AIM Archives - Tag: key account manager

Here’s why key account managers have a HARD job.

563-Key Account Managers

The customer stakeholder saying “no” may be completely HIDDEN from the key account manager. Key decision-makers are ABUNDANT… on average, 5.4 people per B2B buying decisions, which drops their “intent to purchase” below 50% (compared to individuals at 81%). Many critical decision-influencers are RELUCTANT to meet with a salesperson. And because these decision-influencers hail from different job functions, they DISAGREE on what is needed.

Learn how to overcome this with Key Account Blueprinting

Key account managers have a HARD job.

549-Key Account Managers

Key account managers have a HARD job: Members of the customer buying team are… HIDDEN (the person saying “no” may be completely unknown), ABUNDANT (on average, 5.4 people are involved in B2B buying decisions), RELUCTANT (stakeholders believe they’re “too busy to meet with a salesperson”), and DISAGREEING (they have different perspectives on what is needed). To overcome this, try Key Account Blueprinting… New Product Blueprinting applied to one large account at a time.

More in white paper, Key Account Blueprinting

Should you innovate for entire market segments… or single customers?

Vehicle manufacturer logos

To optimize your efficiency, innovate for the entire market segment. Usually. But some clever Blueprinting users have applied the same interview methods to one large account at a time to reap three benefits: 1) Retention: They work so closely with the key account that this customer doesn’t want to use competing alternatives. 2) Expanded business: Customers naturally want more of their focused help. 3) Pricing: They learn how to modify their products precisely in the ways the customer values most, leading to higher pricing.

More in white paper, Key Account Blueprinting

What if your customer’s stakeholders don’t agree with each other?

497-Key Account Blueprinting

According to the authors of The Challenger Customer, “The limiting factor is rarely the salesperson’s inability to get an individual stakeholder to agree to a solution. More often it’s that the stakeholders inside the company can’t even agree with one another about what the problem is.” To overcome this, try Key Account Blueprinting… New Product Blueprinting applied to one large account at a time. This forces stakeholder agreement.

More in white paper, Key Account Blueprinting