Overcome Small Business Networks Sales Disagreements
Learn how you can overcome the most common sales objections heard when selling networks to small business prospects, customers, and clients.
Do you need help overcoming sales objections?
Do you sell computer networks, or other
IT-related products and services to small businesses? 
This article provides tips and hints so you can
be overcoming the most common sales objections heard when selling networks to
small business prospects, customers, and clients.
The problem generally begins when you start
talking about a network upgrade. Around the time, many small business
prospects, customers and clients will dwell on cost.
These small business prospects, customers and
clients often neglect to consider the soft costs of not properly investing in a
network… such as lost employee productivity when imprudent corners are cut,
downtime when fault-tolerance is an afterthought, and service costs from
computer consultants when difficult-to-support or "dead-end"
solutions are selected primarily because of their low price tag.
No matter how thorough your initial consultation, IT audit, site survey and network design reports, some unforeseen client objections may pop up just before you get the client's authorization to proceed (generally a signed contract and retainer or deposit check).
Why Overcoming Sales Objections is SO Crucial
Because one relatively minor concern might
threaten to derail the entire sale, you need to gain the critical business
development skills for overcoming sales objections, with some of the biggest
small business network deal-closing obstacles.
Empowered with these strategies for overcoming sales objections, you'll be much less apt to get emotional, defensive or just plain annoyed. You can then stay focused on keeping your eye on the ball and figuring out the best way to solve the prospect's or future client's problems …and of course, close the sale. Remember, your company isn't in business to solve prospects' problems; only those of paying clients.
Overcoming Sales Objections: Apathy
I hope you get a good night's sleep before this
sales objection rears its ugly head. You need a powerful force to overcome
apathy.
If small business decision-makers have an
apathetic outlook toward the prospect of implementing a network, your
decision-makers might take weeks, months, or perhaps even years before feeling
a sense of urgency about your proposed network project.
However, once you discover the roots of this
apathy, you'll be better able to push (or at least nudge) the approval process
along.
Here's a typical example you'll find in the
field: The small business owner sees no problem with their existing
peer-to-peer network. One or two seemingly innocuous foul-ups, however, can
cause the small business owner to see the "light".
With a Microsoft Windows peer-to-peer network,
for example, the "server" seems perfectly reliable until the person
working on the PC functioning as the server inadvertently hits the reset button
with his or her knee.
If you need to be overcoming more of the common
sales objections, you must be very adept and recounting these kinds of
cautionary tales with the right timing, delivery and empathy.
Using Network Reliability to Overcoming Sales Objections
PC/LAN network reliability can also get called
into question when the user of the peer-to-peer server inadvertently performs
an unannounced, unscheduled shutdown and restart because a software setup
program prompted a reboot.
With peer-to-peer networks, protecting data is
usually also an afterthought. If the peer-to-peer server isn't protected with
fault tolerant hard drives, a reliable tape backup drive, a server-class UPS,
and updated antivirus software, a peer-to-peer server becomes an accident
waiting to happen.
So while any of these factors can turn apathy
into your opportunity, sometimes a little divine intervention steps in to help
you in overcoming sales objections.
One day a lightning storm and blackout pushes
your client's "server" over the edge. When power's restored, the
server cannot even boot up to its welcome or logon screen. So now, the small
business owner is scrambling with the internal guru at 2 a.m. trying to restore
the company's corrupted contact management database, which contains 25,000
records and three years of data.
Fear of Catastrophic Data Loss and Overcoming
Sales Objections 
Situations such as catastrophic data loss,
although horrible tragedies for those affected, are great motivators for
combating apathy and overcoming sales objections. All of a sudden, the small
business owner becomes extremely receptive to your suggestions about your
proposed networking solution, which of course features centralized security and
data protection.
Discontinued technical support is another
powerful counterforce for overcoming apathy-rooted sales objections, especially
when you're talking about vertical, industry-specific software, such as niche
applications designed for accountants, attorneys, physicians, realtors, auto
body shops and restaurants.
After a certain point, the independent software
vendor (ISV) selling vertical, industry-specific software draws a line in the
sand and stops providing technical support, annual updates, and patches for
older versions of their product.
So if your client is an accounting firm that
needs updated tax tables (they'd basically be out of business without them),
your client is forced to upgrade the tax software, which often in turn forces
an upgrade of the server. This results in a call to your firm to upgrade their
server (and several related highly lucrative product sales and service
opportunities for your firm), all as a result of the "domino effect"
from an ISV calling the shots.
With this kind of scenario, you don't even need
to do much of the work in overcoming this sales objection. Your prospect's,
customer's, or client's vertical ISV has done the “heavy lifting” so to speak
in overcoming sales objections.
So besides fears of unreliable systems and
vendor-mandated upgrades, you can also overcome apathy by discussing your
prospect's, customer's or client's competition (without naming names, of
course). If you work with many small businesses in the same industry, and
you're seeing a software or more general technology trend that drastically
alters the competitive landscape in your prospect's or client's industry, by
all means call this to your prospect's or client's attention, as a means of
overcoming sales objections.
The Bottom Line
If you sell and service IT-related products to
small businesses, you need to develop your sales skills for overcoming sales
objections. This article introduces you to three different major categories of
small business IT sales objections and helps you understand simple anecdotal
closing strategies for overcoming those sales objections… and most importantly,
closing more big-ticket sales.

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