The
3 Steps To Overcoming Intimidation in Medical Sales
Medical sales representatives all experience some
level of intimidation at one time or another. This article
will focus on why it occurs, the problems it can cause,
and how to overcome it.
Why Reps Get Intimidated
Medical sales reps sell to
experts in their fields. Whether we are selling to a physician,
a nurse, or a certified technician in one specialty or another,
we assume that they have far more knowledge about their
chosen profession than we ever will. I’m going to focus
on the physician for this article, since it is normally
the physician who has the most education and training in
his chosen field of practice.
Let’s say that you are a
new sales rep for a medical products company, or you were
just given a product line, which is far different from what
you have been selling. Knowing that we possess only a fraction
of the knowledge that a doctor has about a given subject
can be intimidating when our job is to offer him a solution
for a problem. We know consciously that we are not an “equal”
in his area of expertise. This kind of thinking reduces
our status down a notch from where we see ourselves when
compared to the doctor.
The doctor controls the environment
in which we sell. We call on him* in his office, or his
clinic, or work with him in his operating room where he
is King! Everyone you meet in that environment will treat
him like the boss. We are selling to someone who is usually
in control of his environment – and that can be intimidating.
Speaking of control, if you
are not an experienced, competent, presenter, the doctor
will frequently take control of your sales presentation.
When you lose control, that’s really intimidating – and
frustrating!
Also, we always know that
the doctor, just like any other customer, has the ability
to reward us (give us business), ignore us (not give us
business), or punish us (take away business that we already
have). Many reps feel like they are at his mercy (and to
some extent you are, but so what!) and this can be very
intimidating.
The other intimidation element
is that some doctors want to be intimidating. Many will
treat sales representatives as second-class citizens by
talking down to them in ways that suggest they are little
more than glorified street vendors. Being treated like a
peon does little for one’s self-esteem, and that can be
intimidating. There are two problems with intimidation in
sales. The first is that you don't feel very good about
yourself. This also contributes to the second problem which
is you don't sell very well because your lack of confidence
is sensed by the customer and your intimidation short-circuits
your sales abilities.
The 3 Steps to Overcoming
Intimidation
1. Develop the Right Attitude
You must consciously adopt an attitude that the customer,
in this case the physician, is at least your equal as a
human being. Treat him with the dignity and respect that
he deserves, but see him as an equal, after all – you are
both professionals!
Attitude is not about “copping
an attitude.” It’s about being confident. Too many medical
sales representatives see the relationship with the physician
as a one- way street where it is the doctor providing the
rep with business. Aren’t you bringing something to the
table as well? Do you offer products and services that help
the physician improve the care he provides? Are you well
versed in product knowledge that helps to educate the physician
and his staff?
Attitude is about seeing
yourself as someone who can partner with the customer to
help him get the job done. Sometimes he will act like he
can get the job done without you, but realistically he can’t.
Physicians require a vast team to take care of their patients
and a big part of that team is the sales people whose companies
manufacture the products he needs.
“Can’t he buy those products
from one of my competitors” you ask? Of course he can! But
you need to believe in your heart that his doing so would
not provide for his patients as well as you and your products
can. Why? Because if you don’t believe that your offering
is in many ways superior to your competitors’, even if it
is only because you come with it, then why are you selling
this product or service in the first place?
So that is rule number one
– when you walk into the doctor’s environment, you are a
professional with equal standing as a human being. But you
must make sure you are competent, which is the rule number
two.
2. Develop Competency Nothing
reduces intimidation and improves your attitude like being
competent! Competency in medical sales involves 3 areas:
Core knowledge about your
market segment
Product knowledge
Professional selling skills
Core knowledge includes
everything you need to know regarding the market segment
or specialty to which you sell. For example, if you are
selling a line of products specific for cardiac surgery,
then you need to learn cardiovascular anatomy and physiology
and become knowledgeable regarding the different cardiac
surgical procedures associated with your products. Learn
the surgical protocol, potential problems and solutions,
why one procedure is preferred to another, etc.
Product knowledge
is essential! No one that you sell to should know more about
your product than you do! You must master all the aspects
of your product lines including a familiarity with any competitors.
Your products must be the area where “you are the expert.”
Professional selling skills
position you as a professional and place you in control
when you are discussing your area of expertise – your products!
When you have confidence in your ability to present your
ideas, know how to prepare, and can handle any situation
that gets thrown your way, little can intimidate you.
3. Accept The Worst That
Can Happen
Sales people get intimidated
because they feel that they have something to lose, namely
the customer’s business or any business opportunities in
the future. Professional, competent sales people know how
to leave the door open for future opportunities when they
don’t get the sale or they lose some business to a competitor.
Treat any failure to close new business or loss of business
as a temporary situation. Let the customer know that you
will be available when he needs what you offer, if not today,
then tomorrow. Remember that you have other people to sell
to in the mean time.
Summary
Intimidation can result in
sales when we diminish our opinions of ourselves when compared
to others. Our job is to serve the customer by offering
him products and services that enable him to do his job,
or do his job better. When we work with professionals and
see ourselves as competent professionals as well, intimidation
will be a thing of the past.
The best way to overcome
intimidation is to not be intimidated. Learn to project
a professional and courteous attitude, and confidence in
your abilities at all times. After all, you are a medical
sales professional!
* I use male pronouns for
simplicity and brevity since the vast majority of physicians
I have worked with are males. I recognize and respect that
we sell to many female professionals as well.
© Mace Horoff, 2006
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Mace Horoff is a professional speaker
and medical device sales trainer. He
was a successful, award-winning sales representative
in the medical device
industry for over 22 years. Mace is founder and
president of Sales Pilot
Consulting, a company dedicated to training medical
device representatives for
success. He can be reached at (561) 333-8080 or
email.
For information on
having Mace speak for your group or to learn more
about Sales Pilot training
programs, visit www.MedicalSalesTraining.com
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