Q. I have many customers who refuse to even consider some of my products because the one they have now is working fine and they don’t want to change something that is working well for them. They feel they are opening themselves to potential dangers, problems and nightmares by fixing something that isn’t broken. Any suggestion for how to deal with the “If it ain’t
broke, don’t fix it” attitude?
A. This is one that frustrates every sales person. Let’s start by putting yourself in the customer’s shoes. You’ve shown him your product, and it’s noticeably better/cheaper than what they are currently using. Or, they won’t even take the time to look at your latest and greatest solution. Regardless of where you are at in the sales process, the problem is that you have something
better, and they won’t budge from using an inferior solution.
Why not? Let’s analyze the situation. As is almost always the case, the solution becomes really obvious when we have done a good job of analyzing the problem. So, let’s consider the reasons why the customer won’t budge.
Here are the big three.
1. The perceived benefit from switching the product is not worth the time and effort the customer must invest in the change process.
OK, so your LAGS (latest and greatest solution) will save him 5%. But, he must work off his old inventory, notify the current supplier, switch all the numbers in his purchasing and inventory systems, perhaps rewrite protocols, maybe train staff in the new thing, communicate the change so that everyone internally knows about it, etc. See the problem? It takes time, effort and money to change a product. And most of your customers, if they are like most of the business world
these days, have too much to do and not enough time in which to do it. They don’t need another project. So, while your LAGS is an improvement, the improvement just isn’t worth the time and effort.