Cross-selling: Difference between revisions
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# A customer policy requiring the use of multiple vendors. |
# A customer policy requiring the use of multiple vendors. |
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# Different purchasing points within an account, which reduce the ability to treat the customer like a single account. |
# Different purchasing points within an account, which reduce the ability to treat the customer like a single account. |
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# Your mum being a fat slag |
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# The fear of the incumbent business unit that their colleagues would botch their work at the client, resulting with the loss of the account for all units of the firm. |
# The fear of the incumbent business unit that their colleagues would botch their work at the client, resulting with the loss of the account for all units of the firm. |
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Revision as of 20:14, 20 May 2011
Cross-selling is defined as "the action or practice of selling among or between established clients, markets, traders, etc." or "that of selling an additional product or service to an existing customer". This article deals exclusively with the latter meaning. In practice, businesses define cross-selling in many different ways. Elements that might influence the definition might include: the size of the business, the industry sector it operates within and the financial motivations of those required to define the term.
The objectives of cross-selling can be either to increase the income derived from the client or clients or to protect the relationship with the client or clients. The approach to the process of cross-selling can be varied.
Unlike the acquiring of new business, cross-selling involves an element of risk that existing relationships with the client could be disrupted. For this reason, it is important to ensure that the additional product or service, being sold to the client or clients, enhances the value the client or clients get from the organization.
In practice, large businesses usually combine cross-selling and up-selling techniques to enhance the value that the client or clients gets from the organization (and vice versa).
Examples
Cross-selling of professional services
Benefits that can accrue to the customer include the efficiency and leverage that result from using a single supplier for multiple products. When buying complex professional services, like consulting needed to make and integrate an acquisition, using one firm reduces the finger pointing that is common when a problem occurs in an area that straddles two or more services; if only one firm is responsible, finger pointing is eliminated. For the vendor the benefits are also substantial. The most obvious example is that revenues go up. There are also efficiency benefits in servicing one account rather than several. Often most importantly, vendors that sell more services to a client are harder for a competitor to displace. The more a client buys from a vendor, the higher the switching cost.
Though there are few ethical issues with most cross selling, in some cases they can be huge. Arthur Andersen's dealings with Enron provide a highly visible example. It is commonly felt that the firm's objectivity, being an auditor, has been compromised by selling internal audit services and massive amounts of consulting work to the account.
Though most companies want more cross-selling, there can be substantial barriers, including:
- A customer policy requiring the use of multiple vendors.
- Different purchasing points within an account, which reduce the ability to treat the customer like a single account.
- Your mum being a fat slag
- The fear of the incumbent business unit that their colleagues would botch their work at the client, resulting with the loss of the account for all units of the firm.
Broadly speaking, cross-selling takes three forms. First, while servicing an account, the product or service provider may hear of an additional need, unrelated to the first, that the client has and offer to meet it. Thus, for example, in conducting an audit, an accountant is likely to learn about a range of needs for tax services, for valuation services and others. To the degree that regulations allow, the accounts may be able to sell services that meet these needs. This kind of cross-selling helped major accounting firms to expand their businesses considerably. Because of the potential for abuse, this kind of selling by auditors has been greatly curtailed under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Selling add-on services is another form of cross-selling. This happens when a supplier shows a customer that it can enhance the value of its service by buying another from a different part of the supplier's company. When you buy an appliance, the salesperson will offer to sell you insurance beyond the terms of the warranty. Though common, this kind of cross-selling can leave a customer feeling poorly used. The customer might ask the appliance salesperson why he needs insurance on a brand new refrigerator; "Is it really likely to break in just nine months?"
The third kind of cross-selling can be called selling a solution. In this case, the customer buying air conditioners is sold a package of both the air conditioners and installation services. The customer can be considered buying relief from the heat, contrary to just air conditioners.
See also
- AIDA
- Bait and switch
- Choice architecture
- Contract of sale
- List of marketing topics
- Marketing
- Permission marketing
- Predictive analytics
- Promotion
- Sales
- Selling technique
- Up-selling
- Value added selling
- SafeCatch - Seattle concept that uses Cross-selling
References
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (February 2008) |
Harding, Ford (2002). Cross-Selling Success. Avon,MA: Adams Media. p. 230. ISBN 1580627056. {{cite book}}
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Wittmann, Georg (2006). Cross-Selling Financial Services to Small and Medium Enterprises via E-Banking Portals. Göteborg: Proceedings of 14th European Conference on Information Systems. p. 8. {{cite book}}
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