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Solution%20Selling

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Title: Solution%20Selling


1
Solution Selling
2
What Are Your Sales Goal?
  • To create a customer - Peter Drucker
  • To bring our audience and advertisers together
    - KOMC/KRZK, Branson, MO
  • To help people sell more Fords, -- Lowry Mays,
    former CEO of Clear Channel Communications

3
Objectives
  • What are your sales objectives?
  • To get results for customers
  • To develop new business
  • To retain and increase current business
  • Presell
  • Upsell
  • To increase customer loyalty

4
Strategies
  • What are your sales strategies?
  • To sell solutions to advertising and marketing
    problems
  • Complete customer focus
  • To reinforce the value of advertising and of your
    medium

5
Strategies
  • To create value for your product
  • To become the preferred supplier
  • To establish, maintain, and improve relationships
    at all levels of the client and agency (keep
    agency informed)
  • To provide the best research, information, and
    advice
  • To be customers marketing consultant by
    providing solutions

6
Strategies
  • To innovate
  • New packages, new products, new promotions
  • New creative approaches
  • New technology
  • The only functions of an enterprise marketing
    and innovation. Peter Drucker

7
Key Functions
  • What are a salespersons key functions?
  • To position your product to have a differential
    competitive advantage
  • To manage relationships and build trust
  • To create rapport
  • To empathize
  • To persuade
  • To cooperate
  • To build consensus

8
Key Functions
  • To solve problems
  • Creativity
  • Get results
  • To create a sense of urgency
  • To communicate effectively up, down, and across
  • Keep your management and coordinator informed
  • From the street, bring back market and competitor
    knowledge

9
Old Paradigms Of Selling
  • AIDA
  • Attention
  • Interest
  • Desire
  • Action
  • Commitment
  • Close
  • Each step used tricks

10
Old Paradigms
  • Old tricks dont work anymore.
  • Designed in 20s and 30s for one-call, low-cost,
    unimportant decisions
  • Old selling models dont work in todays highly
    competitive, interactive, sophisticated business
    environment.

Adapted from Sales Effectiveness Training by
Carl Zeiss and Thomas Gordon, Dutton, 1993
11
Old Paradigms
  • Dont work because
  • Increased competition, increased need for
    stronger customer loyalty and long-term
    relationships
  • Increased cost of developing new business
  • Solution selling requires partnering.
  • Solution selling is all about establishing and
    maintaining relationships and building trust.

12
Old Paradigms
  • Dont work because
  • Todays buyers are more sensitive to traditional
    sales techniques, manipulation, and tricks.
  • Todays buyers have a multitude of complex
    alternatives they can buy.
  • They need help making decisions.
  • They will let you help them only if they trust
    you and our company.

13
Old Paradigms
  • Dont work because
  • More, stronger competitors provide buyers with
    more choices they dont have to deal with
    anyone who doesnt satisfy their needs or they
    dont like or they dont trust.

14
Old Paradigms
  • Dont work because
  • Todays sellers are unhappy with the pressure and
    grind of one-shot sales (Hunters), they prefer
    long-term relationships (Farmers).
  • Todays sellers want to get results for
    clients--more satisfying.
  • Todays sellers want to be trusted, respected,
    and not seen as manipulators (old-fashioned sales
    image).

15
The New Paradigm
  • The customer is not the opponent--not someone to
    be overcome or beaten.
  • The customer is a partner who needs
  • A trusting relationship
  • Problems solved
  • Needs and wants met
  • Concerns addressed
  • A win-win, fair agreement
  • To get started before a competitor does

16
Solution Selling Is Need-Satisfaction Selling
  • Relationship Rule Do unto others as they would
    have others do unto them.
  • Treat people like THEY want to be treated.
  • Uncover and define problems and needs.
  • Business problems (rational, often ill-defined)
  • Personal needs (emotional, unconscious)
  • Need-satisfaction selling is difficult.
  • Requires emotional intelligence, interpersonal
    skills.

17
The Needs-Recognition Process
UNOBSERVABLE
OBSERVABLE
(Unconscious,
Semi-conscious)
(Conscious)
NEEDS and MOTIVATION
BEHAVIOR
18
Needs Recognition Process
  • Behavior is observable.
  • Behavior is conscious, purposeful -- people
    behave for a reason.
  • Motivation is unobservable.
  • Motivation is semi-conscious -- people are
    usually not fully aware of their motivation that
    drives behavior.
  • Needs are unobservable.
  • Needs are unconscious, deep seated, changing to
    get satisfaction -- people are unaware of their
    needs that drive motivation.

