Welcome Overview the nature of the group and the training before us Today we'll be exploring what has changed with our prospective buyers and what we have to change - often from some long-standing and ingrained sales habits - to adapt to this new consumer.
Welcome Overview the nature of the group and the training before us Today we'll be exploring what has changed with our prospective buyers and what we have to change - often from some long-standing and ingrained sales habits - to adapt to this new consumer.
There's one other thing that has changed...we now live in an "opt-in" world. What effect has that new truth had on advertising?
Is there any reason to think this wouldn't also affect how we sell?
And there's something else the rest of the business world has figured out that home sales professionals still struggle with? And that this that there's a difference between selling big ticket and little ticket items? Two entirely difference processes? And what differentiates the two in the consumer's mind? RISK! (which we'll address later...)
We have to understand the concept of the "Perfect Decision" box.
Buyers evaluate their decision across two axes: What is the "quality of my decision" (Have I shopped enough? Do I know enough?) and how big are my "reasons to move" (Is my problem big enough?).
So let's put one of the most important concepts on the table right here that will underpin everything else we do.
What makes people move in the first place? (discuss the scenario and why people say they are "just looking").
Here's the consumer who has a really compelling reason to move...but isn't anywhere near far enough along to commit (haven't seen enough houses; no mortgage approval; no influencer buy-in).
It all starts with how effectively we "open" the sale. Remember, the consumer is looking to see if they put you on their "keep" pile. What they need from you is "comfort". How do you achieve that? By acknowledging it's their agenda that's important!
Then you have to differentiate yourself!
Then you have to create the proper expectations!
Exercises: opening scripts; how to differentiate yourself (5 USPs); how to create the expectation of what comes next.
Problems drive ALL housing purchases? We have to get to the heart of the problem. We need to set the stage for problem the problem and deepening it through Implication questions.
Many people haven't thought through the implications of their problem. They start with some "implied" needs (problem statements) and we have to move them into "explicit" needs ("I want; I need").
This process transitions from the "sad" Implication questions into "happy" Need/Payoff where the customer can start to tell you how your home will solve their problems. They begin selling themselves!