Honesty and What Your Customers Need to Know

In a recent post, I talked about the changing landscape of sales and how the tired, old sales methodologies simply will not work in today’s business environment.  Scott Shaeffer refers to this as the “New Authenticity” which emphasizes “service and personal credibility” as keys to this changing landscape.

In recent discussions on these thoughts, I was reminded about the importance of honesty with our customers and a past and valuable lesson once provided by a customer.

A sales partner of mine had a very difficult time telling customers what they needed to know.  In his mind, he had to spin things so they always appeared “positive.”  In this one case, the spinning actually made him appear as though he was not being completely honest.  This situation affected his integrity with the customer to the point where the customer eventually “fired”him, but not me.  The reason I didn’t suffer the same consequence, is I told the customer what he needed to know, not what I thought he wanted to hear .  Specifically, my customer said:

“New is news.  Whether it is good news or bad news is up to me to decide.  It is your job to report the news.”

As we continue to focus on “customer service and credibilty” remember to be honest with your customers.  Do not try to manage your answers and your information to make them happy, tell them what they need to know in order to accomplish their objectives.   Building trust and integrity requires honesty.  If your are creatively manipulating your message, you are not being honest and that will eventually cost you.

2 Comments

  1. Chuck Gose says:

    Dave,

    Great advice on being honest with customers. It should go without saying but sometimes the truth is painful for a sales person to deliver to the client. But I agree with you. It can make for a more trusting and satisfying client relationship when each side comes with a clean conscience.

    But the challenge is that sometimes the client is not always completely honest with timelines, budgets, etc. This can also start a relationship down a dangerous path.

    Great stuff though.

  2. Chuck,
    I agree that customers are not always forthright with their information. However, as sales professionals it is our job to establish the high road in building these relationships. Also, customers sometime appear to be dishonest, when they really may not have known or situations have changed. Either way, our job is to do it right and educate our customers on the benefits of doing it right, as well. Thanks for your comments.