| What customers want
Distributor
salespeople may be their own worst enemy, according to an exclusive
survey by Progressive Distributor and MRO Today
magazines.
by Richard Vurva
Distributor
salespeople looking for a way to differentiate their companies from
the competition don’t need to look far. In fact, all they have to do
is look in the mirror.
An exclusive survey
conducted by Progressive Distributor and its sister magazine, MRO
Today, reveals that salespeople have an opportunity to boost their
standing with customers
by raising their level of professionalism. Doing so will set them
above their peers.
The survey asked
end-user buyers of maintenance, repair and operations (MRO) products
their opinion about the quality of the MRO distributor salespeople who
call on them. Although 71 percent of the respondents rate the
salespeople as “good,” nearly half say they
don’t want distributor salespeople calling on them.
It begs the
question: What are distributor salespeople doing wrong when nearly
half of their customers say they could disappear and product
specifiers would applaud or wouldn’t even notice?
A majority of the
respondents indicate that the quality of the MRO salespeople who call
on them has remained unchanged in the last three years. Twenty-six
percent of the respondents said the quality has decreased.
When presented with a
list of 10 factors that influence their
purchase decision, buyers rank the salesperson far down the list, at
No. 7. Delivery, price and product quality are the most important
factors to buyers.
What does it mean?
The results raise serious questions about the perceived value that
most distributor
salespeople offer customers. Buyers could be saying, in effect, I
don’t really care how good the distributor salesperson is, as long
as I get what I want when I want it.
If that is
true, distributors may want to re-evaluate their traditional sales
model. Either customers don’t recognize the value salespeople bring
to the table, or salespeople truly are becoming a dying breed. If so,
this may be a good time for distributors to offer alternatives where
customers can bypass salespeople by making purchases online.
Distributors that
aren’t ready to make such a drastic change should at least take an
objective look at their sales force. Companies that take steps to
demonstrate what value their salespeople bring to customers can go a
long way toward setting themselves apart from their competitors.
What areas should they
focus on? Product knowledge and applications expertise are the two
most important qualities a salesperson can possess, survey respondents
say.
This article originally appeared in the May/June issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright
2001.
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