By: John Boe
Take a cross-selling and up-selling approach to boost business.
While you may not have recognized it, the last time you ordered from a fast food restaurant or went to the post office, there is a good chance you experienced some form of cross-selling or up-selling. Cross-selling and up-selling are well-established and highly effective marketing practices used by many industries.
What is cross-selling? It is a proactive, ongoing sales process designed to provide your customers with a full spectrum of your company's products and services. What is up-selling? It is the attempt or effort to persuade a client to buy more expensive items or additional items. The good news is that cross-selling and up-selling are two of the most profitable and least risky endeavors a sales rep can undertake.
My first exposure to cross-selling was as a teenager in high school working part-time at McDonald’s during summer vacation. Looking back on my brief tenure selling hamburgers, I can still hear my manager’s daily refrain: Be polite, keep the counter clean and always, always ask if they would like fries with their meal.
A couple of years later while attending college, I took a part-time job selling shoes at the mall. I was paid an hourly wage to sell the shoes, but I received a commission whenever I cross-sold products such as shoe polish, socks or purses. This was my first taste of commission, and as a starving college student I took to cross-selling and up-selling like a duck to water.
A Comprehensive Approach
Some shortsighted salespeople might suggest that customers are irritated by cross-selling and perceive it as an aggressive sales technique. Interestingly enough, consumer research indicates the reverse is true. Most consumers surveyed actually prefer a full range of products and services and appreciate the convenience a comprehensive cross-selling approach provides. Top producing salespeople understand the power of cross-selling and recognize it as a critical component for promoting both customer retention and revenue growth.
Not surprisingly, two of the key elements that make cross-selling and up-selling work are trust and convenience. Your customers already possess a degree of trust in your company and this can be converted into additional sales that are not directly related to their existing products.
The best place to introduce your customer to the concept of cross-selling is during your initial needs analysis meeting. Unfortunately, many salespeople fail to take the time to conduct a thorough needs analysis and as a result do not uncover potential products and services that would be of benefit to their customer.
Uncovering Potential Needs
Effective cross-selling is all about guided self-discovery. Through a series of thought provoking, open-ended questions, successful salespeople assist their customers to uncover potential needs. During the needs analysis interview, I highly recommend using a checklist that incorporates all of your company’s products and services. Relying on your memory alone is a poor business decision, so take the time to jot down key information. Ask questions and take good notes.
Developing a systematic approach to cross-selling and up-selling brings in additional revenue with relatively low expense and effort. As you prepare for your next client appointment, I challenge you to look for cross-selling and up-selling opportunities that you can incorporate into your presentation. Sales reps who fail to implement an effective cross-selling program actually do a disservice to their customers and leave the back door open to their competitors.
John Boe presents a wide variety of motivational and sales-oriented keynotes and seminar programs for sales meetings and conventions. John is a nationally recognized sales trainer and business motivational speaker.
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