19
Human Needs
  • See List of Human Needs at http//www.charleswarne
    r.us/indexppr.html

20
Solution Selling
  • Relationship Rule People like and trust people
    exactly like themselves.
  • Trust depends on source credibility
  • Trustworthiness
  • Competence
  • Objectivity
  • Expertise
  • Physically Attractiveness
  • Dynamism
  • Similarity

21
Features, Advantages, Benefits
  • Features What youve got.
  • Channels, splash-screens, impressions
  • Advantages Why what youve got is better.
  • Benefits How what youve got solves a problem.
  • Always remember WIIFM
  • The client is asking himself silently to every
    feature you describe, Whats In It For Me?

22
Solution Selling
  • Position features, advantages, and benefits as
    problem solutions.
  • Position features, advantages, and benefits
    according to needs (Were a safe buy, e.g.)
  • Business needs
  • Personal needs
  • See List of Human Needs in the workbook.

23
Benefits Matrix
  • Use a Benefits Matrix to position features,
    advantages, and benefits according to business
    and personal needs.
  • See Benefits Matrix at http//www.charleswarner.u
    s/indexppr.html

24
Solutions Selling
  • Relationship Rule People dont care how much you
    know until they know how much you care.
  • The best way to let people know how much you care
    is to listen.

25
Effective Listening
  • The single most important skill in personal
    relationships, selling, negotiating, and managing
    is listening.
  • You cant have a successful relationship unless
    you are firmly committed to listening a majority
    of the time.

26
Effective Listening
  • Listening
  • 60 in most relationships -The minimum
  • 80 in some relationships - The maximum
  • If your partner wont listen at least 20 of the
    time, it is not a two-way relationship its a
    one-way relationship like in theater, movies,
    print, broadcasting, or cable -- you are the
    audience.

27
Effective Listening
Listening is an essential component of
communication.
The Communication Process
Source
Message
Channel
Receiver
Listening
Understanding
Feedback
28
Effective Communication
  • Effective communication requires understanding
    the elements of the communication process and
    using them to enhance your communication
    effectiveness and to power a relationship
    forward.
  • More effective communication stronger
    relationships
  • The goal, destination of a relationship is
    agreement.
  • Relationships, like car engines, are very
    complicated.

29
The Elements of the Communication Process
  • Communication -The fuel that powers a
    relationship forward.
  • Trust - The grease and oil that keeps it running
    smoothly.
  • Listening - The foundation, the road on which the
    process of communication travels toward agreement.

30
Effective Communication Depends On
  • Source credibility
  • Message strength
  • Channel effectiveness
  • Receiver characteristics
  • Listening effectiveness
  • Responsive feedback

31
Effective Communication
  • Elements that enhance Source Credibility
  • Trustworthiness
  • Competence
  • Objectivity
  • Expertise
  • Physical Attractiveness
  • Dynamism
  • Similarity
  • People like and trust people exactly like
    themselves.

32
Effective Communication
  • Elements that enhance Message Strength
  • Two-sided argument
  • Ordering effects
  • Primacy and recency
  • KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid)
  • USP (Unique Selling Proposition)
  • Focus on benefits

33
Effective Communication
  • Channel Effectiveness
  • Face-to-face most effective
  • Full, two-way verbal and non-verbal communication
    with instant feedback
  • Video (film, TV, e.g.) next most effective.
  • Audio (radio, e.g.) next.
  • Video and audio can convey emotion and control
    emphasis, even though they are one-way.
  • Print least effective unless the message is
    complex.
  • Cant convey emotion, one-way.

34
Effective Communication
  • Receiver Characteristics that affect
    communication
  • Intelligence
  • The receiver can understand and evaluate
    messages.
  • Self-confidence
  • The receiver trusts self to evaluate
    communication and make an assured decision.

35
Effective Communication
  • Effective Listening is the foundation on which
    effective communication rests.
  • You can improve not only your listening
    effectiveness but also the listening
    effectiveness of your partner on the road to
    agreement.
  • The beginning of knowledge, learning,
    relationships, communication, and conversation is
    a question -- an open-ended question.

