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Donagh Kiernan
Tenego Partnering
NSC Campus
Mahon
Cork, Ireland

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Value Based Pricing – A Story

A construction company was commissioned to build a really grand five star hotel in New York. They decided to use their best engineer, a founding partner with the firm, Jim O’Reilly (he was originally from Cavan, Ireland). The managing partner, Chuck Houlihan (of Irish ancestry) was a strong business man but a little hard headed.

In building the hotel, Jim was at the core of engineering design and construction until business differences separated Jim and Chuck. Jim left the company.

The hotel was completed and all went well and opening with a grand celebration.

Then one day, there was a problem with the air conditioning. This became a big problem and all the expertise with the company couldn’t pin point the cause. Chuck was forced to call Jim to ask him back to check it out, whatever the cost. Chuck asked his engineers to follow Jim everywhere in finding the problem.

Jim toured the hotel checking the system at different points, asking questions and moving on. Then after about two hours he stopped. He had found it. Taking our a piece of chalk marked an X on a piece of equipment. The other engineers saw instantly what we meant.

Jim sent in a bill for $50,000 dollars to Chuck. Chuck nearly had a heart attack and smartly replied to Jim for his billed to be itemised.

Jim responded:

$1 for the chalk, $49,999 for knowing where to put it

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Setting and meeting Sales Targets

Being able to do forecast sales and meet them is magic. Isn’t it?

Recently, I’ve being reading many books on sales management. Many of theses books were from a large company point of view, with 268 sales reps and such. They were typically public companies with quarterly results to report and shareholders expecting the continuous growing sales and profitability. These companies would talk about the certainty required in the measurement of the sales process. “Having a few in the bag, just in case” was always a safety being used. “You must be paranoid”, another would say repeatedly.

When you can pay for the best of everything:
1) You have strong market intelligence of what the buyer wants
2) You know what the markets’ purchasing plans for the coming year
3) You know what you can produce and can move fast to add capacity for contingency reasons
4) You know your sales cycle and lead time to sales
5) You have a pipeline and understand the probabilities at the various stages
6) Your team of 268 sales reps are well trained and managed by the best

So what if you have none of these.

The principles still apply. Do what you can do.

Progress is everything.

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Good Business Principles: Every Client is a Case Study

Case Studies are an invaluable sales tool. Nothing can explain your value clearer than showing how a similar company gained by using your product and/or services. Being able to show all the concerns being alleviated and typical challenges overcome goes a long way to removing barriers to a sale.

When you struggle to understand what a company does, A Case Study shows it very quickly.

With every new client engagement is an opportunity for you to demonstrate your capabilities. Collect the before picture precisely, both the financial and emotional measures.

With good case studies in your arsenal your proposal for business is much more believable as a future vision of success for your client.

Treat every opportunity on the basis that the world is watching how you perform.

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Date: December 2, 2006 | Filed under: Business Development, Good Business Principles
 
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