There are 3 Value Statements. 1 is vital for a client and I bet you aren't using it.
Selling the value of what you do is one of the most challenging areas for many Consultants and Advisers.
There is so much to consider:
Who is my target market?
What is the proposition that I am offering?
How do I get meetings (Zoom's!) with busy business people?
I’m looking for ways to sell higher and deeper into organisations
How do I break through the ‘SMADD’ disease that clients and prospects have – that’s ‘Sales Message Attention Deficit Disorder’!
How do I get more referrals?
How do I prove our worth to an organisation so we don’t have to compete on price?
How do I get clients to value what we have just done for them?
The good news is that I am about to share with you 3 core components of value that you can use in your business to help you with these business challenges and more.
The best news is that very few consultants or advisers work on the outer ring of the value bullseye I'm about to share with you, let alone excel at the inner ring.
Let me introduce you to the ‘Value Bullseye’:
1) Value Hypothesis:
The value hypothesis is the outer ring of value. This is when you are on the outside of an organisation trying to get in, breaking into new divisions, or trying to create a new project within an existing client.
Here you must use research to determine whether you can potentially create value for them. You don’t know for sure yet because you do not know enough about the organization or the particular business initiative or the business pain that the company is facing.
You have a good idea that you can but you need to determine the specifics.
And if you'd like a little 'tune up' on the elements of value in a B2B sale then Bain have a great research piece exploring 40 separate value creators here
This is not to be confused with an ‘elevator pitch’ which can come across as a trite generalization of what you do.
This is a very specific hypothesis of what value you can specifically add to that organization.
An example could go like this:
“John, you should be capable of reducing your stock holding of your entire widget range by 60% through the ability to use our demand forecasting software to know precisely what inventory is required to within a 10% tolerance rate. This will require an investment of £320,000. Which could be returned within 11 months. We recently implemented a similar solution at Major Corp PLC who achieved a 70% reduction and payback within 9 months.”
At the very early stages of a discussion, this is only a hypothesis because you do not know enough about their business.
Without the right kind of conversation, at the right level, and therefore validation it is only a value hypothesis.
You will rarely win business selling on a value hypothesis.
It is only the start of the process and without the questioning and investigating skills needed to get validation from the client and prospect then it will never be a true value proposition.
2) Value proposition:
This is where your client or prospect, is describing how their business operates, where the dysfunction and costs reside and what their vision is for an alternative way of doing things.
This is what you use to map your capabilities to what you discover to articulate your value proposition.
Executives in large organisations have given feedback that few, if any proposals, make them sit up and go:
“Wow, I really love what these guys are proposing”
….and very few if any actually propose anything.
More they are no more than page after page of price lists and capability statements.
Rarely is there a personalised story that tells:
the names of stakeholders
the challenges they face
the goals they own
an overview of how those tasks and goals will be affected by a new solution.
Senior stakeholders want specifics of the value hypothesis turned into the reality of what can and will happen specifically to their business.
Asked why they feel they rarely see this type of value proposition executives answered...
that consultants are too intent on getting their message across without asking the questions needed to identify the core basis of a value proposition.
3) Value Statement:
The value statement is the single most important part of the whole process and yet very few people do it.
When done correctly this is a huge opportunity for you.
One of the core principles of sales has always been trust.
People don’t buy from people they like, they buy from people they trust.
One of the greatest ways to build long-lasting trust and credibility is to show you have delivered on what you have said you would.
This is even more important when selling to large organisations because research shows that senior executives generally get involved at the project scope phase (value hypothesis) and post project review (value statement).
The value statement is simply going back and proving the value of what you said you would achieve:
“John, we said we might be able to reduce the stock holding of your entire widget range by 60% and now the system has been live for 3 months we have seen a reduction of 75% with a prediction tolerance of 7% . Your investment of £320,000 is on track for full payback in 9 months and not the 11 months we originally planned.”
If you can continually prove the value of what you have done then your credibility will go through the roof.
In effect, you are closing the sales loop or Consulting loop.
So my challenge to you then is
How well do you rate on the three stages of the value bullseye?
-----------------
Please put this into practice and let me know the results in the comments.
And, if you are enjoying this newsletter, the best compliment you could pay me would be to share it with one person who you think would benefit from it.
Also - if you don't want to leave notifications of future episodes of this newsletter to the Linkedin algorithm then you can get good old-fashioned email notifications if you subscribe here. I recommend you do :-) -
If you want me to personally coach you on this strategy to make sure it gets done then schedule a coaching call here: https://consultingrevenue.com/coaching