Japan New Client Sale’s Agonies
Japan is a huge market. This is a wealthy, sophisticated society, with a design sense second to none. People work diligently as a team and put in long hours. Achieving annual organic growth should be an expectation of bosses that sales teams should be able to realise. Yet, the results are often flat lining or disappointing. Excuses abound – the yen is too strong, the yen is too weak, competitors are discounting, new competitors are taking market share, etc.
Finding new clients is the perpetual Holy Grail of the sales world. Websites lure, social media sponsored posts promulgate, ad words harvest, email sequences are very precisely engineered and content marketing assures expert authority. But this is the world of marketing to unleash the lead flow so that the sales team can follow up. How well do the marketing and sales teams work together? Often, not well. The marketers complain the salespeople are squandering their hard earned efforts. The sales people whine about the poor quality of the lead flow. Down at your shop, are they operating as two independent empires or as hand in glove colleagues furiously plotting together to achieve world domination?
Targeting new clients doesn’t get much attention in Japan. We all know that our avatar represents the typical client and all we have to do is identify others who fit that profile and the chances are high that they too will benefit from our product or service. How many sales teams here have defined their avatar? What about your crew?
Get Your Spider
A standard operating procedure should be the Spider. If a client from a particular business has landed in your sales funnel and have bought from you, there are no doubt others in that same niche who would also possibly buy as well. Having made a sale to one company, do the salespeople take the Spider metaphor to heart and start listing up other similar targets to proactively contact. They should, but they don’t. Why?
A major ice wall confronts them – the unknown. They don’t have a contact who can introduce them, so they do nothing. The idea of cold calling the target company is judged hard graft, so they don’t try. By the way, are your salespeople cold calling?
There is a way through the OL (Office Lady) barrier by focusing on the design of the conversation that will spark buyer interest. But no, they do nothing and just leave it. It is no push over here. When you cold call a Japanese company, if you don’t already know the exact name of the person you are after, then you get cordoned off by the lowest person on the firm totem pole – the youngest female OL.
They are not very lady like though, in fact they are killers, axing your aspirations right there to speak with the buyer. They are merciless and unrelenting. If you don’t go down without a fight, they will switch you to the next level up on the totem pole. This is the spotty faced, flat headed youngest male in the section, who will promise you that their boss will call you back, as he gleefully gets rid of you, knowing that call will never happen.
No More Whimsy
These opening conversations should not be left to whim. They need to be designed and practiced, so that you do get through to someone who can make a buying decision. Untrained salespeople try to cold call without a solid plan, fail, and then tell all a sundry you cannot cold call in japan. Not true, but you need to have a proven methodology for doing this.
The fall back position may be to try to meet new clients through networking. Japan is a curious place though in the networking world, because fundamentally, no one is interested. I know you, you introduce me to Taro and I will do the same for you with my contacts. A pretty limited way of doing things, but this is acceptable here. Barefaced bowling up to a complete stranger and introducing yourself, trying create a connection, is greeted with such shock, that salespeople give up quickly.
Can you widen your network of people you have no connection to and can you work the room here? Yes, you can, but again you need a methodology and you need to take salespeople out of their self -imposed limits and practice it.
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About The Author
In the course of his career Dr. Greg Story has moved from the academic world, to consulting, investments, trade representation, international diplomacy, retail banking and people development. Growing up in Brisbane, Australia he never imagined he would have a Ph.D. in Japanese decision-making and become a 30 year veteran of Japan.
A A committed lifelong learner, through his published articles in the American, British and European Chamber journals, his videos and podcasts “THE Leadership Japan Series”, “THE Sales Japan Series”. “THE Presentation Japan Series”, he is a thought leader in the four critical areas for business people: leadership, communication, sales and presentations. Dr. Story is a popular keynote speaker, executive coach and trainer.
Since 1971, he has been a disciple of traditional Shitoryu Karate and is currently a 6th Dan. Bunbu Ryodo (文武両道-both pen & sword) is his mantra and he applies martial art philosophies and strategies to business.