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Capturing competitive intelligence is difficult. Some companies capture loss information using a drop-down menu embedded within the opportunity record. Others purchase enablement software in the hope that an algorithm will pinpoint the problem. However, we continually find the best information comes straight from the prospect.

You’ll be surprised at the quality of information you receive.

Did I mean a win-loss interview? No. Win interviews are fruitful for small tweaks or suggestions. However, new customers are reluctant to mention blemishes in their post-purchase honeymoon. They also tend to accentuate strengths. One customer we worked with exclusively conducted win interviews. The result was a self-confirming bias towards all their product’s best features. The equivalent of Volvo reporting safety as the number one desired feature of all car buyers. Losses will tell you much more about your position within the market and against the status quo.

Why? They skirt the polite rapport and force you to confront the truth. Does your product meet the entire market’s needs or just a segment? Did your sales rep execute as well as the others? What is the product’s perceived weakness relative to the competition? Did the rep create a compelling reason to purchase or just pitch features?

Related: The Best Ways to Hire Sales People

Four Loss Interview Musts

Use these guidelines to ensure you maximise the value of these conversations:

1. Any Non-Win Should Be Interviewed

This includes no decisions, early stage drop-outs, and losses due to reprioritisation. No decisions are especially important. Many ‘no decisions’ are reported as an ‘unlucky’ event that lost funding. Many times this is a loss to a non-competing vendor who was able to reprioritise budgeted dollars for his project. No decisions are an indication that sales reps weren’t able to establish a compelling reason to purchase.

How to Do It:

  • Don’t let sales representatives or managers decide who gets to be interviewed.
  • Any opportunity that is not closed as a ‘win’ is a viable interview candidate.
  • Some clients have expressed concern with interviewing ‘no decisions’ since they are still viable prospects.
  • Don’t. If anything, we’ve seen the interview advance the relationship.
  • Customers want to work with companies that are continually trying to improve.

2. Select an Impartial Interviewer

Don’t let a sales representative or manager conduct it. The quality of sales experience questions become distorted. Reps will tell you they lost on price and product features. Managers will obscure or twist words to fit their agenda.

How to Do It:

  • Coach somebody on basic question asking. This could be a client service rep, sales ops employee, or even the CEO. Whatever the case, make sure nothing reported will have an impact on their career.
  • Or utilise a third party to remove any possible contamination. Just make sure they are after details, not checking a box.

Related: Interview Questions That Result In Great Hires

3. Ask ‘Off The Template’ Questions

Using a question template is important to make sure you’re covering the entire sales experience. However, real details emerge outside of the script. What do you mean when you say the competing product made you feel more comfortable? Why? Good reporters know the follow-up question captures the greatest insight. Also, avoid a box checking template for simple data aggregation. A report stating that you lost 35% on Price, 20% on Installation, 15% on Fit, and 30% on Other yields little value.

How to Do It:

  • Brush up your interviewing technique.
  • Avoid common mistakes like ‘Leading the Witness’ and ‘Volunteering Answers’.
  • Make sure the interviewer can establish trust and build rapport.
  • The moment you want is the interviewee to lower their voice and ask ‘Can I tell you the truth?’

4. Analyse Your Loss Interviews To Assess Trends

Many loss interviews are left as stand-alone reports in a folder. Instead, combine the data from interviews over a specific time-frame and search for common trends. Prioritise the gaps you need to fix.

How to Do It:

Bucket interview threads into relevant categories. For example: Sales reps, sales teams, products, competitive losses, no decisions, verticals, and decision-makers. Analyse for commonalities. Put your findings into charts. The loss interview is one of the most powerful methods of gaining insight within sales organisations.

You’ll achieve clarity on:

  • Where the deal was lost
  • Why you lost it
  • Where the rep needs help
  • How your competition is measuring against you
  • Whether the opportunity was worth pursuing in the first place.

Now imagine that tired ‘loss category’ CRM pie chart. You have multiple graphs around key business categories. Beneath the pie chart, there are actual prospect quotes. This appeals to logic AND tells the story.

 

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