Sales POP - Purveyors of Propserity
Walking in the Customer’s Shoes
Blog / Sales Skills / Jun 9, 2020 / Posted by Nikolaus Kimla / 2738

Walking in the Customer’s Shoes

4 comments

The Future of Technology…and Walking in the Customer’s Shoes

Many companies such as mine are always carefully looking forward toward the next innovations. For CRM and other technological products, where are we going?

In one respect we can answer that question positively, without question: all innovations will be in the direction of being able to better walk in the customer’s shoes—understanding and fulfilling the customer need.

Open to Change

Dealing with customer needs does require salespeople to be flexible and open to change. You wouldn’t think so, but it’s still difficult even in these modern times for some to be open to change.

In a broader look at change, over thousands of years, it has been ingrained in us that you become an expert in a profession and you live it. It was even a tradition that a profession was symbolized by the clothing of the practitioner. This tradition was actually changed by the industrial revolution, and by society itself. Today when you go shopping, you can’t identify who is rich and who is poor. Sometimes you look at someone with torn jeans and a t-shirt and figure they have absolutely no money. Then they surprise the heck out of you by dropping $100,000 and buying everything in the store. That’s certainly an example of a drastic change.

Underneath everything is the question: how can we create a mindset that constantly adapts to all the new changes coming our way? We must be able to do so, for the changes are exponential, in every area.

Contextualizing

This constant change has brought about the requirement for a paradigm shift in the way we think and act. We should always be adopting principles we can build on. But on the other hand, we need to constantly challenge principles to maintain their relevance. Principles are generally applicable everywhere—otherwise, they wouldn’t be principles—but the key is to continually contextualize them within specific situations.

Often we find ourselves rationalizing, “It’s always been done this way, so we must continue to do it this way.” But things are changing so rapidly right now—especially with the planet-wide lockdown that occupied nearly the first half of this year—that there are methods that may never come back, or will come back but in a totally new form. Therefore we need the stability of principles, but on the other hand, we need to remain constantly open and ready to adapt them differently where needed.

As a prime example, let’s look at health. There is certainly stability in the body, elements such as our circulation and respiration. We breathe in oxygen, which then goes into our bloodstream. We eat, and food is converted into energy to keep us running. But with covid19 there is something we have forgotten—that health is holistic. Factors in our bodies are interconnected, much as our world is interconnected. One of these interconnections is that your thoughts and emotions have an effect on your body and health.

You can control your own emotions. Martin Luther once said, “You cannot keep birds from flying over your head, but you can keep them from building a nest in your hair.” This meant that random emotions will always be circling around in your mind, but you don’t need to let them “build nests” and take root.

If people maintained healthy lifestyles holistically, they would be much more resistant to viruses. Maybe this is something we all must learn right now—that not only is everything connected as we saw in the last couple of months, but that our bodies and mental systems are also interconnected.

To start with, it has to do with what we eat, how we exercise, and take care of our bodies. I have nothing against drinking, but alcohol to excess, as well as recreational drug use, weakens our immune systems. To strengthen your immune system you need nutrients such as vitamin C and vitamin D, healthy food, and exercise. On the mental side, it’s also important that you feel good about life and remains as upbeat as possible. Armed with these factors, you can fight just about any virus.

So we can see that any system, bodily or otherwise, is constantly being optimized with core principles, but these principles must be periodically challenged. They must be contextualized in every case.

Application to Sales

This approach of contextualizing principles must be taken in sales situations every time. Every person you are talking to is different—they have a different history, a different culture, a different gender, a different upbringing, and a different role within a company. The sale can be at a different stage—an early stage or a late stage. The prospect’s interest could be mild or strong. You may need to lay considerable groundwork leading into the sale.

You can’t stick to a canned pitch and say, “This is my message and this will always be the same” because you have to communicate appropriately to that person. That person must understand you. You then create empathy between you. At that point, your prospect opens up. When that happens, you have a very different conversation about the product or service than when you just launch into a typical sales pitch.

Technology can certainly assist salespeople in taking these measures—but we can certainly see that there are technological limits when it comes to sales. In front of a prospect, a salesperson must be inventive and ask the exact right questions. Technology, including AI, cannot do this. Maybe in 200 years, it might be able to, but certainly not for the foreseeable future.

Pressure to Change and Grow

The circumstances of today are pressuring us to innovate. It’s interesting that some of the most landmark innovations come from people and organizations under pressure, involved in some of the most major crises. It’s often a question of innovating to win.

There are people who will say they only perform under pressure. Professional athletes can be an example of this. When they’re training, they’re doing a great job. But when it comes to the actual competition, some of them really shine; they’re delivering at 100 percent and beyond.

At the present time, society is creating tremendous pressure to innovate. We’re seeing significant changes in business models. In the next 1 – 2 years we’ll see incredible new products and services coming to market, evolving from new ideas that at this point haven’t even been thought of. All of these come from viewing the world in a different way.

These innovations will have to be sold—but as I stated earlier, this selling won’t be in traditional ways. We have to think about the individual we’re selling to, how we can communicate with them, how we walk in their shoes before ever speaking with them, and how we can bring additional value to the table—value they need and are seeking.

Future of Technology and CRM

We’re already seeing, with our own Pipeliner CRM product, how AI can actually help us. To begin with, all repetitive sales activities can be performed by a computer, and in Pipeliner we’ve replaced many repetitive actions with functions that automatically accomplish them.

