Major Account Sales Strategy by Neil Rackham, Sallie Sherman, Joseph Sperry

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 1989
  • 218pp
  • Sales Rank: 156,294
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 1989
    • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies, The
    • Format: Hardcover, 218pp
    • Sales Rank: 156,294

    Synopsis

    An Arsenal of Shrewd Tactics and Winning Strategies to Make You a Major Account Sales Success

    Knowing how to get to the decision maker, deal with the competition, understand buyer psychology, and service the client—these are the keys to success when you need to nail down major accounts. Now, for the first time, here's a book of practical, proven-effective strategies and tactics for the entire major account sales cycle.

    Based on Neil Rackham's exhaustive research, the strategies you'll find here will enable you to . . .


    •Tailor your selling strategy to match each step in the client's decision-making process.


    •Ensure that you won't lose your customers because you'll know the psychology of the buyer and how to respond to their doubts.


    •Gain entry to accounts through many different windows of opportunity.


    •Deal with competitive situations, take on bigger competitors, and win using strategies that the author's meticulous research shows are employed by the most successful salespeople.


    •Handle negotiations, concessions on price, and term agreements skillfully and effectively.


    •Offer the ongoing technical and maintenance support that keeps your major accounts yours.

    From a world-renowned sales innovator, this first-of-a-kind A-to-Z presentation of major account strategy puts sales success in your hands. Make it yours today. Read Major Account Sales Strategy.

    Annotation

    Salespeople, marketers, managers--everyone who is involved in selling today-- agrees that major accounts are critical to survival. Major Account Sales Strategy is the first book to offer new, proven-effective strategies for major account sales.

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    Biography

    Neil Rackham is founder and former president of Huthwaite, Inc. Huthwaite researches, consults, and provides seminars for more than 200 leading sales organizations around the world, including Xerox, IBM, and Citicorp. His academic background is in research psychology. It was at the University of Sheffield, England, that he began his research into sales effectiveness that resulted in SPIN. Rackham is the author of more than 50 articles and several books.

    Customer Reviews

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    Major Account Sales Strategyby Anonymous

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    May 01, 2002: Unlike most developers of major account sales strategy, Neil Rackham methodically backs up his analysis of the buyer circle with in-depth research. To develop his major account sales strategy, Rackham has observed and analyzed a large number of high dollar value sales made around the world. Rackham convincingly shows that effective selling strategy is built on a thorough understanding of customers and the concerns they can have at each phase of a sale. Mastering that strategy, of course, requires, a lot of hard work and practice from salespersons determined to make the difference at the end of the day. Rackham successively reviews these phases that he has identified as: account entry strategy, recognition of needs, evaluation of options, resolution of concerns, sales negotiation, as well as implementation and account development. 1. In analyzing ?Account Entry Strategy?, Rackham successively explores the focus of receptivity, the focus of dissatisfaction, and the focus of power as well as the pitfalls associated with them. Because coaching, in our culture, has a positive connotation, few professionals will turn down the chance to demonstrate to a fellow professional their expertise and the usefulness of their connections. For that reason, successful salespeople identify, nurture, and leverage their sponsor(s) to ultimately get access to the different buying influences. Because of possible shifts in the account on the buyer side, Rackham rightly recommends that no salesperson rely on only one individual to penetrate an account. Rackham also reminds his audience about the critical importance of uncovering implied needs to turn them into expressed needs. Successful salespeople make their contact(s) at the level of dissatisfaction aware of the urgency and severity of the problem(s) to be addressed so that these contact(s) eventually feel obliged to help them get access to the leverages of power. 2. In looking at ?Recognition of Needs? and ?Evaluation of Options?, Rackham first briefly explores his SPIN questioning strategy that is explained in a luxury of details in his other book ?SPIN Selling.? Basically, successful salespeople usually first ask the buyer situation questions, secondly problem questions, thirdly implication questions, and finally need-payoff questions to uncover implied needs for turning them into expressed needs that require action. Rackham also reminds his audience that successful salespeople prepare their sponsor(s) to help these sponsor(s) sell the sellers? solution in their own words if they are denied access to the focus of power. Furthermore, successful salespeople not only help the buyer identify needs but also influence him/her in the definition of the differentiation factors and their perceived importance to sort out the different options being offered to him/her. Rackham urges his audience to keep a broad definition of competition in mind. Finally, Rackham explores the three strategies that can help salespeople overcome their vulnerabilities and the dangers associated with these strategies: I Change the decision criteria (overtaking, trading-off, redefining, or creating alternative solutions), II. Increase their strength through correction of misunderstanding or negotiation, and III. Diminish the competition directly or indirectly. 3. In examining ?Resolution of Concerns?, Rackham reviews the hidden and expressed concerns that can push buyers to get ?cold feet? in the decision-making...