Personal Selling
Personal Selling
Personal Selling
Personal selling is oral communication with potential buyers of a product with the intention of
making a sale. The personal selling may focus initially on developing a relationship with the
potential buyer, but will always ultimately end with an attempt to "close the sale"
Personal selling is one of the oldest forms of promotion. It involves the use of a sales force to
support a push strategy (encouraging intermediaries to buy the product) or a pull strategy (where
the role of the sales force may be limited to supporting retailers and providing after-sales service).
Personal selling is used to meet the five objectives of promotion in the following ways:
The main disadvantage of personal selling is the cost of employing a sales force. Sales people are
expensive. In addition to the basic pay package, a business needs to provide incentives to achieve
sales (typically this is based on commission and/or bonus arrangements) and the equipment to
make sales calls (car, travel and subsistence costs, mobile phone etc).
In addition, a sales person can only call on one customer at a time. This is not a cost-effective way
of reaching a large audience.
PROCESS OF PERSONAL SELLING
• Preapproach
Step 2.
• Overcoming Objections
Step 4.
• Closing
Step 5.
Step2. Preapproach:- The salesperson needs to learn as much as possible about the prospect
company (what it needs, who is involved in the purchase decision) and its buyers (personal
characteristics and buying styles). The salesperson should set call objectives: to qualify the
prospect, gather information, make an immediate sale. Another task is to decide on the best contact
approach, which might be a personal visit, a phone call, or a letter. Finally, the salesperson should
plan an overall sales strategy for the account.
Step3. Presentation and Demonstration: - The salesperson now tells the product "story"
to the buyer, following the AIDAS formula of gaining attention, holding interest, arousing desire,
obtaining action and giving satisfaction.
The AIDAS theory of personal selling is one of the widest known theories and is the basis for
training materials across numerous organizations. AIDAS stands for Attention, Interest, Desire,
Action, and Satisfaction. The AIDAS theory simply states that a prospect goes through five
different stages before finally responding satisfactorily to product. Thus he should be led
comfortably through all five stages.
Attention - Gaining attention is a skill and just like any skill, gaining attention can be improved
upon with practice. The initial attempt of the sales person must be to put the customer completely
at ease. Casual conversation is one of the best openers after which the sales person can gain
customer attention by leading him onto the sale.
Interest - After gaining the attention, it is very important to maintain interest. Some sales people
are very good in the opening but as the technicalities take over, they become uncomfortable while
explaining the product. Whereas others who are strong in the product department might open
bluntly but create interest in the second stage.
Desire – Personal seller has to create enough desire in the customers mind such that he immediately
has to buy the product. Imagine an aquaguard sales man or a tupperware sales person. They
highlight the product in such a manner that the customer might be thinking “Why didn’t I buy this
product before”. Thus kindling that desire becomes an integral part of the AIDAS selling theory.
Action - Although there may be desire for the product, the customer might not act on it. The seller
might want to buy the product but he might NOT buy it. In such cases the customer needs to be
induced. There are various ways to induce the customer such that he buys the product. It is
important for the sales person to understand whether to directly induce the customer or whether to
push subtle reminders that you are there for a sales call. Both methods work, but personal seller
need to know the customer.
Satisfaction - What would you do after the customer has given the order? The customer has just
parted with his money. So even after the customer has bought the product, there is need to reassure
the customer that he has made the right decision. The product is good for the customer and the
personal seller has only presented the product. It was his decision and he is right about it. These
small cues post the sales process really give confidence to the customer and he then looks forward
to your product rather than thinking whether or not he has made the right decision.
The salesperson uses a features, advantages, benefits, and value approach (FABV). Features
describe physical characteristics of a market offering, such as chip processing speeds or memory
capacity. Advantages describe why the features provide an advantage to the customer. Benefits
describe the economic, technical, service, and social benefits delivered by the offering. Value
describes the worth (often in monetary terms) of the offering. Too often, salespeople spend too
much time dwelling on product features (a product orientation) and not enough stressing the
offering's benefits and value (a customer orientation).
Step5. Closing: - Now the salesperson attempts to close the sale. Salespeople need to know
how to recognize closing signs from the buyer, including physical actions, statements or
comments, and questions. There are several closing techniques. They can ask for the order,
recapitulate the points of agreement, offer to help the secretary write up the order, ask whether the
buyer wants A or B, get the buyer to make minor choices such as the color or size, or indicate what
the buyer will lose if the order is not placed now. The salesperson might offer the buyer specific
inducements to close, such as a special price, an extra quantity, or a token gift.
Step6. Follow-Up And Maintenance: - Follow-up and maintenance are necessary if the
salesperson wants to ensure customer satisfaction and repeat business. Immediately after closing,
the salesperson should cement any necessary details on delivery time, purchase terms, and other
matters that are important to the customer. The salesperson should schedule a follow-up call when
the initial order is received to make sure there is proper installation, instruction, and servicing.
This visit or call will detect any problems, assure the buyer of the salesperson's interest, and reduce
any cognitive dissonance that might have arisen. The salesperson should also develop a
maintenance and growth plan for the account.