There Is No Such Thing as an Apples-To-Apples Sale

Price shoppers use value-stripping to gain price concessions by sellers. This means that buyers reduce the offer to its most fundamental and generic properties; they commoditize the product. Salespeople must not participate in this game. And, this is a game.

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Tom Reilly, Chairman Emeritus ofTom Reilly, Chairman Emeritus of

Price shoppers use value-stripping to gain price concessions by sellers. This means that buyers reduce the offer to its most fundamental and generic properties; they commoditize the product. Salespeople must not participate in this game. And, this is a game.

In Value-Added Selling, there is no such thing as a commodity. The salesperson's solution includes three things: the product, the company supplying that product, and the salesperson. Can two sellers sell the exact same product? Yes. Can two sellers sell the exact same product in exactly the same way? Possibly, but not probably. Can two salespeople be exactly the same? No. No two salespeople bring the same value.

Consider the three ways you can differentiate — with your products, your company's services, and you. Even commodity-type products can be differentiated if they are repackaged differently or supported differently. No two customer service departments are the same. No two company resources are exactly the same. No two salespeople are exactly the same.

There are over 7,500 varieties of apples worldwide with 2,500 varieties growing in the U.S. alone. One apple is not the same as another. A Gala apple is different from a Red Delicious apple. A Fuji apple is different from a Granny Smith apple. A Jonathon apple is different from a Cameo apple. Get the point? Your apples are different from your competitors' apples; so, the next time your buyer tries to suck you into an apples-to-apples comparison, remind the buyer that there are many varieties of apples, and then sell your unique variety.

Tom Reilly is literally the guy who wrote the book on Value-Added Selling that ignited a global value-selling revolution. His pioneering work in value-added selling has earned him the title of “Value Meister” by Gerhard Gschwandtner, founder and CEO of Selling Power Magazine. He is Chairman Emeritus of Tom Reilly Training and the founder of Reilly Sales Training. Tom Reilly Training is a St. Louis-based, privately owned company that specializes in training salespeople and their managers in the principles, strategies, and tactics of Value-Added Selling.​

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