Personal Selling

In the past few tutorials we saw how marketers can use advertising, sales promotion and public relations to reach a large number of customers. While these methods of promotion offer many advantages, they each share one major disadvantage: they are a non-personal form of communication. And whether a company is in retailing or manufacturing, sells goods or services, is a large multi-national or a local startup, is out to make a profit or is a non-profit, in all probability at some point they will need to rely on personal contact with customers. In other words, they will need to promote using personal selling.

Unfortunately, personal selling is widely misunderstood. For instance, many customers think salespeople possess traits that include being manipulative, arrogant, aggressive and greedy. While many marketers believe salespeople are only out to make a quick sale intended to increase their income and that they often do this by making unscrupulous deals undermining the marketer’s attempt to build strong brands.

Personal SellingWhile there certainly are some salespeople that fit these descriptions, today the most successful salespeople are those who work hard to understand their customers’ needs with the ultimate goal of ensuring that customer’s needs are satisfied at a high level. And, more importantly, personal selling holds a key role in the promotional activities of a large number of organizations. In fact, in the business market where one company sells products to another company, money spent to support the selling function far exceeds spending on advertising.

In this part of our highly detailed Principles of Marketing Tutorials, we begin a two-part look at personal selling. We will continue our coverage of personal selling in the next tutorial when we discuss the selling process used to obtain a customer order.

3 Comments

  1. With today's technology personal selling can still exist and not be face to face. With the amount of social media that's out there you can interact and engage with others completely online. There are essential skills that are still needed though such as knowing when to close the sale.
  2. Excellent - sometimes I feel a bit alone touting the notion that person-to-person is still the highest form of communication. I employ a mix of tactics to develop new business, but the cornerstone is based on personal interaction. I wrote a post recently that delves into selling skills and how to develop those skills. The quickest way? Activity. Personal experience dealing directly with new prospects. I have seen many statistics about “how many” non-personal contacts are needed to generate a sale. In general, nothing can top person-to-person. Add extra touch with non-personal outreach (i.e. mail, email, posts, pr, etc.), but make person-to-person contact your foundation. Thanks!
  3. To be a successful sales person does not only mean 'closing the sale', but how to retain and develop a relationship with customer- probably: relationship marketing

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