Youโve got a customer. In fact, itโs a very profitable, long-standing customer that pays its bills and is just generally great to work with.
Itโs the kind of customer you wish you had more of.
This customer calls and makes a request that causes your company to jump through all kinds of hoops to respond to the request. But itโs OK. Theyโre a great account and you want to keep them happy. Heck, theyโve done this type of thing a few times before and itโs always turned out good. So unless theyโre asking you to do something illegal or something that might send your company under, youโre probably just going to comply without giving it too much thought. And that, in my opinion, would be the right thing to do.
A prospect is not a customer
But why is it the right thing to do? Is it because your company adheres to the adage that, โthe customer is always right?โ I hope not.
In the case above, itโs the right thing to do because it just makes good economic business sense to do itโฆperiod!
Iโm very unpopular in many circles because I think that embracing the adage โ dare I say the clichรฉโ โ that the customer is always right, in a very insidious way, brings more downside than benefit. Itโs a noble-sounding notion that quickly takes hold in a companyโs culture. Unfortunately, it then gets applied indiscriminately โ even to โcustomersโ that are still just prospects.
Hereโs one of the more familiar ways this can play out. Gary is a strategic account salesperson for a capital equipment company. Suddenly, a request for proposal shows up in his inbox. He prints it and peruses it. Looks like a winner. Like most RFPs, this one will require input from numerous areas of Garyโs company โ engineering, finance, production, etc. Plus, the requested deadline is very tight. But, โthe customer is always rightโ is playing subconsciously in Garyโs head.
He pulls the team together. About 12 man-days later the proposal is off to the prospect ahead of deadline. Gary starts the follow-up process: โHow are we looking?โ โWhen will you be deciding?โ After a few weeks of polite non-responses, things go quiet.
Then, well, you know how the story ends.
Many salespeople would like to think they, unlike Gary, would never get lured into such a trap. Perhaps. But their world is filled with potential traps. For starters, every meeting requested by a prospect or customer can be a trap, set by a truly well-meaning prospect or customer (customers rarely waste vendorsโ resources in a malicious way).
Itโs the rare salesperson who instinctively questions the worth โ to his or her own company โ of each meeting request. Most embrace a philosophy that prompts them to accept such customer-requested meetings without much question.
Then thereโs the endless flow of requests for product information, pricing discussions, pre-sales analyses, proposals, demos, technical evaluations, and on and on that can all be part of any sales campaign. Each of these represents yet another potential trap.
Not all customers are created equal
During a recent client meeting, the director of the clientโs strategic accounts sales team related an exchange sheโd had the day before. At the end of an account review with a SAM (strategic account manager), โone of our better ones,โ the director pointed out to me, she inquired about the SAMโs next steps with the account they were strategizing. โIโm taking a systems engineer and doing a demo of our new software next week,โ she said.
Certain that it was a waste of time for an account with so little growth potential, the director asked why the SAM was doing the presentation. Without missing a beat, he replied, โBecause the customer asked for one.โ (After all, the customer is always right.)
Salespeople subconsciously invoke โthe customerโ the same way that politicians consciously invoke โthe childrenโ to justify many actions.
Unlearning the clichรฉ
If youโve continued reading past my earlier heresy and are interested in knowing how to shed your own version of the customer is always right, here are two ways to get started.
First, eight times per day, every day, for the next month, repeat aloud to yourself, โI am protective of my time and my companyโs resources and I will make sure that every single prospect and customer somehow understands this.โ You must convey this to customers with real finesse, which isnโt easy. But by the end of the month, you will have figured out howโฆand you will never look back.
Second, stop reinforcing a master/servant relationship with customers by thanking them for their time and telling them how busy they are.