From the Ask Tom mailbag:
We must have touched a hot button on Time Span in the Selling Process.
Question:
Can you talk more about the team selling approach. As my company grows, I am trying to move out of the sales area. In the past two years, we recruited three salespeople, capable guys, but when the big deal stalls out, I have to come in to close it. Will I ever get out of sales or is the team approach, with me as the closer, something we just adopt and live with?
Response:
Do what is necessary. The sales process is a designed process. When you are brought in as the closer, it’s not like a major league pitcher breaking down in the seventh inning. It’s all in the match. As your sales ticket gets large, the customer is likely to bring in more players to inspect the deal, kick the can around, ask questions. The larger the deal, the more likely a higher stratum player will be in the mix.
I have witnessed an entire deal stuck in an endless meeting cycle. The customer was uncomfortable because the salesperson was not matched with their Time Span. The differences in language, approach, depth of solution were all glaring. We brought in a higher Time Span player on the selling team and the deal got wrapped up in a ten minute meeting. It had nothing to do with the terms of the deal, the contract, a better sales technique or any specific objection. Five minutes after the meeting started, the customer had his pen out of his pocket. Five minutes later, we left the room with a signed contract.
Designing a team approach to selling is matching players on your selling team with the players on the buying team. Time Span helps us calibrate who those players are.