Training
that works
How
one industrial distributor taught its salespeople a new way to document
the value it offers customers.
When
Empire Machinery & Supply Corporation lost a major customer a few
years ago, company president Hank Turner decided the time had come to
make a change. While it’s always upsetting to lose business, it’s
especially aggravating to lose to a competitor that isn’t better than
you, just cheaper. It means your company didn’t do enough to
demonstrate your value for that customer.
“When
we lost a major account, we realized we needed to be doing something
better than what we’d been doing,” Turner says.
He
decided that Norfolk, Va.-based Empire needed to do a better job of
documenting the value it offers customers. Looking for a way to begin,
Turner and executive vice president Jim Topping attended a seminar
sponsored by the Industrial Distribution Association on value-added
selling led by Tim Underhill of Underhill & Associates of Tulsa,
Okla. Underhill underscored the importance of defining unique services
companies provide to customers.
“I
think Tim is 100 percent correct when he says, ‘If you don’t
differentiate yourself and show your customers what you’re doing
different or better, and show your customers the value of the services
you provide them, they’ve got nothing to compare you against your
competitors except your price,’” says Turner.
Turner
was so impressed with the presentation that he invited Underhill to give
a one-day seminar to Empire’s sales staff and management to teach them
how to sell value-added services. The seminar was especially helpful to
Eric House, an Empire salesman assigned to a large shipbuilding and
repair facility in Newport News, Va.
“The
training came at a perfect time when Eric was working on a major
contract. He presented all these cost savings documents and showed
people what he was doing and could do. We won one contract and then
another because of it,” Turner says. In the past 3 1/2 years, House
documented more than $375,000 in cost savings for the shipbuilder and
won a major contract as one of only four key suppliers in the
company’s automotive warehouse and vehicle maintenance facility.
“We
were recently awarded this new vendor consolidation contract to take
over and manage the customer’s industrial and MRO inventory in their
new maintenance facilities warehouse,” Turner says. “We currently
have three full-time employees on site to manage inventory and to
purchase needed material.”
Hoping to
build on House’s success, Turner started requiring all Empire
salespeople to submit written proof of the value they bring their
customers. As many distributors have found, simply ordering salespeople
to comply is putting the cart before the horse.
“To be
perfectly honest, we weren’t very pleased with the results we got,”
says Turner.
Back to the drawing
board
The salespeople supported the value-added effort; they simply didn’t
know where to begin. A one-day seminar wasn’t enough to teach all of
Empire’s salespeople value-added selling. They required ongoing
training and support.
“It’s
OK to make this a requirement for salespeople, but you’ve got to give
them tools to do it,” says House.
Because
he had the most success, House agreed to become Empire’s in-house
trainer. He purchased Underhill’s train-the-trainer video and
scheduled another training session to teach salespeople how to document
the various ways Empire benefits customers.
“I made
up templates everyone could use to document their savings. It’s
something they can carry with them. They can put it on a floppy disk and
show it to customers,” he says.
For
example, he created a one-page form (click
here) that salespeople could adapt to summarize material, freight,
process and inventory savings. Additional forms (click
here) and worksheets (click
here) summarize other activities they performed to lower a
company’s process or possession costs, reduce expenditures or improve
profitability.
“I took
Tim’s concepts and created templates in Microsoft Excel and Microsoft
Word. I wanted a basic guideline for these guys to follow that was
simple. My objective was to give them a simple set of forms where they
could fill in the customer’s name, the process impacted and the
result,” House says.
In the
two months following the first training session, Empire salespeople
recorded about $30,000 in cost savings for customers. As salespeople
become more proficient, Turner believes their results will improve.
“We’re
planning another training session with Eric to review some of the case
studies they’ve turned in,” Turner says. “It gives them an
opportunity to explain what they did and why they did it that way. But
at the same time, they know they’re being inspected.”
Lessons learned
What valuable lessons can other distributors learn from Empire?
1) Put it
in writing. If distributors don’t document the various ways they
benefit customers, don’t expect customers to remember what
distributors did for them. If Empire started its value-added approach
sooner, it might not have lost that major account.
2) Assign
documentation goals to salespeople. Unless they’re given specific
instructions, such as turning in one documented cost-savings project per
month, don’t expect salespeople to put much effort into the program.
If possible, tie the effort into their compensation package.
3)
Provide training. Turner hired Tim Underhill to introduce the
value-added selling concept to salespeople, then assigned additional
training responsibilities to an employee. Make training a day-to-day
effort if you expect to see continued improvement. The
ValueAddedPartners.org Web site provides several articles, case studies
and sample documentation forms that can serve as a basis for in-house
training.
4) Keep
it simple. Customers don’t necessarily require detailed, complex
documentation, and some salespeople may not be comfortable presenting
such information. Develop options to use for smaller or less
sophisticated customers and templates that make it easy for salespeople
to get started. Simple templates also allow the salesperson to become
comfortable with the value-added selling process.
5)
Offer rewards. For one major customer, House set up a commission
structure to reward inside salespeople who save customers money. It
provides the salesperson with an incentive to look for cost savings
opportunities.
6)
Expect results. As a direct result of the company’s new approach to
documenting its value, Empire won several new contracts totaling
millions of dollars in business. The company also earned honorable
mention status in the Industrial Supply Manufacturers Association 2003
Value-Added Partner of the Year Award, which Empire can promote in
future marketing efforts.
This
article was written by Rich Vurva for ValueAddedPartners.org. Visit www.valueaddedpartners.org
to read more about adding value for your sutoemrs.
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