I Paid $75 for This Sales Lesson
On a nice evening out for dinner with my wife we were seated at a great table in an upscale Italian restaurant.
A manager stopped by our table and welcomed us to the restaurant and asked us if we would like to start off with a bottle of wine. My wife was looking at the wine list and thought a bottle of her preferred wine was too expensive, so she ordered a glass.
The manager asked if I would like a glass, I had not thought about it, but said “Yes.”
“You might consider ordering a bottle, sir, if either of you would like a second glass the bottle would be a better value.” The manager said.
My wife smiled and very quickly nodded to the affirmative that ordering a bottle was a good idea. I ordered it even though not three minutes before my wife had considered the bottle too expensive.
The price was a barrier until the value the bottle represented was elegantly explained. With a value statement, the manager successfully bridged the gap between the perceived cost and actual cost of that bottle of wine, altering the perception and effectively closing the deal.
The restaurant was beautiful. The lights were dimmed a bit. Fresh aromatic bread was on the table as was a special oil and garlic mixture for dipping. We both ate the delicious bread, dipping it into the oil as we went over our respective menus.
My wife decided before we had even arrived that she wanted some sort of lobster pasta dish. Sure enough, she found what she wanted, but was put off by the price. She decided to go with her second choice. Seeing that we had put our menus away, our waitress stopped by asking if we were ready to order.
I asked about a special couples promotion I had heard on the radio the restaurant was running but the waitress did not know what I was talking about. The manager, however, just arriving with our bottle of wine overheard the conversation and verified the promotion and happened to toss in that the lobster pasta dish was part of the promotion, having no idea that was what my wife was really wanted.
My wife, smiling ear to ear, ordered her pasta dish, I forget what I ordered.
The restaurant was still beautiful and my wife was thrilled, which in turn made me happy. She got a reasonable value on the wine she loved, she ordered her entre of choice, and the restaurant staff was on top of everything.
Soon the bottle of wine was delivered and out waitress placed our empty crystal wine glasses on the table and set about opening the bottle. She poured two glasses with a bottle roll at the end and confidently plopped the bottle on the table stating out entrées would be out in just a few moments. A bite or two of the fantastic bread later, we picked up our wine glasses to toast the occasion. The evening progressed with a good meal, great conversation, a nice desert, I paid and we left.
The marketing dollars spent and the message delivered was a perfect compliment to the sales experience on the restaurant floor. The marketing dollar found its target market in me, the message compelled me to action and the sales team at the restaurant was delivering on that implied promise, providing an experience for me and my wife I was willing to pay for.
Corporate direction, to raise average tickets by getting more couples in the restaurant, was perfectly in line with Marketing, having put together an attractive targeted promotion that got us in the restaurant, and Sales completed the trifecta by delivering quality service and tacking wine and desert on our final bill.
This was a perfect case study in what can happen when Management, Marketing and Sales are all on the same page, out of their respective silos, and delivering a consistent message from the top down.
Look at your own company. Does your stated corporate direction match what your Marketing department is doing? Is the Sales department in line or are they marching to their own drum? If not, then your company is probably paying too much for each sale. From a numbers perspective it probably looks like there are too many sales people on the payroll for the amount of revenue being generated.
The good news is it should be easy to find some sales improvement just by getting everyone on the same page and some additional improvement yet again, from my experience, once you all get good at working together.
