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Imagine this scenario. You are a sales
representative for Baker distributing. One of your
long-time customers, Albertson Metals, operates a mill
that produces high nickel alloy ingots. Each year, this
mill purchases approximately $500,000 worth of MRO
products such as bar conditioning wheels, flap wheels,
grinding belts, cutoff wheels, steel shot and grit, and
other products for the mills laboratories.
Unfortunately, you are usually able to obtain only about
30% of this business.
During the last six months, you have been
working intensively with the mills management to
convince them of the value of developing an integrated
supply arrangement with you. They have reacted positively
to your ideas and you have developed a proposal that you
believe fits their needs perfectly. Among other things,
you will:
- manage Albertsons inventory.
- stock all items with sufficient buffer
stock to assure JIT availability.
- supply Albertson with OSHA-certified
safety seminars on appropriate topics to be
mutually agreed upon.
- provide 24 hour emergency delivery.
- invoice biweekly for items drawn from
consignment.
You have submitted your proposal at a price
that you believe fairly compensates you for your high
level of service and for the special features included.
A week later you call the plant and are told,
"We got your proposal and its excellent.
However, we have to refer anything of this magnitude to
Corporate Purchasing." You call the Purchasing
Department and speak to the buyer responsible for this
contract. He says, "Youve submitted an
excellent proposal, and obviously you have done your
homework. Unfortunately, we have something of an
embarrassment of riches here. Two of your competitors
also submitted excellent proposals. You should be aware
that your pricing is extremely high compared to your
competitors. As a result, at this time your proposal
really is not competitive."
You explain to the buyer how youve
worked with the plant for the last six months to develop
this proposal. You discuss at length your excellent
service record and how you have gone the extra mile to
meet the plants needs. The buyer acknowledges this
but says, "Your competitors also have excellent
service records but are willing to meet our needs at a
much lower cost."
Did you see this coming? You worked hard to
meet your customers needs. You solved problems with
your customer. You anticipated a win/win for everybody.
Your goal was to avoid a price negotiation by
differentiating yourself and focusing on your services
and your added value to the customer. Now, at the last
minute, price rears its ugly head. In fact, the
purchasing agent says that price is the determining
factor.
What do you do now? What should you have done
throughout the sales process to prepare for the
possibility of a serious price negotiation?
In our sales negotiation training programs we stress four key steps that will greatly
improve your chances of making that sale while
successfully negotiating to maintain your margins.
1. Be prepared for a
price negotiation but dont lead with your
wallet.
2. Think like the
buyer.
3. Be brutally
honest with yourself as to what your added value is
really worth.
4. Be aware that the
negotiation starts when you say hello.
Lets look at each step.
1. Be prepared for a price negotiation but dont lead with your wallet. As buying
organizations have become more sophisticated, many
realize that the key factor is not price but total cost.
Therefore, it is sometimes possible to avoid price
negotiations if the customer sees enough value. We know
of one manufacturer who was approached by an automobile
company to take over production of certain parts because
their current supplier was not meeting expectations. The
manufacturer called in its machine tool distributor with
whom they had had a very good relationship. They said to
the machine tool distributor, "We promised the
automobile manufacturer that we could do it. Now
its up to you to make it happen. Were not
here to negotiate the price just make it
work." The distributor sold $10 million worth of
machine tools at list price, including a full turnkey
operation and the placement of a full time technician at
the manufacturers location.
Theres a lesson to be learned: If you
think there is a possibility that you can make the sale
based on your added value and services, try to leave
price out of the discussion. Dont start with price
concessions or discounts but focus on the added value.
On the other hand, with todays ferocious
pressures to reduce costs, buyers never forget that price
is an important component of cost. Usually, buyers will
want to have the best of both worlds. They want you to
solve their problems, add value, reduce their costs, and
in addition, give them a better price, which further
reduces their costs. Dont be surprised, dont
be shocked, and dont be hurt. Thats just the
way the game is often played. As you start the process,
you need to move forward in such a way that while you
dont invite a price negotiation, if there is one,
youre prepared.
2.Think like the buyer. To
negotiate effectively, take up residence in the
buyers mind. Say to yourself, what might actually
be going on vs. what theyre telling me? What they
say may be the least important information. What they say
to each other and what theyre thinking is the key.
Lets go back to Albertson. We could
imagine three different scenarios.
Scenario 1 Plant: "This
proposal from Baker is great. Were going to
save all kinds of costs and solve all kinds of
problems. I know they appear a little pricey, but the
cost savings are worth it." Purchasing:
"Have you looked at any competitors?"
Plant: "Weve looked at two who say they
can do it and have offered a much lower price, but
their services really arent there and we
dont believe they can produce the cost
savings." Purchasing: "Would you mind if I
use the fact that you got two competitive lower cost
quotes to try to bring Bakers price down?"
Plant: "No problem, as long as you promise that
we will get a contract with Baker without losing any
of the services and added value they have promised
us." Purchasing: "You have my
guarantee."