36
Effective Listening
  • Ask an open-ended question.
  • Adopt the proper attitude.
  • Optimistic, open, confident, trusting,
    respecting, non-defensive, and non-judgmental
  • Shut up and listen.
  • Listen actively nod, use gestures, smile
    (Responsive Feedback).
  • Concentrate on the speaker.

37
Effective Listening
  • Do not step on sentences.
  • Do not respond to negatives, objections, concerns
    too quickly.
  • If you do, you appear to be defensive.
  • Do not think of a rebuttal.
  • If you continually rebut arguments, youll stop
    getting them and wont learn anything.
  • If you think of a rebuttal while trying to
    listen, you cant receive 100 of the information
    you hear.

38
Effective Listening
  • Respect the other sides statements.
  • Respect and learn about their view of the world.
  • Listen for themes.
  • Risk averse, conservative, entrepreneurial, needs
    recognition, affiliation needs, goal oriented,
    etc.
  • Be very sensitive to emotional cues.
  • Listen in synchronization--dont mimic.

39
Effective Listening
  • Concentrate on the speaker (open body language).
  • Acknowledge, dont always agree.
  • Oh, Uh-Uh, I see, e.g.
  • Dont say Good, or Youre right, --
    judgmental.
  • Do not react emotionally.
  • Control your emotions.
  • Listen with authenticity.
  • Be yourself, others can tell when youre not
    sincere.

40
Non-Verbal Communication
  • Non-verbal communication conveys 65 of a
    messages meaning.
  • Look for individual body language.
  • No universal body language.
  • Use gestures, space, openness, and your body
    language to
  • Give the message you care about and like the
    other person.
  • Match their style and pace.

41
Non-Judgmental Listening
  • People have a deep need for someone to listen to
    them and understand them.
  • Non-judgmental listening responds to this need.
  • Interpreting and understanding their entire
    message without imposing your preconceived ideas
    or opinions on it.
  • Non-judgmental listening is non-defensive
    listening.

Sales Effectiveness Training, Carl Zaiss and
Thomas Gordon, Penguin Books, 1993
42
Non-Judgmental Listening
  • Listen, understand and accept other peoples
    perception of the world.
  • Spend time in their shoes.
  • Develop a non-threatening, non-confrontational
    attitude so people feel secure in opening up,
    revealing personal information.
  • Offer personal information first and then trade
    it.
  • Find something you have in common with the other
    person.

Sales Effectiveness Training, Carl Zaiss and
Thomas Gordon, Penguin Books, 1993
43
Non-Judgmental Listening
  • Vary your responses, otherwise listening becomes
    a monotonous technique.
  • Show genuine concern and caring.
  • I dont care how much you know until I know how
    much you care.
  • Never ask Why?
  • No challenges
  • No obvious, manipulating techniques or leading
    questions Have you stopped beating your wife?
    e.g.

44
Non-Judgmental Listening
  • Objectives
  • To understand the other persons needs
  • Often, the other person just needs to talk.
  • To understand another persons unique perception
    of their world.

Sales Effectiveness Training, Carl Zaiss and
Thomas Gordon, Penguin Books, 1993
45
Listening Roadblocks
  • Denying, minimizing,
  • Cheering up, reassuring, encouraging
  • Sympathy, indignation, me-tooing, story-telling
  • Advising, teaching
  • Become condescending

Sales Effectiveness Training, Carl Zaiss and
Thomas Gordon, Penguin Books, 1993
46
Listening Roadblocks
  • Taking over, rescuing
  • Analyzing, probing, playing detective
  • Criticizing, moralizing, warning
  • Arguing, defending, counterattacking
  • All of these responses are judgmental.
  • So the point is to shut up and listen and
    acknowledge unemotionally like a therapist does.

Sales Effectiveness Training, Carl Zaiss and
Thomas Gordon, Penguin Books, 1993
47
Effective Communication
  • Aggressive behavior - Getting What I Want.
  • Dont be aggressive.
  • Assertive behavior - This Is How I Feel.
  • Be assertive.
  • Know who you are, what you want, and what you
    feel and communicate it.
  • Use I messages.

