|

Carlton’s Successful Reseller
Secret # 4
Candid Advice From Experts
By. J. Carlton Collins,
CPA
The following questions
were asked of several award winning resellers from around the country in
May, 2002. While the names of these resellers have been suppressed, here
are the profiles:
Reseller 1
– (Vermont) Open Systems since 1993, moved to MAS 500 last
year. 11 employees.
Reseller 2
– (Tucson) CPA firm, resells ACCPAC BPI and MAS 90, have grown from 2
employees to 25 employees over past 7 years.
Reseller 3
– (Detroit) Has worked with BusinessWorks and MAS 90 products, has 6
employees and 125 customers.
Reseller 4
– (Dallas) 15 employees, resells Solomon, BusinessWorks, MAS 90, and
MAS 500. More than 500 implementations.
Reseller 5
– (Charlotte) 9
employees, sells BusinessWorks and MAS 90.
Reseller 6
– (Portland) Top customer service in the country 2 years in a row. 15
employees. More than 800 implementations.
1. What has been the
most successful thing that you have done to build your pipeline with
Mid-range prospects?
-
Our alliances and
networking with local CPA firms work great. We also work closely with
the Chamber of Commerce and our golf outings helped put us on the map
and catapult our image. (Reseller 3)
-
We work with local
media. If there is a technology story, this reseller tries to get there
free on the news as a reference. Most sales come from people who saw the
reseller in the news. (Reseller 1)
-
We rely heavily on CPA
alliances and seminars with CPAs, almost everything we do is based on
referrals. (Reseller 6)
-
We buy leads from any
qualified source. $90 per lead is a good range to pay for a lead – well
worth it. (Reseller 6)
-
We tried CPA Online’s
Find Accounting Software and finally closed 1 deal after more than 2
years. Better sources are now available. (Reseller 6)
-
Another source for
leads (refused to disclose) has been 10 leads a month – 20% success
rate. (Reseller 6)
-
Accounting Software
Advisor – is a good source for promoting your firm on the web and
gathering good credibility (Reseller 6)
2.
What are the steps you always take to prepare for your first meeting
with a prospect?
-
We always conduct a
phone interview prior to our initial visit to confirm the meeting,
length of time, objectives, and process. (Reseller 5)
-
Rather than beating
around the bush and talking about starting the process, we prepare a
list of questions and actually start the evaluation process. This tells
the prospect that we are efficient with our time and like to make
progress. After a good productive meeting in which we have already
completed step one, it is more difficult for them to throw away our
progress and hire another consultant. (Reseller 2)
-
We do our homework. We
print their web sites, find out who their CPA firm is, learn about their
competitors, look for articles, etc. (Reseller 1)
-
We perform a needs
analysis up front for no fee. Many other resellers say that they don’t
like to give away knowledge for free. However we first decide if we want
to do business with the client. Are they clear, are they organized? If
so, we conduct the needs analysis – you need to do this anyway, and
forcing them to pay for this can chase the prospect away before you ever
get started. (Reseller 3)
-
We always find out who
the decision makers are, and we make sure that we are talking to them.
We find that otherwise, we are often wasting our time. Once we land the
needs analysis work, we then turn our attentions to the staff. (Reseller
3)
-
We always ask for a
tour of the facility first. It is a good ice breaker and subsequent
discussions always seem to be clearer and easier to understand. This
gives the prospect a chance to feel more comfortable with us, it allows
us to bond a little bit and gives us a good mutual frame of reference
for further discussions. (Reseller 3)
-
We never take a
computer with us on our first meeting. We view the initial meeting as a
get acquainted meeting – we will come back with our presentation and
demonstrations well prepared to meet their concerns. (Reseller 2)
-
We try to find out
where the referral came from prior to our first meeting, and contact the
source of the referral to find out as much as we can. (Reseller 1)
3. What competitors
do you see most often and how do you differentiate your products to beat
them? How do you differentiate your company?
-
Great Plains is a
frequent competitor.
-
We try not to come
across as a reseller, rather we strive to come across as a business
partner. We walk away from prospects who see us as a reseller and we
tell them why. In many cases, they ask us back and thereafter see us in
a more professional light. It is a great trick but takes guts to try it.
(Reseller 2)
-
We are a solution
provider for Microsoft and we have Microsoft engineers on staff. This
helps us differentiate and compete. (Reseller 5).
-
We work with software
only. Many of our fellow resellers are either CPA firms or they also
sell the hardware. We are able to come across as specialists in our area
because software is all we do. We like to show prospects a list of CPAs
in area that used to sell “Great Plains” but they do not sell it any
more. It is a real eye opener to see how so many got in and got out of
that line of business. (Reseller 1)
-
We run into Great
Plains and Solomon. We try to find out about our competitors – little
details about their last failed installation or problems they have
encountered. Also, we send our information in first but go last in the
demonstrations. (Reseller 2)
-
We once won a deal
because the client said we took the time to learn their business. Ever
since then, this has been a fundamental part of our approach. (Reseller
4)
-
We provide the prospect
with a detailed plan that lists all of our tasks – the longer, the
better. This helps them better understand what we do, why they need us,
and helps justify our fees. (Reseller 3)
4.
What are the key indicators in the sales cycle that you look for to
determine if you can win the deal and if/when it makes sense to walk
away?
-
If the warehouse looks
like junk, their books probably look like junk too. (Reseller 2)
-
We once walked away
from deal because the client did not want to pay for client/server and
the hardware. (Reseller 3)
-
We have a phrase -
“Sell & Repent”. We try to avoid this common situation. (Reseller 6)
-
Due to tight time
frame, we recently were not able to go through the pecking chain, and as
a result we lost the deal. Next time, I think we will excuse ourselves
all together when faced with that same situation. (Reseller 5)
5.
As you approach the end of the sales cycle, how do you overcome price
objections/price shopping and prospects who take a long time in making
the decision to move forward?
-
We charge a
relationship fee for orphans. If the client expects to price shop and
buy elsewhere after we have done the evaluation, then we will not take
them as an orphan unless they pay us the full profit on the sale that we
would have made in the first place. So far, two orphans have paid this
fee. (Reseller 6)
6. What are the top
three things that have contributed to the success of your company?
-
Good people, good
products, a good publisher behind them. (reseller 5)
-
Focus! (we used to do
networks and anything the client wanted. Now we just concentrate on
software and we are good at it.) (reseller 5)
-
We developed a
structure that we follow with each prospect/engagement (this has
helped our process a great deal)
-
Consistent Marketing
(we hired a firm that does direct mail, email, fax, brand awareness)
-
Integrity – We don’t
sell anything the customer does not need. (reseller 6)
-
Constant communication,
end user seminars, newsletters, write your own and make it personal.
(reseller 5)
-
Acquisitions of other
reseller partnerships did not work for us (reseller 1)
-
Promotion is big
(reseller 1)
-
#1 Radio Station –
drive time 60 second spot $65 a spot. (reseller 1)
Resellers Get Listed Today...
If you are a reseller and you want to be listed on this web page, you
must first pass our tough criteria and due diligence background check.
There is a fee involved. Click here to learn
more. |