Complex sales

Complex sales, also known as Enterprise sales, can refer to a method of trading sometimes used by organizations when procuring large contracts for goods and/or services where the customer takes control of the selling process by issuing a Request for Proposal (RFP) and requiring a proposal response from previously identified or interested suppliers. Complex sales involve long sales cycles with multiple decision makers. Multiple stakeholders and stakeholder groups contribute to every complex sale.

Description

Any product or service may become a complex sale. In some instances, a complex sale occurs when the market is mature and the stakes are high enough to warrant attention from a variety of stakeholders in the buying organization. In other instances a complex sales process is needed when the buyer has never had experience with the vendor, technology being sold, or if the solution is business critical or impacts the buying organization on a strategic level. The series of filters, purchasing steps, and stakeholders involved are designed to reduce the risks associated with making the wrong buying decision.

Often the need to have multiple stakeholders or buyers involved relates to the level of risk that is involved in the purchase or sale of goods and/or services. As the buyer or buying organization if the purchase only impacts a small group of people or component of the buying organization then often the decision is made by one buyer and the process tends to be quite transactional.

If the purchase impacts the entire organization, affects the company strategically, or can change the buyer business process then often the sales person is required to have a set of skills that are more in line with a subject matter expert or consultant than a traditional sales person. This type of sales person can often be referred to as a Key Account Executive or Complex Sales Executive.

Large or complex sales opportunities that are international in nature require an additional set of personal and sales skills. The need for cross-cultural awareness may add an additional layer of complexity in the sales process.

The larger the purchase and the buyer risk the more trust and credibility required from the Vendor. As a Key Account Executive or Complex Sales Executive in addition to product knowledge and consultative selling skills top producing sales executives also have the ability to build strong client relationships and navigate and avoid the political pitfalls within client organizations.

Forms of complex sales

  • Selling consulting engineering services
  • Facility Management bids including provision of soft and hard FM services
  • Enterprise technology sales such as CRM or POS solutions
  • Private data networks such as MPLS
  • Commercial insurance sales
  • Real Estate development
  • Large fleet vehicle sales
  • Mining equipment sales (e.g. Caterpillar tractors and large tunnel boring machines)
  • Scientific Solution Sales (Data analysis and management)
  • Government acquisition such as for military hardware and services
  • Building management systems
  • Security systems

Sales controlling

Due to the high costs of proposals in complex sales the hit rate i.e. the percentage of successful offers is a valuable indicator of the performance of the sales force.

Limitation of complex sales

By analysing the characteristics of 'stellar performers', Dixon and Adamson argued that building strong personal and professional relationships and advocates among customers was no longer the most important success factor for selling. On the contrary, nearly 40% of 'stellar performer's were sellers who pushed their thinking and were not afraid to share even controversial views with both their customers and bosses.[1]

gollark: SSD controllers and the like.
gollark: The average x86 desktop already likely contains a few random ARM chips in it.
gollark: I expect ĀRM will take over eventually.
gollark: Intel will probably never be the underdog - they have more money and are more diversified.
gollark: Then AMD will be Intel and probably equally anticompetitive!

See also

References

  1. Dixon, M and Adamson, B. (2011). Selling Is Not About Relationships. Harvard Business Review. [online] Available at: https://hbr.org/2011/09/selling-is-not-about-relatio [Accessed 1 May 2017].
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