48
Effective Listening The Four Steps
  • Listen carefully, actively to other people.
  • Repeat/rephrase their position/objection.
  • Let me make sure I understand your positionyou
    feel our CPMs are too high?
  • Get their agreement that you understand.
  • Is that correct?
  • Respond with a form of an I understand
    statement (vary your responses)
  • I understand,
  • Feel, felt, found.

49
Feel, Felt, Found
  • Respond
  • I understand how you feel
  • Acknowledges their feelings and honors them.
  • Many advertisers have felt the same way
  • Reinforces and legitimizes their opinions so
    they know they arent way out, unusual, or silly.
  • But we have found that higher CPMs are based on
    three things highly targeted inventory, high
    demand, and high renewal rates.

50
Effective Listening Exercise
  • Find a partner
  • One is the salesperson, the other the client
  • Client says, your price is too high.
    Salesperson then goes through the four steps of
    Effective Listening.
  • Practice repeating the phrases.
  • Let me make sure I understand what you are
    saying.
  • Is that correct?
  • I understand how you feel, others have felt the
    same way, but we have found
  • Switch roles after three attempts.

51
Solutions Selling
  • Position features, advantages, and benefits
    positively as solutions to advertising and
    marketing problems.
  • Dont knock the competition.
  • You cant sell what they dont have.
  • You can only sell the features, advantages, and
    benefits you have.

52
Dont Knock the Competition
  • When you knock, you
  • Waste time.
  • Lose credibility (not objective).
  • Lower your image (stay above it).
  • Open up areas you cant control.
  • Client/buyer may like competitive salesperson.
  • Build competitors image.
  • Bring them up to your level.
  • Rolex doesnt advertise thats its better than
    a Timex.

53
Ways of Dealing with the Competition
  • Dont mention the competition if you dont have
    to -- ignore them.
  • If you have to mention them or are asked a
    question about them
  • Compliment the competition.
  • Talk first about your strengths (dont answer the
    question directly--like politicians do).
  • Expose generic weaknesses.
  • Yahoo has very high-traffic and is the best of
    the portals, but portals arent very sticky.

54
The Six Steps of Selling
  • Prospecting
  • Identifying Problems (discovery)
  • Generating Solutions (research and strategy)
  • Presenting
  • Negotiating and Closing
  • Servicing

55
Set Objectives for Each Step
  • Criteria for MADCUD objectives
  • Measurable
  • Attainable (accepted)
  • Consistent with company goals
  • Under the control of the person
  • Deadlined
  • MADCUD goals must be flexible

56
Goals
Peak Motivation
Motivation
Goal Difficulty
Very Hard
Very Easy
57
Goals and Objectives
  • The purpose of goals (long term) and objectives
    (short term) is to make people feel like winners.
  • Must be bottom-up, not top-down
  • Budgets and quotas are not motivational for all
    people.

58
Goals
  • Set time-spent goals for the five steps of
    selling. For example
  • Prospecting 10
  • Identifying problems (discovery)
    15
  • Generating solutions
  • (research,strategy)
    15
  • Presenting 40
  • Closing
    20
  • How much time spent on each varies according the
    the experience of the person, type of account
    list, etc.

59
Set Activity Goals
  • Calls/Contacts
  • Meetings
  • Critical skills
  • Building rapport and trust
  • Presenting
  • Solving problems
  • Overcoming objections
  • Addressing concerns

60
Set Activity Goals As Well As Revenue Goals
  • Orders
  • Critical elements
  • Creating value
  • Selling an idea
  • Selling the proposal
  • Negotiating
  • Closing

61
Set Activity Objectives As Well As Revenue
Objectives
  • Set activity and revenue objectives
  • Revenue objectives dont work for everyone.
  • Calls, appointments, and presentations lead to
    sales, which lead to revenue imperative to make
    the connection.
  • By focusing on activities that lead to revenue,
    the control of the goal stays with the
    salesperson.
  • Salespeople cant always control the size of the
    order they get.
  • But they can control how many calls they make and
    effective their sales presentation is.

62
Set Activity and Revenue Objectives
  • There must be a well-organized system for
    tracking and reporting on calls, meetings,
    presentations, opportunities, and orders.
  • And details on why opportunities were won or
    lost.

