What Is Selling?
I’m sorry but that’s not selling, that’s order-taking.
I asked a few dozen security directors what they looked for in a solution provider. Careful listening and creative problem solving were the top criterion, next to price, of course. But even those mentioning price made it clear that they’d like to “get what they pay for” rather than pay for it and not get the quality they expected. With each executive, I asked about preferred vendors, favorite products and complaints about both. I was surprised to find a kind of sparkle in the eye of those who used Axis networked video products. Weird. Most security end-users don’t generally show emotion about specific companies – especially not praise. But Axis stands out as a manufacturer whose business practices are appreciated by the buyer and the distribution channel alike.
If Axis can produce loyalty all along its distribution chain – all the way to the end-user – they must have uncovered a secret. I’ve never had any kind of formal relationship with the company, so I decided to investigate.
Axis Communications, the Sweden-based maker of IP cameras, came up with a secret sauce for channel management and ranks extraordinarily high in customer satisfaction. After a few phone calls to their field managers and executives, I had a pretty good idea of how the company excels where so many stumble. Axis actually reaches out to its channel, even as far as the end-user, and participates in the consultation. In contrast, I talked to a senior sales executive at one of the big security product manufacturers whose name everyone knows, and I asked when was the last time he had lunch with an end-user. After he asked me to clarify what in the world I meant by an end-user (a bad sign indeed), he replied, “I don’t think I ever have.”
I asked Fredrik Nilsson, Axis general manager for the Americas, the same question and he said “nearly every month…sometimes every week.” But the secret itself lies in the management of the channel program. Axis signed up distributors in each region from which every installer, integrator and reseller has to buy. That by itself would seem to stifle the channel and remove incentives, until you uncover more ingredients of the recipe. Installers who bring “value” to Axis get rewarded.