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3 M’s on how to sell when it’s worse than just tough times!
Over the past decade, considerable attention has been devoted to the topic of selling during challenging economic times. I’ve focused my topics and training on selling in Ag and to farmers during those tough times. However, today’s market is different than those times. Today, we are faced with something unseen in our work history: a worldwide tariff war. And during a time in history when the world trade has never been more intertwined. Our products are being manufactured, processed, mined, and resold back and forth across borders at the highest rate in history.
For every agribusiness, they should be looking at this as a recession or simply, more than just tough times. In 1980, we learned from the Russian wheat embargo that trade wars can disrupt a market forever.
What will happen to your business, your sales territory, or your customers after this war settles down? What can you do as a sales organization or individual salesperson?
Three M’s of selling in Ag: Move – Modify – Maneuver
Most of the world is like deer in the headlights (shocked, frozen, and afraid to move). The first step in any crisis is to realize that you are in shock. When the pandemic hit, nobody younger than 90 had ever seen anything comparable (1918 Spanish Flu). The world was in turmoil, and every day was more bad news. The same thing is happening in today’s trade wars. Every day is full of bad news, from the stock exchange to new reactions from trading partners.
The hope is fading that it will all just go away. A new reality is setting in. Our trading partners will have to find some way to move their products. And so do you.
After realizing that you are frozen, the next step is to face reality as it is and not as we want it to be. The changes from this tariff war are big and, in some ways, irreversible. Our trust in how we operate with the rest of the world will forever be eyed cautiously. Your international customers and vendors are shopping hard for alternatives. And so should you.
Ways to Move:
2. Modify: “Get them a different product.”
All of us have tough financial times in our own personal lives. When that happens, we make changes. Granted, not all of them are the best changes. Cheaper per pound or box doesn’t always mean we are getting the best deal. However, in our minds, it gets us by for the time period. Farmers are no different. At current input costs and selling prices, something has to give. To get by, they might need a different product or service from you.
Ways to Modify:
3. Maneuver: “Outflank the market.”
Last month, I toured an old Civil War fort on the North Carolina coast. As I read the history board displays and looked at the map, all I could think about was the concept of maneuvering. There was a great battle for days as both sides fought it out. Why didn’t the navy just bypass the fort altogether and go around? Instead of charging into the barrage of artillery and storming people onto the unprotected beach, why not sail into an open passage further north or south? There looked like several on the map. Again, in 1991, as I watched the first Gulf War from Ft. Wainwright, Alaska, I anticipated deployment to the Middle East. Only to watch as the allied forces fixed and outmaneuvered an extensive defensive line in only 4 days. They fixed them in place, breached several key points, and then outmaneuvered. What about your business? How can you keep your focus on your primary market but begin to maneuver your territory or business to face the new reality (farming recession)? Instead of going head-to-head into a race to the lowest price, what can be done?
Ways to Maneuver:
The theme of how to sell in a recession or tough times is going to be with us for some time and I plan to focus on it. So much so that I have to live up to my advice. In doing so, I will be launching several sales training opportunities in the near future. Many agribusinesses have slowed spending. Yet, they also need more sales than before. That’s a problem I plan to focus on. How to develop your sales team despite the recession? Please reach out if interested in learning more.
By Greg Martinelli3 M’s on how to sell when it’s worse than just tough times!
Over the past decade, considerable attention has been devoted to the topic of selling during challenging economic times. I’ve focused my topics and training on selling in Ag and to farmers during those tough times. However, today’s market is different than those times. Today, we are faced with something unseen in our work history: a worldwide tariff war. And during a time in history when the world trade has never been more intertwined. Our products are being manufactured, processed, mined, and resold back and forth across borders at the highest rate in history.
For every agribusiness, they should be looking at this as a recession or simply, more than just tough times. In 1980, we learned from the Russian wheat embargo that trade wars can disrupt a market forever.
What will happen to your business, your sales territory, or your customers after this war settles down? What can you do as a sales organization or individual salesperson?
Three M’s of selling in Ag: Move – Modify – Maneuver
Most of the world is like deer in the headlights (shocked, frozen, and afraid to move). The first step in any crisis is to realize that you are in shock. When the pandemic hit, nobody younger than 90 had ever seen anything comparable (1918 Spanish Flu). The world was in turmoil, and every day was more bad news. The same thing is happening in today’s trade wars. Every day is full of bad news, from the stock exchange to new reactions from trading partners.
The hope is fading that it will all just go away. A new reality is setting in. Our trading partners will have to find some way to move their products. And so do you.
After realizing that you are frozen, the next step is to face reality as it is and not as we want it to be. The changes from this tariff war are big and, in some ways, irreversible. Our trust in how we operate with the rest of the world will forever be eyed cautiously. Your international customers and vendors are shopping hard for alternatives. And so should you.
Ways to Move:
2. Modify: “Get them a different product.”
All of us have tough financial times in our own personal lives. When that happens, we make changes. Granted, not all of them are the best changes. Cheaper per pound or box doesn’t always mean we are getting the best deal. However, in our minds, it gets us by for the time period. Farmers are no different. At current input costs and selling prices, something has to give. To get by, they might need a different product or service from you.
Ways to Modify:
3. Maneuver: “Outflank the market.”
Last month, I toured an old Civil War fort on the North Carolina coast. As I read the history board displays and looked at the map, all I could think about was the concept of maneuvering. There was a great battle for days as both sides fought it out. Why didn’t the navy just bypass the fort altogether and go around? Instead of charging into the barrage of artillery and storming people onto the unprotected beach, why not sail into an open passage further north or south? There looked like several on the map. Again, in 1991, as I watched the first Gulf War from Ft. Wainwright, Alaska, I anticipated deployment to the Middle East. Only to watch as the allied forces fixed and outmaneuvered an extensive defensive line in only 4 days. They fixed them in place, breached several key points, and then outmaneuvered. What about your business? How can you keep your focus on your primary market but begin to maneuver your territory or business to face the new reality (farming recession)? Instead of going head-to-head into a race to the lowest price, what can be done?
Ways to Maneuver:
The theme of how to sell in a recession or tough times is going to be with us for some time and I plan to focus on it. So much so that I have to live up to my advice. In doing so, I will be launching several sales training opportunities in the near future. Many agribusinesses have slowed spending. Yet, they also need more sales than before. That’s a problem I plan to focus on. How to develop your sales team despite the recession? Please reach out if interested in learning more.