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MEDDIC Sales Process

The MEDDIC sales process was developed in 1996 by Dick Dunkel at software company Parametric Technology Corporation (PTC). The MEDDIC sales process is a framework used by B2B sales teams to foster predictable and efficient growth.

Understanding the MEDDIC sales process

As a qualification framework, MEDDIC sets itself apart from other sales processes. It emphasizes extensive buyer qualification to ensure the business does not devote considerable resources to leads who will not convert. This process increases close rates and drives more predictable growth with better sales forecasting.

The qualification process itself is based on the twelve selling principles author Neil Rackham outlined in his 1988 book SPIN Selling. SPIN is an acronym for Situation, Problem, Implication, and Need-Payoff and is particularly suited to large or complex deals where the salesperson needs to become more of a trusted advisor to the client.

MEDDIC is a more evolved version of SPIN where sales teams are equipped with the tools and decision criteria to work closely with prospects and best meet their needs.

The six components of the MEDDIC sales process

The six components of MEDDIC are based on collaboration between Dunkel and individual PTC sales teams with a core focus on three questions:

  • Why does PTC win?
  • Why does PTC lose?
  • Why do some PTC deals slip?

Let’s take a look at the six common components Dunkel defined below.

Metrics (M)

These are the economic indicators that encompass product functionality. The sales team must first determine the benefits a prospect will experience from using a product or service and then find a way to quantify them.

Metrics can then be incorporated into the pitch. For example: “Our service will save your business up to 25 working hours per week and increase productivity by 35%.”

Economic buyers (E)

Economic buyers are those within the prospect company with the ability to purchase the solution. Many businesses waste time here because they engage with employees that do not hold the requisite decision-making power. 

LinkedIn is a good place to search a company’s employees based on job title. Otherwise, a meeting can be proposed with the sales team inviting the prospect to invite individuals who will be heavily involved in the project.

Decision criteria (D)

Since most prospects will meet with multiple companies before committing to a purchase, the sales team must also determine their sales criteria. This may take the form of:

  • Technical criteria – how will the prospect implement a product or service? Indeed, does it have the technical ability to do what they need?
  • Relationship criteria – is the prospect interested in working with the company? Are the needs, interests, and objectives of each party aligned?
  • Economic criteria – does the product in question deliver an attractive ROI? What is the implementation cost? What about opportunity cost?

Decision process (D)

The decision process deals with how the prospect uses decision criteria to make a decision.

It tends to comprise two parts. The first part is a validation process where the prospect clarifies that the product or service can achieve what it says it can. The second part concerns receiving authorization from relevant stakeholders to move forward with a particular product or service.

Sales teams should make the decision-making process as smooth as possible by:

  • Involving new stakeholders or others involved in decision-making.
  • Reiterating or confirming the decision-making timeline, and
  • Offering a free trial or product demonstration.

This is a crucial part of the deal forecasting process. Prospects that do not possess a clear decision process or who seem otherwise reticent represent a major red flag. Since the complex B2B deals to which MEDDIC is suited can last for months, reps need to keep the process moving forward wherever possible. Dedicated CRM software is one way to assist in this process.

Identify pain (I) 

Identifying prospect pain points is a proven way to frame a product or service as the one that can best meet their needs. Most of these revolve around:

  • The elimination of tedious tasks.
  • The removal of complicated or convoluted solutions.
  • Time or resource efficiency improvement.

These pain points can also be outlined in the context of a competitor. For example, the business may claim that its product is easier to use and more affordable than a rival offering.

Champion (C)

In the context of the MEDDIC process, a champion is an internal stakeholder within the prospect’s business who:

  • Is selling the product or service to other stakeholders within the organization. The solution is afforded a certain degree of credibility when its benefits can be clearly linked to organizational objectives.
  • Possess the power and influence to finalize the sale or at least ensure that it remains top-of-mind among decision-makers.
  • Have a vested interest in the company’s success. This means the solution will remove a problem that makes their job easier or results in a promotion.

Key takeaways:

  • The MEDDIC sales process is a framework used by B2B sales teams to foster predictable and efficient growth.
  • The qualification process inherent to the MEDDIC process is a more evolved version of the twelve selling principles outlined in Neil Rackham’s 1988 book SPIN Selling.
  • The MEDDIC sales process is an acronym for six components: metrics, economic buyers, decision criteria, decision process, identify pain, and champion.