Scenario 2 Plant: "This
proposal from Baker is great. Were going to
save all kinds of costs and solve all kinds of
problems. I know they appear a little pricey, but the
cost savings are worth it." Purchasing:
"Have you looked at any competitors?"
Plant: "Weve looked at two other
competitors. Theyre almost as good as Baker and
they are cheaper." Purchasing: "How much
more do you think Baker is worth than the best of the
two competitors?" Plant: "We think
theyre worth about 10% more." Purchasing:
"O.K. Well try to get Baker down so that
theyre no more than 10% above your best
competitor, and of course well try to get them
even lower than that. If we cant get them down,
then well go with your No. 2 choice."
Plant: "Sounds good to me."
Scenario 3 Plant: This proposal
from Baker is great. Were going to save all
kinds of costs and solve all kinds of problems. I
know they appear a little pricey, but the cost
savings are worth it." Purchasing: "Have
you looked at any competitors?" Plant:
"Weve looked at two other competitors that
can do the same thing Baker can. They all appear to
have the same quality and would produce the same cost
savings." Purchasing: "Then you dont
care which one we go with as long as we get the best
price." Plant: "Yes, theyre basically
the same, so go with the best price."
The buyer will almost always want you to
believe that Scenario 3 is happening. But is it really?
The profitability of your sale may depend on your ability
to determine which scenario really is in operation.
3. Be brutally honest about the worth of your added value.
If it comes down to a price negotiation, your added value
is worth only what the buyer is actually willing to pay
for it. Say, for example, that the only difference
between you and your prime competitor is that you have a
better reputation in the marketplace. Is that of value?
Of course. Is it important? Absolutely. Is it worth
anything? That depends on the buyer. If a one buyer says,
Im willing to pay 2% more to go with Company A
because of their better reputation, then its worth
2% to that buyer. On the other hand, if another buyer
says, Im not willing to part with any hard, cold
cash because of Company As reputation, then for
that buyer it is not worth anything."
For each sale where you have one or more
potential competitors, you need to do a value-added
analysis in order to figure out the most the buyer would
pay you vs. your competitor. Lets make up a simple
example where you have just one competitor, Company A,
and lets assume there are just four different
components of value: service, reputation, delivery, and
problem solving ability.
Based on your knowledge of the customer and
the competition, you believe the customer thinks that you
have a better reputation, provide better service and have
better problem solving capabilities, but that your
competitor is a little better on delivery. Furthermore,
although your customer likes your reputation, they
wont pay more for it. They like your service and
feel thats worth up to 2% more. They believe that
your problem solving capability has helped them overcome
significant difficulties and that thats worth 4%
more. On the other hand, you have had some delivery
problems. While not fatal problems, the customer would be
willing to pay your competitor up to 2% more for their
better delivery.
Your value-added analysis sheet would look
like this:
Value
Added Item Vs. Company "A"
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The
Most Your Customer Would Pay Extra for That Added
Value
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| Reputation |
0%
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| Service |
2%
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| Problem
Solving |
4%
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| Delivery |
(-2%)
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Under this scenario, your customer would be
willing to pay you up to 4% more than your competitor. Of
course your customer will often say, as our Albertson
purchasing agent did, "You guys are all the same.
You all provide good quality except your delivery
isnt very good. Youve got to get much more
competitive with your pricing." If youve done
the value-added analysis and its accurate or
reasonably accurate, you can see behind the purchasing
agents mask to what is really going on.
4.The negotiation starts when you say hello.
At this point you may be saying, "Everything you say
is true but if Im the Baker sales representative
talking to the Albertson purchasing agent and he says to
me, Your competitors are lower and you have got to
cut your price, what do I do now? That purchasing
agent isnt going to tell me their real scenario,
what they said to each other, or what they really think
our added value is worth vs. our competitors."
Correct. If the first time you thought that
there might be a price negotiation was when you were
talking to the Albertson purchasing agent, its too
late. You dont have the information you need, and
its going to be difficult to get it.
And that takes us back to our first point. Be
prepared for a price negotiation while you try to avoid
one. The negotiation starts when you say hello. The time
to start finding out who potential competitors might be,
how your customer views them vs. you, the problems
theyve had with competitors, whether anybody can do
as good a job as you can, etc., etc., is from the very
beginning of your discussions with your customer.
Have as many contacts with your customer and
with as many people in your customers shop as
possible. Ask direct questions, indirect questions, feel
people out gently, and try to get a picture of their
whole situation.
Prepare vigorously for a price negotiation,
and at the same time do everything that you can to avoid
one.
© Michael Schatzki - 1998. All rights reserved
Byline
Michael Schatzki is a master negotiator
who, for over 20 years, has provided
negotiation training and coaching for
thousands of people in the U.S. and globally. More than 75% of Mike's
programs
are for satisfied, repeat customers. The Negotiation Dynamics® system
really works. Mike can be reached at (888) 766-3530 or at
www.negotiationdynamics.com.
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