Do You Know Why Your Clients Buy?
Do you know why your clients buy? Seems like a pretty simple
question, right? Not really, when you dig deeper under the
surface. How you answer is critical to the success of your
business.
To begin, understand one simple fact: prospects and clients buy
for their reasons, not yours. They could care less about your
company and your mission statement or the long list of product
features you so skillfully articulate.
They only care about the outcome your offer provides them. They
want the benefit, the impact, the improvement, the comfort, or
the security it will deliver. Most small business marketing
fails to address these crucial client needs directly. Instead,
they focus on the greatness of their product or service and miss
what is important.
Small business marketers are often their own worst enemies.
Frequently, they are not communicating on the buyer's level of
motivation. They are too busy figuring out how to "sell" the
product than finding out the reasons the client "buys".
The problem comes down to the marketing strategy that is
employed. Are you pushing your product or are you pulling the
client through the marketing process?
There is a very important distinction here. Since buyers only
care about their needs and take action for their personal
reasons, why should they pay attention to why you think your
product is so great?
When you push your products, you are essentially telling the
client that they should buy from you because of your reasons.
With this egocentric approach you often run into a stone wall of
objections and delays. Pushing the product forces them out of
their comfort zone and places unnecessary pressure on their
decision making process. A relentless assault of closing
techniques pushes them away from a purchasing decision on their
terms.
Pulling a buyer through the purchasing process is much more
effective. When you pull you are leading them to the purchase
like leading a horse to water. You gently guide them through
your features and benefits and come to a decision on their
terms. If they resist you have not educated them enough with
information to motivate them or you haven't addressed their
objections sufficiently.
The buyer will only make a decision when they are comfortably
satisfied your offer has met all of their purchasing criteria.
As a seller, you must pull them through the process and always
let them stay within the limits of their comfort zone. It's by
staying within these boundaries that trust is established and a
long term relationship is built with the client.
Also remember that the purchasing process is completely rooted
in the perceptions of the buyer. They have ultimate control over
the process, not you. Your job as a marketer is to develop all
your communications to make them comfortable and lead them to
the best outcome...purchasing your product or service.
Always be aware of which method you are using - push or pull -
and adopt it to the buyer's personal reasons for purchasing and
you will enjoy continuous success.