63
Prospecting Creating Opportunities
  • Developing new business finding prospects who
    have advertising and marketing problems.
  • No one is completely satisfied with their
    advertising.
  • Make contacts
  • Write out your telephone pitch in advance.
  • Use the prospects name, introduce yourself and
    your organization.
  • Use a referral if possible. (Jeff Bezos
    suggested I call you.)

64
Prospecting
  • State the purpose of the call is to set up an
    appointment, not to sell anything.
  • Mention a motivating benefit (special reason or
    special idea).
  • The word idea is magic, consultative.

65
Prospecting
  • Pacing is the key on the telephone.
  • Get to the point quickly.
  • Pause often.
  • Match prospects style and pace.
  • Put a mirror on your desk and stand up.
  • More animated, friendly, dynamic

66
Prospecting
  • On the phone, be persistent (but not obnoxious).
  • If you get a yes, reconfirm the time and day.
  • Do you have your Blackberry handy?
  • Generally, dont reconfirm the day of the
    appointment unless its out of town.
  • In town, have your assistant call and say, Shes
    on her way for her 1000a.m. appointment.

67
Prospecting
  • If you get the dont-come-see me stopper
  • Ask why
  • Compliment their business.
  • If one of your salespeople...
  • Appointments are imperative.
  • Getting appointments is the most difficult part
    of selling new business and requires creativity
    and, most of all, persistence.

68
Prospecting
  • Prospecting success ratios
  • By telephone 66
  • Cold calling 92
  • Play the odds, use the telephone.
  • Use voice mail effectively.

69
Prospecting
  • On cold calls never say
  • May I have a few minutes of your time?
  • I just happened to be in the neighborhood?
  • Im sorry I interrupted you.
  • On cold calls always state the purpose of the
    call and how long it will take.

70
Prospecting Methods
  • By Current Advertisers in Other Media
  • By Season
  • By Category
  • By Geographic Region
  • By Inactive Advertisers
  • By Current Advertisers
  • By Business, Civic, and Other Organizations

71
Persistence in Prospecting
  • The key to prospecting, in fact, to all selling
    is persistence.
  • Never, never, never, never, never give up.
  • Every client has at least one problem (perhaps
    they are unaware of it) that is searching for a
    solution.

72
The Process of Preparation Identifying Problems
  • Set objectives.
  • Ask Discovery Questions
  • What is the age, sex, and lifestyle of your best
    customers?
  • What problems do you expect interactive to solve
    for you?
  • What advertising are you doing now?
  • What do like best, least about your current
    advertising?

73
Identifying Problems, Needs (Discovery)
  • The best questions are follow-up questions.
  • Discovery requires solid detective work.
  • Information is power.
  • The more information you get, the more problems
    you uncover, the more objections and concerns you
    uncover, the more precise and helpful your
    solutions will be.
  • See Discovery Questions at http//www.charleswarne
    r.us/indexppr.html

74
Generating Solutions (Research and Strategy)
  • The process of preparation
  • Research prospects category.
  • Advertising and marketing expenditures.
  • Category growth profile
  • Research prospects industry.
  • Rank order of players and their market share.
  • Media expenditures of players
  • Creative campaigns and approaches of players
  • Marketing strategy of players

75
Generating Solutions (Research and Strategy)
  • Research prospect companys marketing and
    advertising goals, strategies, and problems in
    achieving these goals.
  • Prioritize problems.
  • Research prospect companys customers.
  • Research prospects strengths and weaknesses.
  • Research prospects major competitors strengths
    and weaknesses.
  • Research prospects current creative approach.

76
Generating Solutions (Research and Strategy)
  • Create ideas that will solve the prospects
    problems.
  • Targeted
  • Maximize reach
  • Receptive audience
  • Brainstorm to generate several solutions.
  • Order, anchor, and frame solutions effectively.

77
Generating Solutions (Research and Strategy)
  • Anticipate your competitors attacks on you (what
    they say about you to prospects).
  • Anticipate prospects objections and prepare
    appropriate answers.
  • Keep your sales objectives in mind at all times.
  • Create an account-entry strategy.
  • Create an overall sales strategy a detailed,
    step-by-step plan of attack (who does what when).