Related Business Concepts

Business Development

Business development comprises a set of strategies and actions to grow a business via a mixture of sales, marketing, and distribution. While marketing usually relies on automation to reach a wider audience, and sales typically leverage a one-to-one approach. The business development’s role is that of generating distribution.

Sales vs. Marketing

The more you move from consumers to enterprise clients, the more you’ll need a sales force able to manage complex sales. As a rule of thumb, a more expensive product, in B2B or Enterprise, will require an organizational structure around sales. An inexpensive product to be offered to consumers will leverage on marketing.

Sales Cycle

A sales cycle is the process that your company takes to sell your services and products. In simple words, it’s a series of steps that your sales reps need to go through with prospects that lead up to a closed sale.

RevOps

RevOps – short for Revenue Operations – is a framework that aims to maximize the revenue potential of an organization. RevOps seeks to align these departments by giving them access to the same data and tools. With shared information, each then understands their role in the sales funnel and can work collaboratively to increase revenue.

BATNA

In negotiation theory, BATNA stands for “Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement,” and it’s one of the key tenets of negotiation theory. Indeed, it describes the best course of action a party can take if negotiations fail to reach an agreement. This simple strategy can help improve the negotiation as each party is (in theory) willing to take the best course of action, as otherwise, an agreement won’t be reached.

WATNA

In negotiation, WATNA stands for “worst alternative to a negotiated agreement,” representing one of several alternative options if a resolution cannot be reached. This is a useful technique to help understand what might be a negotiation outcome, that even if negative is still better than a WATNA, making the deal still feasible.

ZOPA

The ZOPA (zone of possible agreement) describes an area in which two negotiation parties may find common ground. Indeed, ZOPA is critical to explore the deals where the parties get a mutually beneficial outcome to prevent the risk of a win-lose, or lose-win scenario. And therefore get to the point of a win-win negotiation outcome.

Revenue Modeling

Revenue modeling is a process of incorporating a sustainable financial model for revenue generation within a business model design. Revenue modeling can help to understand what options make more sense in creating a digital business from scratch; alternatively, it can help in analyzing existing digital businesses and reverse engineer them.

Customer Experience Map

Customer experience maps are visual representations of every encounter a customer has with a brand. On a customer experience map, interactions called touchpoints visually denote each interaction that a business has with its consumers. Typically, these include every interaction from the first contact to marketing, branding, sales, and customer support.

AIDA Model

AIDA stands for attention, interest, desire, and action. That is a model that is used in marketing to describe the potential journey a customer might go through before purchasing a product or service. The AIDA model helps organizations focus their efforts when optimizing their marketing activities based on the customers’ journeys.

Social Selling

Social selling is a process of developing trust, rapport, and a relationship with a prospect to enhance the sales cycle. It usually happens through tech platforms (like LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and more), which enable salespeople to engage with potential prospects before closing the sale, thus becoming more effective.

CHAMP Methodology

The CHAMP methodology is an iteration of the BANT sales process for modern B2B applications. While budget, authority, need, and timing are important aspects of qualifying sales leads, the CHAMP methodology was developed after sales reps questioned the order in which the BANT process is followed.

BANT Sales Process

The BANT process was conceived at IBM in the 1950s as a way to quickly identify prospects most likely to make a purchase. Despite its introduction around 70 years ago, the BANT process remains relevant today and was formally adopted into IBM’s Business Agility Solution Identification Guide.

MEDDIC Sales Process

The MEDDIC sales process was developed in 1996 by Dick Dunkel at software company Parametric Technology Corporation (PTC). The MEDDIC sales process is a framework used by B2B sales teams to foster predictable and efficient growth.

STP Marketing

STP marketing simplifies the market segmentation process and is one of the most commonly used approaches in modern marketing. The core focus of STP marketing is commercial effectiveness. Marketers use the approach to select the most valuable segments from a target audience and develop a product positioning strategy and marketing mix for each.

Sales Funnels vs. Flywheels

The sales funnel is a model used in marketing to represent an ideal, potential journey that potential customers go through before becoming actual customers. As a representation, it is also often an approximation, that helps marketing and sales teams structure their processes at scale, thus building repeatable sales and marketing tactics to convert customers.

Pirate Metrics

Venture capitalist, Dave McClure, coined the acronym AARRR which is a simplified model that enables to understand what metrics and channels to look at, at each stage for the users’ path toward becoming customers and referrers of a brand.

Bootstrapping



This post first appeared on FourWeekMBA, please read the originial post: here

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MEDDIC Sales Process

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