In
the second year of my first sales job with a major IT company I was working the
biggest deal I had in my pipeline to that date.
It was going to be $8.5M over a
five year period. The math was easy and even back then it would have been half
of my annual quota for the next five years (assuming no yearly increases –
yeah, right!). And with a deal that size I had a lot of help from upper
management.
I
was in tight with the customer. It was a small group and they were all of the
decision makers.
Fairly fresh out of many sales training courses, I applied all
of that knowledge to every aspect of my capture plan for that deal. I met with
the customer often, and a lot of those were at his request.
I knew the
requirements inside and out and we had a solution that answered it, and then
some. The customer verified that our solution was a great fit, too.
Then,
as often happens in government sales, the program was put on hold. The customer
didn’t know for how long but felt that it was most likely till the end of the government
fiscal year.
I wasn’t too worried. That was 6 months away and I had two things
in my favor – the first month of the next government fiscal year was also the
last month of my company’s fiscal year so I thought it would be a great close
out for that year and, secondly, I had a great pipeline that would take me over
my quota if that deal happened to slip even further.
I
told that customer that I would check in periodically and asked that if things
changed to please let me know as well.
I called about 3 months later and
discovered that only weeks prior they had gotten their money and went with a
competitor. I asked why they chose the competition and, in so many words, he
told me that my competitor stayed engaged and sold them on their solution.
I
was mad at myself (and so was my management) for making such a rookie mistake –
I quit selling!
From
then on, I made sure that I never quit selling to any customer, even if a program
was cancelled.
That discipline paid off two years later when I closed the
biggest software sale of my career, and the biggest one that company had that
year – all because I stayed engaged with a customer that had another competitor’s
solution selected and their customer didn’t like it.
Because I was in contact
on a frequent basis even after we weren't selected, they called me back and 19
months later I closed the deal.
As
I learned more about the trade of selling I have made many other mistakes since
‘the one that got away’. I learned the hard way that in the field of sales
–
Never Quit Selling!
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