A growing business was looking for a new salesperson, someone who could take over an existing customer base and also find new customers.
This business relied on healthy person to person relationships with customers who continued to trade with them on an ongoing basis…
Repeat customers, frequently!
In the interview, the Sales Director asked the salesperson “what type of salesperson are you? Are you a Hunter or a Farmer?”. The salesperson answered, “Oh, I am definitely a hunter. I love the thrill of chasing new customers and getting that first sale. It gives me a real buzz”. She then went on and added, “I love getting the sale and then leaving the customer with someone else to manage the relationship”. The sales director was impressed with her ‘gung ho’ attitude and her passion for the sale.
However, she only gave him part of what he was looking for.
In the next interview, the Sales Director asked the same question of which the salesperson answered, “Well, I am a farmer. I am happy to keep looking after customers and nurturing them. I really don’t like cold calling, but I’ll do it if I have to. All of my previous customers really love me”.
The Sales Director liked how this salesperson seemed to relate to customers, however, was concerned about his ability to grow new customers. What to do? The Sales Director was torn between the two candidates. Perhaps he could employ both of them?
Does any of this sound familiar?
If we shift our perspective then we see there are two, more succinct, categories. The first category I name the ‘Product Salesperson’ and the second category I name the ‘Relationship Salesperson’, and just to be clear I will give you my definition of these two categories:
Product Salesperson:
This is the salesperson who loves the sale, the sound of the money going into the till.
The sale becomes the focus and the end game. The pitch is focused on ‘what I need to say and do to get this sale – now!’ The understanding of the customer is limited to just knowing enough to be able to talk about what the salesperson has got to sell.
The features and benefits are rolled off the tongue regardless of what the customer's needs are. These salespeople are more prone to have price at the top of their list of reasons as to why customers buy and as to why they lost a sale. Predominantly, the salesperson’s need to make the sale is greater than the need to understand the customers’ problem and a subsequent solution.
Relationship Salesperson:
This salesperson knows first you have to understand the customer and then find how what you do is of benefit to each individual customer. They understand that if you do this well, the sale will come. Their love of selling is based on making and holding long term, trusting, business relationships and partnerships. They are less likely to have price as a key reason why customers buy and are more likely to think harder on why they lost a sale and what they could do better next time. Now, the reality is that most salespeople sit somewhere in between these two groups and my experience reinforces this reality.
When we categorize salespeople into ‘hunters and farmers’ we do not get to the heart of the type of salesperson we want. It drives businesses to focus on these two categories and make statements like “we need more hunters cos sales are dropping” or “we need more farmers cos some of our long term customers are leaving us”.
If your business is all about having repeat customers, is all about gathering new customers while holding onto the ones you have, is all about selling value rather than price, then you need salespeople who are not afraid to start a sales process, knowing that relationships are built from trust and trust always has to be reinforced.
In short, you are looking for salespeople who are willing to take the journey to become a true relationship salesperson.
This type of salesperson has to hunt and farm all the time.
Andrew Nisbet




