Amazon.com Review
Harry Washburn and Kim Wallace, principals in a firm specializing in sales and marketing research, believe salespeople are most successful when they can read customers' true motivations and tailor subsequent strategies to fit their unique needs. Based on 20 years' experience with companies like AT&T, IBM, and Polaroid, they've developed a method for replacing traditionally combative sales techniques with ones that encourage a cooperative decision-making process. In
Why People Don't Buy Things, they explain how to find each customer's "buying path" by determining his or her specific "buying profile," which they classify as either Commander, Thinker, or Visualizer--and then adjusting arguments, language, and demonstrations to match them. The result, they contend, will help salespeople overcome stumbling blocks that regularly drive possible business away before a sale is consummated.
As any experienced salesman knows, if an individual or group prospect has substantial objections to buying from you that are not smoked out and resolved in your favor, you will lose the sale.... Why people don't buy things is as important a factor in individual and group purchasing decisions as why they do buy things.
--Howard Rothman
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
Forty years ago Louis Cheskin helped popularize the use of motivation research in marketing with his now classic
Why People Buy. Washburn and Wallace look at the other side of the coin to analyze customer objections, and they provide techniques to overcome them. The authors met when they were vice presidents at New England's largest advertising agency, and they left that firm in 1976 to start their own marketing company specializing in consulting, sales, and marketing research. Over the years, they have developed such tools as ThoughtScan, the ArgumentAudit, and Decision Path Analysis. Here they explain how these work and show how to apply them. Potential buyers fit three different profiles, argue Washburn and Wallace. They show how to recognize "commanders, thinkers, and visualizers," and using real-life examples, they offer strategies for countering resistance in each case.
David Rouse
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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