Posts Tagged ‘seller’

The Chinese Guide To Sales Negotiation

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Sales Negotiators Need To Learn How To Negotiate With The Chinese

Sales Negotiators Need To Learn How To Negotiate With The Chinese

Pity the poor American salesperson who goes out into the world of business and tries to negotiate. Sure, he/she is probably well equipped to negotiate with his / her American born-and-breed peers. I mean, after all, we share the same vocabulary, culture, and were brought up pretty much the same way. However, what happens when we encounter someone from a different (dare I say foreign?) culture? Like say, China…?

The world is constantly becoming a smaller and smaller place. Current economic conditions not withstanding, this is only going to speed up over time. That means that somehow we need to find a way to quickly come up to speed on how to deal with sales negotiators who come from different cultures. They think and act completely differently than we do and we are the ones who need to learn to adjust in order to make our sales negotiations successful.

Dr. Charles Karrass has spent a lot of time studying not only negotiations but also how cross-cultural negations do or don’t work. When it comes to dealing with folks from China, he’s got some suggestions for us:

  • Get Some Quanxi: Quanxi is the Chinese term for the construction of close family relations, or a joined network of relationships with the emphasis on the individual and informal groups rather than formal organizations. Building guanxi means building relationships. In sales negotiations, this means that by entering into a negotiated relationship, you are actually taking on a lot of responsibility. If things change during the contract, the other side can ask for changes and you are expected to be accommodating.
  • Watch Those Words: In negotiations with Chinese, what a word means is critically important. All too often, what a word means to you may not be what it means to the other side. Both before and during a negotiation, it would be worth your while to take the time to carefully define key words and make sure that both of you are using it the same way.
  • Persistence Pays: All too often in Western culture, we take a “no” as really meaning “no”. To a Chinese negotiator, your “no” just means “no for now” and they will feel free to revisit it over and over again to see if you’ve changed your mind. Many western negotiators have commented on this by saying that Chinese negotiators appear to grind away until they end up getting most of what they want. Chinese negotiators have both consistency and persistence – be prepared!

Yes, a sales negotiator can successfully conduct business with Chinese negotiators. However, you need to be aware that they view the world differently than you do and YOU are the one that is going to have to adjust in order to have these negotiations turn out successfully.

Have you ever had an opportunity to negotiate a business deal with a Chinese negotiator? Did they keep coming back over and over again to issues that you thought were already closed? Were there any misunderstandings over vocabulary words? Did you end up building a quanxi relationship? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.

Should Sales Negotiators Be In Long Term Relationships?

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Do Buyers Or Sellers Get More Out Of A Long-Term Relationship?

Do Buyers Or Sellers Get More Out Of A Long-Term Relationship?

Who wouldn’t want to be in a long term relationship? I mean we wanted our parents to be in one, we want to be in one, movies always end by having the hero walk off into the sunset and into a long term relationship, right? It turns out (as with so many things in life), when it comes to sales negotiations it depends on what side of the table that you’re sitting on as to if you should want to be in a long term relationship…

Let’s be straight here, getting ourselves into a long term relationship makes life sooo much easier. There are all sorts of benefits like reliability, friendship, and even peace of mind. However, it has been shown that over time these types of relationships start to favor one party over the other. Here’s what can happen:

  • You can lose your objectivity
  • You can become compliant
  • You can lose your company’s secrecy
  • You can become too dependent on the other side

If you are a seller, then getting into a long term relationship can be a very good thing. Generally speaking, long term relationships favor the seller over the buyer. Here’s why:

  • More often than not, product specifications change over time.
  • Changes in product specifications tend to increase the seller’s margin.
  • The seller can tailor standard offerings into special products and charge more for them.
  • The seller has fuller access to the buyer’s organization – the reverse is not true.

Sure seems like the seller has an unfair advantage doesn’t it? Buyers should take heart, there are actually a number of things that a buyer can do to even the score:

  • Change buyers every few years just to shake things up.
  • Expand the number of competitors vying to be your supplier.
  • Have another group evaluate each long term relationship every so often.

Long term relationships do have their advantages; however, just as with your love life, you need to step back every so often and make sure that this relationship is the right for you right now.

Are you currently in a (business) long term relationship? Are you the buyer or the seller? Do you think that this relationship is still a good one to be involved in? How can you double check this? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.

Weird Negotiating: The Buy Now – Negotiate Later Tactic

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Buy Now - Negotiate Later Is A Dangerous Tactic That Should Be Used Carefully

Buy Now - Negotiate Later Is A Dangerous Tactic That Should Be Used Carefully

I’ve always thought that this tactic was just a little bit crazy, but I have come to think that it goes on a lot more than any of us may believe. To set the stage properly, you’ve got to be able to imagine a buyer who is desperate. For whatever reason, a project has got to be started NOW. Ultimately the project has a number of items that are going to have to be negotiated, but its got to start NOW.

Using the buy now – negotiate later tactic, the buyer asks the seller to start the project now on a prearranged contractual basis. The buyer will then provide some limited funds in order get things started and both the buyer and the seller agree to work out the details in the future.

Does this sound dangerous to you? This is not the way that I like to work – things can get messy really quickly. The key reason for the way that I feel is that it can be incredibly hard for a buyer to change vendors once the project is started. We all tend to make both financial as well as mental commitments that are hard to change after we’ve reached an initial agreement with the seller. What was once a temporary agreement, has somehow become permanent and the buyer is locked in to it.

