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AI's CapEx Driven Endgame - A Shareholder Crash, Not an Economic Crisis

AI's CapEx Driven Endgame - A Shareholder Crash, Not an Economic Crisis Ian Harnett (Chief Investment Advisor of Absolute Strategy Rese...

Friday, October 15, 2021

Why B2B sales deals are refused

Winning and losing are part of any sales process. Every deal and opportunity enriches a sales professional's journey with insights and experience. Learning is a lifelong journey and we learn more from losing deals than winning. It’s important to reflect upon key reasons for refusal leveraging 2nd loop learning, even if we made a reasonable offer and catered for various factors in play. Frustration kicks in easily when negotiations in good faith backed up by a genuine offer fail, hence it requires a new approach to tackle and win. The key to winning is getting a handle on why stakeholders refuse a good or generous proposal. 

Following are the key reasons why deals are refused: 

No Closure was Proposed or Reached - The back and forth nature of negotiations often lead to numerous proposals to sweeten the deal. It is important to put a line in the sand and tell them what is the final proposal to close it, without drawing a closure line, you run on a risky slope and in the process setting up wrong expectations. 
Failure in providing a Good Purchase Experience No alt text provided for this image 

Didn’t give a Face Saver – it is important to give a face sever to the client because we don’t know who in their hierarchy has said what to their stakeholders for clinching a deal. 

Didn’t Respect their Restrictions – Need to respect clients' constraints and restrictions and show more flexibility in navigating around their environment. 

Couldn’t Justify or Articulate the Value - Sharing and telling a story around the value is important, even if the proposal is sound and covers all aspects.

What do you think, would like to learn from your experience and journey. Please do share your thoughts. #Sales #Advisory #Deal making #Negotiation

1st published on linkedin

Thursday, October 14, 2021

How Buyers are Disrupting the Sales Process

In my previous posts on the Impact of 2 Speed IT on  Innovation  Culture and Sourcing IT Delivery I have discussed how each aspect requires a different approach to be managed for better success and outcome. In the continuing series, today I would like to reflect upon how the sales process has been disrupted.

Technology has evolved over the years and with each evolution, it becomes a disruptive force in the marketplace. In the current environment, it is not just the technology that is rapidly disrupting the business model across the industries. What is intriguing is that it is the Customer who is disrupting the industry at a rapid pace.

In my view, customers are far more disruptive today than technology-driven disruption, because they are far more sophisticated and demanding, and understand what is happening in the technology space. In the past, they used to rely on advisory firms, vendors, and salespeople to educate them and share necessary information to make a decision. Today, buyers have confidence in their own research, information, and trusted networks. They are not averse to risk or lowering switching costs. Cloud-driven consumption model has made buyers more dynamic, fluid and customer-driven

Traditionally technology or IT sales have been relationship, business and provider-driven, with face-to-face interaction and primarily inside out. From a sales organisation perspective, when interaction with the buyer is initiated from an internal marketing team or sales team, it becomes inside out.

As technology has evolved, the sales engagement process has evolved with it, from face to face, phone-driven, e-commerce chat, to the social platform. Today, sales have become outside in, which demands a different engagement model. Hence, the existing sales model and process are struggling in facilitating the desired outcome. From a sales organisation perspective, when interaction with the sales organisation is initiated by a buyer and dictates the sales process, then it becomes outside in.

Buyers are adopting an outside-in approach for engaging with the sales organisation because the consumption model for technology has enormously changed. Cloud is one of the prime drivers for this change in the consumption model.

Buyers are not engaging linearly with sales anymore. They are simultaneously moving and jumping across exploration, evaluation, engagement, and experience. For example, they go from the exploration to evaluation stage, and if they are not sure after evaluation, they go back to exploration and then jump to engage and experience and finally make a purchase. Because of this dynamic engagement, sales pipeline predictability has been reduced.

Customer-driven sales model with a reduction in pipeline visibility and predictability has put enormous strain on vendors and service providers. It is affecting their quarterly targets and win-loss conversion ratio. The productivity of the salesforce has suffered, in some cases driving a higher attrition rate of the sales force.

So what does it mean for vendor and service providers sales force under this new disruption and consumption model:

  • Management of sales funnel cannot be linear anymore; it needs to be flexible with what customer wants. Different buyers, depending upon their need and urgency, will close the deal in a different order of the sales funnel in their buyers’ journey.
  • Following a linear sales funnel model religiously during the buyer's journey can be a hindrance to their decision-making process. Hence, align and adjust your sales funnel with their dynamic buying process. This is more prevalent in the Digital IT domain.
  • Customer experience is the new battleground in a buyer-driven sales process. Every touchpoint with a buyer needs to be consistent and must be tailored to their needs. The sales process needs to be frictionless and must progress at every touchpoint.
  • When buyers are shopping on price, functionality/feature, service, or consumption model, vendors need to ensure that buyers’ entry point in the sales journey must be matched with an adequate or a tailored sales model, else customers will move away and in some cases, they will be moving backward.
  • Today, customers are well informed and confident in their own research. When meeting with a buyer or a customer with an existing relationship, keep interaction minimal and specific to their needs. Do not try to dictate them with your mandate, let them drive you through their own process.
  • Nurturing of both human and digital connectivity is required to mitigate the risk of no buy. For example, Response to Inbound (outside-in) sales is high when a request comes from a known contact, while the response to Outbound (inside-out) sales will be high if a refresh of technology is required. When these two scenarios are reversed, the risk of no buy is high.
  • To improve pipeline visibility and predictability under the new consumption model, insight-driven and smart selling must be practiced especially in a Digital IT landscape.


Every technology and every buyer is different. The salesforce needs to come out of its comfort zone, take some risks, and dream big to succeed. Albert Einstein said:

We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them


first published on linkedin. 

Monday, October 11, 2021

Telecoms Cost Out Opportunity

Telecoms Cost Out Opportunity - Reference View

  • Telcos cost out opportunity reference model suggests mapping the challenges on the supply and demand side to identify the areas of impact in the value chain 
  •  Once areas of the value chain are identified then technology levers need to be applied and executed for relief in the cost envelope 
  • Revenue Generation Levers like pricing, increasing market share, monetising assets like spectrum



Thursday, October 07, 2021

Australias Budget Deficit and Debt - Pressure on IR

 


Weekend Reading

 

“No CEO in history has created as much total shareholder value as Mr Cook. When he took over the company had a market value of $349bn. Today it is worth $2.5trn, more than any other listed firm ever. Under his aegis annual sales surged from $108bn in 2011 to $274bn last year. Net profit more than doubled to $57bn, overtaking Saudi Aramco’s oil-fuelled earnings and turning Apple into the world’s most profitable company. Less widely noticed, during his tenure the “Apple economy”—its annual revenue plus everything other companies make on one of its platforms—has grown sevenfold to more than $1trn.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Why Digital Transformation is Difficult


An estimated $700 billion in #DigitalTransformation spending falls short of delivering the desired results. Employees Resistance and Poor Change Management are driving inertia. (src:venture beat)
























Impact of Digital on Culture