Selling Power Magazine Article

double right arrow The ABCs of Selling Higher Up

How to approach, present, and sell to the C-level executive

In certain sales situations, a rep can only close a sale by meeting with the top decision maker. In the post-2008 economic climate, many companies require approval from the top of the decision-making chain. Thus, it’s not unusual these days for sales reps to find themselves in front of C-level customers, where long-lasting relationships can begin to develop.

“If you get buy-in at the top, the sale is far easier,” summarizes sales consultant Sam Manfer. “Salespeople can make a sale without going to the top, but it is harder. The customer cajoles you on price. At the top you get follow-up and cross sales.”

There are two absolute rules for selling to C-level customers: Do your homework, and have something important to say. But there are also lots of details to get right.  

Prepare for the C-level customer before you visit. Use LinkedIn and other tools to build a network of colleagues who can help make referrals. For example, Tom Begg has links to 500 names in LinkedIn, has started 50 groups, and sends newsletters to group members. Many of these contacts have been useful; they are C-level execs or people who know them. “Don’t be shy about asking for help,” Begg advises.

Know exactly which C-level exec you need to speak to – CEO, CFO, COO, or other. Who has the most to gain or lose from what you are selling? To answer this question, a rep must know the informal process, apart from formal RFPs, the firm uses to make buying decisions.

“The informal process always trumps the formal one,” notes Steve Bistritz, coauthor of Selling to the C-Suite: What Every Executive Wants You to Know About Successfully Selling to the Top (McGraw-Hill, 2009). He successfully bid for a major IT firm’s business only because the key C-level exec stepped in at the end, overriding the purchasing agent’s choice. “The relevant exec can change the rules,” Bistritz summarizes.

You may learn this “relevant” executive’s name from a low-level manager who warns you not to go over his head. “You must weigh the risk of jeopardizing that low-level relationship by seeking the higher decision maker with losing the deal because you did not go higher,” Bistritz explains. “Salespeople must manage risk.”

The biggest error is not doing enough homework. Bistritz urges reps to speak to lower-level managers first. Learn about the firm’s industry, utilizing information from key customers and competitors, annual reports, CEO letters to shareholders, 10-K and 10-Q reports, and such services as OneSource. “Listen to the quarterly earnings call; stock analysts ask pretty good questions. Look for key initiatives and your solutions for these initiatives.”

“Pick the brains of your network to learn what the exec is like and what his issues and landmines are,” Manfer urges. “Preparation develops confidence, and confidence makes you believable.”

Monitor the prospect constantly, looking for gains, losses, and market movements. Nicholas Read, lead author of Selling to the C-Suite, says individual reps must often do all this research. “But if you have a team on the account, there must be a formal schedule and delegation of responsibility for gathering information.”

Nearly 90 percent of the execs Read surveyed for his book said they would meet with a salesperson based on a recommendation from someone they know and respect from inside their company or business network. “Know the people they rely on internally, perhaps who are three levels below without title or rank but are true subject experts. These are the people who always stay, no matter the ebbs and flows. If these people recommend you, the exec will see you.”

The best references are often C-level peers at other major corporations. “This shows you play at their level,” says Jill Konrath, author of Selling to Big Companies (Kaplan Business, 2005). “If they get a reference from their peers, they have to pay attention.”  

Go for a C-level meeting early and with a big idea, or do not go at all. The top execs from 400 major corporations who Read surveyed told him that once an RFP hits the street, they are no longer involved.

“So see [C-level customers] very early to define [your solutions],” Read argues. “Don’t meet with them in the middle of the sales cycle unless you can bring new insights, change the vision beyond the scope of the original, or reengineer it to be more effective. But if you have a better approach they will listen. Timing is everything.”

Tom Begg finds the best time to call top execs is from 41 to 57 minutes past the hour. “If you call at 10 a.m. to 10:40 a.m. you will not get through,” he stresses. But even the best-timed calls are likely to require leaving a message. Make it succinct and persuasive. Follow up with a quick email, and then call again in three days. Keep a detailed record of every contact.

The first time you connect with the exec, you may have only three minutes to demonstrate why he or she should take a longer call or meeting. “You have to demonstrate some value to the exec, for example that you have sold the solution to the same industry,” Bistritz argues.

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You can go for a short telephone call first – say, 20 minutes long. If the call lasts longer, that is great. But be prepared to keep it short, and seek a face-to-face follow-up.

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– Henry Canaday
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