78
Generating Solutions
  • Create a killer presentation.
  • See Checklist for Customized, Solutions-Based
    Presentations at http//www.charleswarner.us/inde
    xppr.html

79
Presenting
  • Confidence is everything!
  • Confidence is an attitude, which you control
  • Optimism
  • Positive goals (winning, not avoiding a loss)
  • Visualization
  • Mental Rehearsal
  • Do the right thing (honesty)

80
Presenting Call Structure
  • Greeting
  • Set tone of the meeting and build rapport
  • New information
  • Provide new, relevant information to enhance your
    source credibility and expertise.
  • Opening
  • A well-planned statement to pique interest in
    your proposal and solution
  • Recap and purpose
  • Recap what challenges and problems you will be
    addressing and state the purpose of the call.

81
Call Structure (Continued)
  • Discussion
  • Move prospects from desire to conviction that
    your solution is the best one.
  • Dealing with objections
  • Conditions
  • Discussion tactics
  • Summary and close
  • Summarize key points no more than three and
    ask for the order or for Next Steps.  No ask no
    order.

82
Dealing With Objections
  • No objection no sale
  • Figurative and literal objections
  • Figurative are not real they are negotiating
    tactics and can be ignored.
  • Literal objections are real and must be
    addressed.
  • Probe to understand.
  • Compliment, restate, and get agreement.
  • Empathize, reassure, and support (feel, felt,
    found).

83
Dealing With Objections (Continued)
  • Use trial closes
  • Forestall objections
  • Use Yes, but and compare.
  • Use case histories (case studies).
  • Use coming to that
  • Pass on objections

84
Dealing With the Price Objection
  • Hope it comes up otherwise youve underpriced
    your product.
  • Always talk quality.
  • Break price into smallest possible units.
  • Talk value, not price.
  • Refer to investments, not costs.
  • Advertising is an investment in future profits
  • Use you get what you pay for.

85
  • Conditions
  • Cant be overcome they are legitimate reasons
    for not buying.
  • Leave as a friend

86
Discussion Tactics
  • Vary your style.
  • Contrast
  • Movement
  • Novelty
  • Use equivalencies to dramatize numbers.
  • Narrow down objections and reconfirm
    understanding.
  • Change the basis for evaluation if necessary.
  • Reassure doubts.
  • Continually evaluate reactions and adjust.

87
Summary and Close
  • Summarize three key points
  • Close
  • Ask for the order
  • No ask no order.
  • Move the sale along.
  • Get a commitment for Next Steps

88
Presenting
  • Youre a marketing solutions provider, not a
    seller.
  • Always keep in mind your 1 sales objective To
    get results for customers.
  • Dont sell customers stuff that wont work.
  • Dont sell them something they like just to get
    an order. Sell them what works best -- youre the
    expert.
  • Dont sell them more than they need no gouging,
    they wont renew.

89
Closing
  • Help buyers make the right decision.
  • Create a sense of urgency.
  • Use a variety of closes
  • The Clincher Close
  • The Assumption Close
  • The SRO Close
  • The Minor-Point Close
  • The T-Account Close
  • The Pin-Down Close

90
Closing
  • Ask for a decision.
  • Letter of Intent (LOI)
  • Commitment to send IO
  • 48-hour hold
  • What else is left?
  • If I can resolve these issues, do we have an
    agreement?
  • Once you reach an agreement, scram!
  • Dont be around when buyers remorse sets in.

91
Closing
  • Be careful about trying to close too
    aggressively.
  • You can create a sense of urgency, but the
    timetable has to be theirs.
  • Too much pressure can kill a prospective sale.
  • High pressure raises suspicion.
  • People want to buy, they dont like being sold
    or closed.

92
Servicing
  • You are the unique competitive advantage.
  • Set servicing and business increase goals.
  • You never close a sale, you open a long-term
    relationship. Dennis Waitley
  • Which order is the most important one first or
    second?
  • Tangibilize
  • Send notes (more personal than e-mails), cards,
    small gifts, etc.

93
Servicing
  • Always say thank you memorably.
  • Dont forget anyone (review your account list
    regularly).
  • Always present new ideas increases.
  • Pre-sell
  • Handle complaints immediately and honestly (see
    them as an opportunity to prove how good you are
    at servicing and managing an account).

94
Summary
  • Solution Selling is
  • Managing relationships based on trust
  • Creating value
  • Making proposals that will get results for
    customers
  • Tracking results and making adjustments
  • Getting enthusiastic renewals at larger
    investments
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