3 Ways to Influence Dealers or Distributor Sales Forces:
1. Relationships
Think of the distributor reps as your customers. Work at creating close business relationships with the good distributor reps in the same way that you would with end-user customers. Focus on the good ones and spend
little time with the mediocre. With the higher quality reps, discover their interests, uncover their values, find things you have in common, get to know their spouses and families, spend non-business time with them, etc. As you build strong relationships with them, you’ll find your distributor reps naturally becoming more involved with your product lines.
Focus on the concept of “comfort zones.” Most distributor reps have a virtually unlimited number of products that they can promote.
Most eventually settle on those products and applications with which they feel most comfortable with selling. They develop product/customer/application comfort zones. If your product or application doesn’t fit into a specific rep’s comfort zone, they’re going to spend little time with it. So, you must get to know your good distributor reps (see above) and then you must help them
expand their comfort zones to include your products and applications.
That means that you must lead the way, showing them how to find the opportunities, how to specify and present your product lines, and how to close and services those sales. Until the distributor rep is
comfortable with your products and sales processes, you’ll be swimming upstream.
3. “Easy, Secure Money”
Yep, money is still important. But notice the emphasis on the first two words.
“Easy” means that you make it as easy as possible to deal with you, to sell your product. You have the best selling literature, a generous sample policy, the quickest and most responsive inside people to respond to the distributor’s questions and requests, the simplest price list, the easiest policies and procedures in each of these
issues.
When your company is easy to deal with and when your product is easy to sell, you’ll find more and more support for it among the distributors.
“Secure” means that you provide some security for the salesperson who decides to spend time promoting your product. You protect that investment of time by making sure that none of his competitors can come into an account and low bid it after the salesperson has done the work to get your product trialed and accepted. If a distributor
rep invests in selling your product and experiences a competitor who did nothing to sell it, comes in and steals the business out from underneath him just once, you will likely lose that rep’s loyalties forever.
Hope these three strategies will help.