
If you had to name the biggest challenges to your ecommerce design or development business, what would they be?
Like most other agencies, you will say, “Clients who keep expanding the scope of work beyond what we agreed on!” Or, “Prospects that let me spend hours on a proposal and then shop it around or ghost me just before signing.” Maybe you’ll point to customers who want extensive services on a small budget. In other words, people who may mean well but end up stringing you along, eating your time, and eroding your profits.
Rachel Jacobs, founder of Ecommerce Partnerships, shares top tips for revamping your sales process, screening out poor prospects, and pumping up your conversion rate.
I used to think there were good clients and bad clients. I now understand that nine times out of ten, it’s not bad clients but a destructive client qualification process that drags an ecommerce agency down. This doesn’t mean there aren’t destructive projects; it just means that a lousy project usually starts from sales. The good news? If you can get the sales process right, you’ll save your agency a ton of money and your team hours of heartache and stress!
I’ve worked directly with over 20 ecommerce agencies in the last year alone and advised hundreds more. I repeatedly hear the same sales challenges—there are not enough leads, prospects have ghosted us, and clients don’t have the budget. And then there’s the main threat to agency profitability: scope creep.
Sales is a huge sticking point for agencies that don’t have a documented sales process. Many agency owners are so bogged down with the day-to-day business that they have no time to grow their agency effectively.
Most agencies are so eager to get contracts signed that it’s often at the expense of due diligence and, more importantly, profit.
And yet, the number one cause of scope creep (which chips away at your profits) is a poor sales process. It’s almost impossible to deliver a profitable project when it’s been undersold in the first place. Before anyone signs on the dotted line, you need to weed out the clients that aren’t a good fit. To do that, you need a well-designed sales process.
8 Steps to Fix Your Sales Process
Winning more business isn’t just about having the correct pricing. It’s about getting your prospect to want to work with you. It’s making them realize that with your agency as Alfred, they get to be Batman!
To get them to believe, you need a proposal that knocks it out of the park.
But how do you do that? I like to think of a business proposal like a phone number—you must have all the digits in order to get the desired result.
I recommended creating a master template and making it as comprehensive as possible. My proposal template, which I will share with you here, may seem detailed, but it will save you precious time in the long run. Each time you create a new proposal using the template, you can delete the irrelevant pieces and do a quick search-and-replace for the customizable sections. When you get efficient at creating proposals, you’ll spend no more than 15 minutes per proposal.
You can use the time you save for what’s important — growing your business.
Most agency proposals start out touting their own credentials and success stories. Resist this temptation! Remember, it’s not about you; you’re not the hero of this story (you’re Alfred, after all). When you’re walking a prospect through a proposal, they only care about themselves, their problem, and how it will be solved.
You need to develop a crystal-clear plan that defines expectations on both sides. Something like: “This is exactly what we are promising you, and exactly how we will do it.” After you’ve presented the deliverables, justifying your pricing before you give it, offer the pricing and let the prospect respond first.
If you are at the proposal stage with a prospect, inform them that your policy is to present the proposal in person, via phone, or video conference. Why? Submitting in person or by video call lets you explain the details, demonstrate your knowledge of the project scope, and outline your strategy for helping clients overcome their problems, issues, and challenges.
It also allows you to overcome any objections that may arise along the way. You must be willing to walk away from anyone who won’t agree to this term because if they don’t meet with you, they’re not serious about working with you anyway.
3 Simple Questions to See if You’re Wasting Your Time
Let’s look at one of the most common objections from a prospect: “Send me more information.” When your option says something like this, it means one of two things. Either something is missing, or you’re wasting your time. These three simple questions will tell you if you need to help your prospect overcome a hang-up or if you’re just wasting your time:
If someone wastes your time, they won’t have good answers to these questions and’ll give you a generic response. But a good prospect genuinely interested in working with your agency will request a particular piece of information and give you a timeline and a reason.
That’s how you’ll see if they’re the real deal and worth your time. If this is still a legitimate prospect, agree to send the information and set up the next meeting right then and there.