3 actions you can take to help your team win more deals, more often at higher prices
We’ve used research, experience and practice to develop an approach that enables you and your team to learn and master four skills that will help you win more deals, more often, at higher prices.
Research and experience shows that…
Most businesses feel they are undervaluing themselves or their customers do not pay what they should be for your products/service which means you’re leaving money on the table and missing out.
Sales people tend to focus more on the features of your product than the outcomes and value customers want to achieve which means you miss the point and customers don’t see why they should do business with you let alone pay a higher price.
People are anxious about price discussions and negotiations which means they don’t push for the deal.
This makes it difficult to simply know your value, ask for what you want and get it through the only mechanism that turns what you do into money – price.
There are ways you can address this imbalance and improve your chances of winning deals at higher prices.
Here are three that will have a big impact;
1. Find out what is really important to your customers – the easiest way to do this is to ask them – and then align your product and service to these areas the best way you can that delivers results for your customers. If you can’t then it may be you are trying to attract the wrong target customers or you may need to make some changes to what you offer.
2. When you have done point 1. You can price to your value. This may not be easy to begin with, however if you understand customer value then it’s about what is a fair price for the customer to pay. Fear of increasing prices can be debilitating, leading to inaction and frustration, however there are a number of low risk ways this can be achieved, for example offering customers options like Good, Better, Best versions of what you do and changing prices accordingly. You don’t need to do lots of data analysis or invest in IT systems to begin to address your pricing challenges. Build on where you are.
3. Create a framework and script that enables your team to talk confidently about your prices. Simply presenting your prices in a confident, non negotiable way, based on the value you give your customers will in itself work wonders. Customer price objections are driven by a lack of focus on customer value, poor justification and a nervous anticipation of objections and challenges. A well prepared – and practiced – price conversation solves these issues.
Achieving higher prices and better margins is not just for big brands, well known companies or trusted to luck.
We can all get better at some core activities that give us a better chance of getting what we all want – which is a fair price for what we do.





