building capabilities of your team. Are current relationships strong enough to withstand the destructive pressures of today’s tough economic environment? Do your salespeople know how to leverage personal assets and the assets of your company to “competitor proof” their customer relationships? To build enduring connections with customers requires two distinctive kinds of skills focused on two distinctive kinds of relationships. The Importance of “Little r” Relationships Even one or two little r relationships have value, but the real relationship benefit occurs when sales representatives develop a whole network of connections with the right people in the customer organization. With a wide range of contacts who view the sales representative as a trusted business partner, inside information will be shared, and contacts step up as champions, advocates, and coaches. The salesperson will receive advance notice of opportunities and get critical “heads up” notices when potential decisions could adversely affect a sale. On the flip side, if these relationships are weak, or have been allowed to erode through sub-par performance, they offer no protection against competitive encroachment. In the worst cases, where deadlines have been missed or customer concerns left unaddressed, a poor relationship can actually open the door to competitors. • Establish professional credibility. The Value of “Big R” Relationships For example, a company that provides its customers with complex high-tech solutions may be very concerned about the R&D direction and technical capabilities of the supplier of a critical component of their offering. Because Big R buyers have a long time horizon and higher risks, they want to understand the supplier’s marketing and product strategy, and they depend on the supplier’s stability. Though not every customer has the potential for developing a Big R relationship, your sales team needs to know how to identify these highly valuable customers, assess their potential, and establish the Big R relationship. This requires business acumen and gathering both internal and external information. Specifically, they must develop the capabilities needed to: • Fully understand the customer’s solutions. The next step is to know how to create alignment between the way these select customers are doing business and the way your company does business with them. The Bottom Line On the other hand, strong and enduring relationships are not dependent on product features others can duplicate or price cuts that can actually hurt the seller’s bottom line. Rather, both little r and Big R relationships offer a unique competitive advantage by delivering real business value deriving from the relationship itself rather than from a product or a price. The ability of a sales team to leverage interpersonal connections and corporate business alignment becomes the best and most reliable resource for maintaining current market share and driving growth, even in an unpredictable and chaotic economic environment. |