With all of this having been said, buy now – negotiate later can still be the way for a buyer to go in certain special circumstances. Some of these are:

  • Blobs: Sometimes the amount of work that has to be done truly can’t be estimated until some initial work has been done.
  • Out Of Time: Although we’d all like to have plenty of time to sit down and complete a negotiation, sometimes there is no time for negotiation – work needs to begin right NOW!
  • Phantom Costs: Sometimes there has been an initial discussion of prices between both parties. This has left the buyer feeling as though the seller is trying to collect for expenses that will probably never occur.
  • Pilot Time: If the buyer has never dealt with the seller before or if the job requires unique specialized skills, then the buyer may want to try-it-before-he-buys-it. This will provide the buyer with a way to find out if the seller truly knows his stuff.
  • Seller’s Advantage: The seller may be willing to enter into this type of deal if he/she realizes that his bargaining power is going to be less later on. There are several different reasons why this can happen, the most common is that resources have been committed and this means that he/she will lose this contract opportunity.
  • Good Record: The buyer may be willing to enter into this type of agreement if his research shows that the seller has a good track record and past customers report that he probably won’t rip the buyer off.
  • Not To Exceed: The buyer can consider entering into this type of deal if the seller is willing to commit to a not-to-exceed price at the outset.

I’m still wary of these types of deals. Even sellers need to be careful. A seller’s power in a negotiation is the greatest during negotiations BEFORE work has started. Once services start to be delivered, then all bets are off.

Have you ever been part of a buy now – pay later deal? Why was this type of deal proposed? Who proposed it: the buyer or the seller? How did it turn out – was everyone happy in the end? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.

Negotiating Self Defense: Countering The Reverse Auction Tactic

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009
Sellers Need To Defend Themselves Against Buyers Who Use The Reverse Auction Negotiating Tactic

Sellers Need To Defend Themselves Against Buyers Who Use The Reverse Auction Negotiating Tactic

I’ve always liked superheros. From my earliest days of reading comic books to my current-day trips to the movie theater to see Spiderman and Iron Man, I just don’t seem to be able to get my fill of superheros.

I believe that superheros, although fictional (probably – however I still have hope), can teach us a lot about how to become better negotiators. One lesson that all superheros seem to learn in superhero school is that in order to be successful in a fight, they always need to have good self defense skills.

In negotiations, sellers need to have a good defense against one negotiating tactic that a buyer can use which is called the “reverse auction”. It works like this: let’s pretend that you wanted to build buy a new car. You visit three different car dealers and get three different offers. As you can imagine, each of these offers will contain a confusing mix of different financing and option packages.

Your next step will be to call a “reverse auction”. You go back to each dealer an tell them that you’ve visited the other two dealers. Each dealer will then proceed to tell you why they are the best and why you should avoid buying from the other dealers. After you’ve had a chance to talk with all three dealers, you now understand the subtleties and the options associated with buying the car that you want.

With all of this new information, you are now able to more clearly refine your specifications because the alternatives have become clear. You can now specify the specific financing and option packages that the dealers can bid on.

You will end up selecting the dealer who can provide the best price while providing the most car for that price. By using a reverse auction, the buyer was able to learn a great deal about buying a specific new car and was able to trade off options that he/she originally did not know existed.

All of this is great if you are a buyer, but what if you are the seller (or the dealer in the case of our example)?

It turns out that although it may initially appear as though the buyer is holding all the cards when they are using the reverse auction tactic, that’s not really true – you still have a great deal of negotiating power.

Your greatest strength comes from the simple fact that the reverse auction takes a great deal of the buyer’s time in order to do correctly. They have to identify sellers, collect bids, evaluate, revisit to collect information, and then revisit again to negotiate a final deal. All this takes time that they may not have to give.

What you need to do is to present yourself as being the seller who best understands that the buyer’s needs are. If you can convince him of your credibility then you’ll be well positioned to close the deal.

Here are a few tips that will help you come out ahead when your buyer decides to us the reverse auction tactic on you:

  1. Be Last: You want to be the last person that the buyer talks with, not the first. This may allow you to short-circuit the reverse auction process.
  2. Use Your Best: When dealing with the buyer, you want to use either your best negotiators or at least make sure that you are well prepared for the discussion (no distractions!).
  3. Give In Slowly: This is always a good tip – do not hurry to make concessions to the buyer.
  4. Sell, Sell, Sell: Make sure that you sell the buyer on your strengths and benefits.
  5. Use Limits: Clearly communicate to the buyer that the scope of your authority is limited in this deal to the bottom-line figure.
  6. Use Experts: The buyer is desperately looking for somebody to believe in so that they can be convinced that you are the right one to buy from. Make sure that you provide the expert that they need to find.
  7. Use Innovation As A Back-Up: Life is unpredictable. Sometimes a reverse auction will start to go badly for you. In these cases, you need to make sure that you have a new and innovative approach that you can whip out if this happens – lifetime free oil changes anyone?
  8. Find The Decision Maker: You can talk with the buyer until you are blue in the face, but it will be all for naught if you haven’t done your homework and made sure that they really are the final decision maker. Check before you invest the time and energy.

Have you ever been in a situation where a buyer used the reverse auction tactic on you? Did you feel as though they had the power in the negotiation or that you had it? Was time a key factor that the buyer was dealing with? Were you able to convince them that you were the expert? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.