Ditch the Discount and Protect Your Profit
The phone rings and the sales manager hears on the other end the all-too-familiar plea of a salesperson. The salesperson tries to convince the sales manager that it makes so much sense to offer the prospect a discount to get them to finally become a customer. Of course, the salesperson has the expectation that this new customer will quickly become a high-profit customer. The sales manager has heard the same plea hundreds of times before, and yet for some reason, the salesperson and the lack of current sales suddenly make offering a discount very attractive.
Protect Your Profit!
It’s as if we’re watching the unveiling of a very slow accident that is completely avoidable and yet happens anyway. The salesperson gets it into his or her head that the only way to close the deal is by discounting the price. They just need to convince their sales manager to go along with it. When this occurs, a major shift happens with how the salesperson does their job. No longer are they selling to the customer; now they’re selling to the sales manager. The problem with this is simple – a salesperson gets paid for selling to customers. That’s how both the top-line and the bottom-line are made.
If you’re reading this and you’re a salesperson, here is some very simple advice. Contrary to what you believe will happen, you will never make up in long-term profit what you’re about to give up with your immediate discount. Sure, there are always exceptions to this, but such exceptions are similar to me winning the lottery. Is it doable? Yes. Is it probable? NO!
Ditch the Discount
When you discount the price, the new price is now the price of value the customer is willing to pay. When they’re offered the price once, they will expect it again and again. When you attempt to move the price to the “normal or regular” price, they see it as a price increase. Even if you do get the price up to the “normal or regular” price, you’re still behind the profit curve because of all the product you sold to the customer at the lower “discounted” price.
I hear this argument a lot: “You don’t understand. If I didn’t offer the discount, I would never have had the opportunity to move the price up, because they would never have become a customer.”
My response is always the same: “So what! It doesn’t matter.” In your quest to get the customer, you cut your price. But you did so much more than that. What you did was cut your profit dollar for dollar. That is a very simple fact of what happens when you cut your price. It’s highly unlikely you cut the cost of your goods or services, because your goal is to get the customer to experience what you can do. That means the only place to cut is your profit.
Here’s the deal: Your ability as a salesperson is not in how much you sell, but in how much you earn for your company. It’s the bottom-line profit that counts, and anytime you reduce your price, you’re slashing your profit.
There is not a sales manager out there of any quality who will allow any salesperson to spend their valuable time trying to sell internally. The focus must be on external selling. Focus first on creating value by determining the needs of the customer. Then position your product or service as the solution, and do so at full price.
This is the only strategy that ensures you are not only protecting profit, but also ultimately in a place to increase it!
- 6 Rules to Consider Before Using an iPad on a Sales Call
- Help Customers See Value in What You Offer
- Is it Okay to Fire Your Customer?
- How to Examine Your LOST SALE and Learn From It
- Do You Know Your Customers Price Tolerance Ratio?
- When Is A Good Time To Sell A Price Increase?
- The Pressure of Price Discounting: Stop Undermining Your Profit Margin
- How To Increase Your Price Investment Ratio
- The Indecisive Buyer
- Don't Unsell What You Just Sold!
- Buyers Don't Like Salespeople - Why?
- Learn to Listen: Sell to the Customer's Expectations
- Professional Buyers Know Your Game, Maybe Better Than You Do
- Driven to Distraction: Chasing the Latest, Trendy Sales Technique
- Intellectual Capital Determines Business Success
- Twelve Negotiation Rules for a Successful Outcome
- Social Media vs. Cold Calling
- Closing the Deal: Separate the Prospects from the Suspects
- 3 T's of Negotiating: Trust, Time, & Tactics
- How to Handle the Purchasing Department
- Integrity Leads to Sales Success
- Only Losers Cut Their Prices
- Close Too Quick and You Lose Profit
- Why Customer Service Destroys Salespeople
- Position Yourself as a Leader
- Holding on Price in a Down Economy
- Selling a Price Increase in a Soft Market
- Maximizing Your Price – The Value / Benefit Equation
- The Price Increase Switching Game
- Maximizing Your Price in a Soft Economy
- Are You Easy?
- Don't Bring a Knife to a Gun Fight
- Attack Yourself
- Confirming Sales Appointments: Are You Asking For The Cancellation?
- I Just Called to See How Things are Going
- Use the News: How to Create New Opportunities Fast
- 5 Secrets to Effective Email
- 5 Ways To Keep Your Prospect Talking
- The 5 Best Openings
- What Not To Do On a Cold Call eMail
- Protect Your Time
- Yes You Can!
- Secrets Buried In a Sales Person's Resume
- Define What You Want And Write It Down
- 10 Rules for Pricing Confidence
- There's a Pony In Here Somewhere


