Cross-Selling: 10 Ways To Sell More To Your Customer

11 years, 5 months ago - October 26, 2012
Cross-Selling: 10 Ways To Sell More To Your Custom
Cross-selling is the art of getting a customer to buy something else along with the product they've already chosen. The well-worn textbook example of cross-selling is the McDonald's all time great: 'Do you want fries with that?' Simple, yet incredibly effective for upping revenue.

Important note: cross-selling isn't about manipulating customers. Completely the opposite, actually: it's most effective when you stick to extra items the customer would have a genuine interest in anyway - items that are well-connected to their original choice. Step over that almost invisible line, and you'll look pushy and transparent.

But if you stay safely within the boundaries of relevance and restraint, customers actually appreciate a nice spot of cross-selling. It makes their life easier, after all. So here are the best 10 ways to do it.

 

1.    Get prepared - then ask!

Make sure you've built a range of products that complement each other. So if you sell antique furniture, get some good quality wood-polish in stock ready for a last-minute cross-sell. (Travel sites like EasyJet and Expedia are masters of this on a larger scale - if you search for a flight, they offer you hotels, travel insurance, car rental.)

Then it really is as simple as just remembering to ask customers whether they want the extra item. Your cross-sell item should be cheaper than the original product, and something that only takes a quick buying decision. The more complex the product and the way you need to explain it, the more difficult your cross-sell will be.

Make sure staff are familiar with all your products and that they know which go hand-in-hand, and teach them how to master the cross-sell too.

 

2.    Position wisely

Learn from supermarkets and newsagents the world over: there's a reason they always have gum, chocolate bars and magazines by the check-out. Placing a cheap impulse purchase where people queue is enough in itself to prompt a purchase. Aim to use the cheapest items most likely to complement your best-selling products. To mimic this effect on your website, see the next point.

 

3.    Gear up your website

The great thing about cross-selling online is that you have so much data to work from. You can even automate your cross-selling opportunities, using data on what other buyers have bought (more on which in the point below). If that's out your budget, just showcase your products with common sense - if someone searches for 'tomato seeds', offer a seedling tray, compost and cellophane cover alongside. Use the 'site overlay' function on Google Analytics to see which products work best together (according to how customers click from one to the other), and use your sales data wisely - it reveals which products customers are already buying at the same time. Make sure it's easy for buyers to find out the info they need on extra purchases without navigating away from the original.

Every page should be maximised to encourage cross-selling opportunities, though check-out is a particularly fertile one. Good shopping carts to use on your site include Prostores.com, osCommerce.com and X-Cart.com - they've all been designed with cross-selling in mind.

 

4.    'Other people who bought this also bought'

In 2006, Amazon reported that a whopping 35% of the year's sales came from cross-sells. Their introduction of 'Customers who bought this item also bought' and 'Frequently bought together' is nothing short of cross-selling genius. It plays on your trust in the tastes of people with tastes like yours. This leads neatly into a cross-sell without it seeming like Amazon has had anything to do with the recommendation at all, and thus absolving them from any whiff of a hard sell. And it is of course showing you products you're likely to enjoy.

You can replicate this effect on your website by automating the recommendations as Amazon does (which will cost you), or you can just manually upload items to the relevant places on your site under the 'Also bought' heading (which is significantly cheaper, though more time-consuming). Use your sales data on what items get bought together, or just semi-cheat by using common sense.

Use this technique it in person by casually referring to other customers with similar tastes and what they bought recently.

 

5.    Incentivise

Tempting offers such as 'free postage on orders more than Rs1000' incentivise customers to just buy that little bit more. You might also try a discount or gift voucher for orders over a certain amount, or, the reward card favourite, double loyalty points (or similar) for a certain spend.

The techniques above and below should be used in conjunction to give customers that extra little push needed.

 

6.    Bundle up

Meal deals - where would we be without them? A lot slimmer and slightly richer, probably. But they work because they bundle together products that fit naturally together at an attractive price point. The consumer feels like they're making a saving on stuff they would possibly buy - or at least want - anyway. Find that golden price tag that feels like a bargain buy while still earning you a tidy profit. Then make the offer glaringly obvious to customers and place all the products included right next to each other.

 

7.    On-product copy

If you've ever absent-mindedly read the back of a shampoo bottle in the shower (who hasn't?), you may recall that old cosmetics and beauty marketing staple: 'For best results, use in conjunction with [insert same-brand product of choice]'. If you've got your own-branded product line, this is a no-brainer.

 

8.    Expert recommendations

If you don't have any control over the copy on the products you sell, leverage expert opinion on which two or three products are most effective when used together. The expert can be you if needed: you know your niche better than your customer (hopefully!), so cite that knowledge. Or use quotes from other experts and articles you've read.

Steal the idea so well implemented by small wine shops and bookshops, of hand-written cards explaining employees' favourites, but just apply the descriptions to two products rather than one. As in: 'Julie's favourite: I've got this violet candle in my home - it smells heavenly and fresh. I like propping it on the darkwood candle-stand when I have friends over for dinner - so much quirkier looking than flowers'. Personal touches like that never do your business any harm.

 

9.    During the pitch

If you're pitching to a customer face-to-face, whether in the meeting room or from the cosmetics counter of a department store, you get the chance to plant your cross-sell seeds early. In the early stages of the pitch, as you draw out your prospect's pain points (read more on this here), keep mental notes on everything even as you focus your pitch around one big issue. When you get to the close, throw those early pain points back in with products you have to fix them - with a bit of a discount thrown in for good measure, if you like.

 

10.    Discounted second buy

The 'bolt-ons' and 'add-ons' that have become so de rigueur among mobile phone companies in the last few years work because they offer desirable (non-essential) additional products, made yet more attractive by a bit of a discount. It feels like you're getting a deal - even though the company makes a better profit by selling you two services rather than one, and you probably would have never bought the second item if it wasn't for that deceptive Rs10 – Rs500 off.  The Boots favourite 'Buy two get third free' has the same idea behind it, though the financials are more daring.

But as long as the add-on you offer is something your customer is likely to lust after a little, and the discount you offer doesn't negate your profit margin on it, it can be worth taking the hit of that slightly slimmer profit on item two just to double your sales per transaction - particularly during slower sales periods. It gives your customers that grabbed-a-bargain feel-good factor, too. (If they're not interested in your offer first time round, use direct mail to follow up on sales offering similar incentives to repeat buy.)

This is not dissimilar to the bundling idea, you just position it slightly differently, as you offer it to the customer as an added bonus at the end of the sell rather them choosing the deal from the get-go.

 

Text by Smarta

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