In another example, we’re getting to the point that we can speak to a computer and not have to actually type anything in—it’s automatically transcribed. After the text is in the computer, the intelligent work starts. Perhaps in the future, the computer can then discover patterns in the text you enter, and through algorithms can correlate the text with data that was entered earlier. It can then provide enriched data. It’s similar to how our minds operate—for example, someone mentions a particular scene, and you immediately remember it’s something you’ve seen before. You see a correlation and you think, “I shouldn’t do that again.” You’ve immediately adapted to the situation you’re in, and perhaps you’re changing your behavior. Technology should be completely supportive of these factors in the future—providing us better, faster insight for decisions, backed by reliable evidence*.

This is where I believe we are headed, and where we need to go.

*“Reliable evidence” is something that should truly be taken to heart. With covid19, we saw incredible numbers of conflicting theories and opinions of what the virus was or was not, or how dangerous it was or was not. How is it possible for scientists to have so many differing opinions about covid19? I’m not a doctor, a virologist or epidemic specialist, but I don’t understand how there could be so many conflicting views in the medical community. If we don’t get straight with the reliability of our data, we may not survive the next pandemic.

About Author

CEO and partner of pipelinersales.com and the uptime ITechnologies, which I founded in 1994 and has since played a significant role in the development of the IT-environment. pipeliner is the most innovative sales CRM management solution on the market. Pipeliner was designed by sales professionals for sales professionals and helps close the gap between the requirements of C-level executives for transparency and the day-to-day operational needs of field and inside sales. I am also the founder and Initiator of the independent economic platform GO-AHEAD!, which orientates itself on the principles of a free marketplace in terms of liberal and social responsibility. Connecting people, the trust of business leadership in terms of values such as freedom, self-responsibility, and entrepreneurial spirit, and strengthening their awareness in order to create a dynamic boost within the economy triggered through spontaneity, all stand for the initial ideas surrounding GO-AHEAD! I studied in Los Angeles and Vienna and received my Masters's Degree in 1994. I am married and have 3 children My Specialties are in: Sales Management, Sales CRM Software, CRM Cloud Solutions, SAAS, Business Strategy, Software Development, "Pipeline Management", Social responsibility, outbound sales, b2b sales, inside sales, sales strategy, lead generation, sales process, entrepreneurship, coaching, mentoring, speaker, opportunity management, lead management, Austrian School of Economics

Author's Publications on Amazon

This is a practical manual covering the vital subject of Sales Management. I firmly believe that sales are the most important profession for dealing with today’s turbulent world and Econo my, for salespeople create wealth and produce peace. But salespeople need a competent, stable leader—and…
Buy on Amazon
Inside this eBook, you’ll discover a series of chapters dedicated to some of the most important areas facing sales today. From the sales process definition to measurement, lead generation, and proven sales techniques, this comprehensive eBook will provide you with the information you need to…
Buy on Amazon
A common term in sales today is EQ, which stands for “emotional I.Q.” It means the skill a salesperson has in reading emotions and utilizing them in sales. It means empathy and a number of other abilities. The short version is, it’s an I.Q. when…
Buy on Amazon
People are smart to question the future of automation, for it has become part of everything we do. With the quantity of applications and technology around us, we yet still crave more. We become convinced of its power when our package is delivered from Amazon…
Buy on Amazon
Sales management isn’t a simple subject by any means. But at the same time, it does have some basic and somewhat simple fundamentals—and that is what we are bringing to you with this book. First come pain points of sales management, and how to overcome…
Buy on Amazon
Today the Internet has transformed a seller's market into a buyer's market and author Nikolaus Kimla states that the role of sales has never been more crucial. It is now time to give salespeople the role they factually can play: entrepreneurs within the enterprise. They…
Buy on Amazon
This is our public declaration of the intentions behind Pipeliner, and our objectives and motives for the product and for our company. Behind the development of that CRM application and, in fact, behind everything we do, we have a real cause. The story begins with…
Buy on Amazon
For the future, there must be a perfect balance of humans and technology. You have to have the perfect technology, andthen the perfect human being in application, performance and presentation. Today and into the future, it’s a 50-50 balance. In the past it was perhaps…
Buy on Amazon
The salespreneur is based on the concept of the entrepreneur. Before we can explain the salespreneur, you have to have some understanding of the entrepreneur. The entrepreneur plays a crucial role in any economic system. The entrepreneur seeks out information that can be utilized for…
Buy on Amazon
A seasoned captain would never leave port without a competent navigator. In a similar way, a sales manager might be a total ace at "commanding the ship" – at inspiring and coaching sales reps, pointing out and getting agreement on making quotas, and keeping everyone's…
Buy on Amazon
Comments (4)

1

Masoud commented...

At Pipeliner CRM, I believe its the future of technology since it gives and plan to initiate consumers and experts the chance communicate and influence positive changes.

1

Jessica Arikpo commented...

Putting CUSTOMERS first at this time is important as their need constantly change and pipeliner CRM is moving towards meeting every changing need of it clients as the world market moves toward a total makeover.

1

Cynthia Muriuki commented...

Technology is the future. It will help us adapt to the new normal after Covid 19.

0

Okelola Ikeoluwa hannah commented...

This help to improve sales skill

..
..
..
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. For information on cookies and how you can disable them, visit our privacy and cookie policy.