R.J. Stasieczko
The End Of The Day With Ray! Time Cost Money
The End Of The Day With Ray! Talking With Three Who Are Focused On Helping The Industry
Imaging Channel's Classroom
"Repetitive learning is a Procrastinator's Journey."
It's not about Chairs or seats, no meters, one-rate, everything free, or what a few minuscule-dealers with less than 100 customers claim to be doing new ever week, which will align the Copier/Printer industry with the realities of the marketplace. It's about smart business people understanding the importance of data over the noise of nonsense.
Those who follow me will remember back when the industry started filling seats in courses on how to bill customers; I was a critic yelling stop the madness! And suggested the industry focus more on learning the cost of what they delivered. It was then I came up with a new acronym for the Imaging Channel
CABB (Cost Awareness Based Billing).
"It's not about Chairs, no meters, one-rate, or everything free. It's about smart business people understanding their data and simply billing based on what the data tells them."
The reality to billing printers and their services without collecting meters is not rocket science, is nothing new, and it defiantly does not take college courses to understand how to implement it.
What it takes is Data and the ability for dealer owners to modify their current billing processess. Over the last, nearly five years, the channel has spent way too much money and time trying to learn secret knowledge, which is commonly available; it lives it their data.
"Dealers need to focus more on their cost to deliver what they bill, over how they bill what they deliver."
Our friends at Konica have been billing customers without collecting meters for nearly two years. Our friends at NEXERA have been showing dealers the data, and providing them the science to understanding the cost of delivering with no-meter for over a year - utilizing their trademarked iDaaS program (imaging Device as a Service.)
All those dealers using NEXERA, have the Data they need to understand their cost to service every device they deploy. What dealers need to do is look at their data, understand their cost, and determine the customer's volume band.
Once those three things are understood, simply write an agreement just as you did in Cost Per Copy Models. The difference, you will never bill for overages because you will include the customer's volume in the contract.
My friends this works because everyone in the industry understands volumes are declining, and everyone in the industry understands leasing partners pass-through service revenue collected as part of lease payments. They have been doing this for three decades.
Regardless of how a dealer describes the agreement, CPC., No-Meter, OneRate, No-Clicks, Chair based billing, or whatever the next guy or gal comes up with. Leasing companies have passed through to dealers the service revenue portions of lease contracts for decades. It's not innovative; frankly, it's old school.
Now we have a pandemic problem with bundled leasing.
This current Pandemic is now exposing the problems with lease payments and service payments being bundled. As End-users are looking at all their accounts payable and questioning that if they are not using the devices on lease should they be paying the service portion of the bundled payment? This practice will also be question by disruptive innovators as they seek to bring new approaches to the channel's end-users.
While dealers are wasting time learning something they should already be doing. The real innovators are looking at ways to truly innovate and disrupt the print equipment and its services deliverable. These innovators are looking to replace out-dated leasing with subscription-based programs. Innovators will replace those early upgrades and the rolling in of excessive buy-outs with more customer-centric approaches. Innovators will fight for customers by explaining the Overselling of A3, and provide the channels customers A4 and, online procurement capabilities.
I am not sure how many of my friends are worn out like me, on the channel's obsession to continue making themselves feel good by believing changing the name of a deliverable is the channel's innovation. My friends, we need to change the game and realign to the field the new game will be played on.
So regarding No-Meter Billing or billing by the chair, I suggest Dealers - just bill with no meter regardless of the number chairs and move on to the next thing. I do caution dealers to pay attention to Data and build programs based on business plans, not noisy lunacy from tiny dealers selling things in unscalable ways who are lacking not only Data but business acumen as well.
The Imaging Channel needs to align its deliverable based on market realities instead of their obsession in learning what they already know. or, doing stupid unscalable things based on emotional nonsense.
The Pandemic experience should prove to all that. End-Users won't care about chair-based billing when they are in their home office, and they need toner, need to buy a desktop printer, need to pay online with a credit card, need a computer, a laptop or they need some help with software applications. The list of things the imaging channel's customers can currently do online with competitors outside the channel is way past what most dealers can offer. This lack of innovation must be addressed immediately.
" The time to replace yesterday's mentalities with tomorrow's realities is now."
The channel needs to shift their tuition dollars from yesterday's redundant education to learning what today's market realities demand, you know. The channel needs to learn quickly how to navigate through what I describe as that intersection between the physical and digital worlds.
The Imaging Channel is wasting too much time learning things they already know. It's time to fill the chairs in new classrooms leaving behind the insecurities which have kept the channel living in yesterday.
Remember, "Repetitive learning is a Procrastinator's Journey."
"Status Quo Is The Killer Of All That Will Be Invented"
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Ray Stasieczko CEO TEASRA, The Innovation Channel and Host of End of The Day With Ray! https://teasratic.com/
The “Relationship-less” Sale
Yes, I created a new word. “Relationship-Less” As time moves along so must our thinking.
I first published this article in March of 2019, With the current circumstances we are all living through I wanted to re-publish. The world's businesses and the world's people will advance in their digitization by at least five years. I fear many B2B sellers will confuse their temporary great relationships; relationships created for and in a different time.
The changes caused by this pandemic regarding digitalization will be profound. It will be most important that B2B sellers align their expectations of customer and prospect relationships to the realities of a new buyer's mindset. This pandemic was an Evolutionary Event and the speed to buyers becoming disenfranchised with outdated seller mentalities will be shocking to the un-prepared.
Here's the article as previously written
We hear a lot about relationships and their importance in the sales process. I agree with that. However, I also caution those who believe that their success will hinge on only building 1990 style relationships. In these times we live relationships are modifying too.
Yesterday's relationship building as a must before selling. Is not the reality of many today's buyers. There are many things purchased every day both goods and services which are void relationships as defined in 1990. Today there are too many in sales who still believe that without a relationship they can’t provide the means to a prospects desired outcome. This misguided thinking is costing them business to the savvier sales organizations.
The disconnect, is based on what precisely defines a relationship with a buyer? The old school thinking will make it near impossible to face the realities of today’s buyer. Many buyers today see this obsession from sellers who must build relationships ahead of delivering as an aggravation, not a benefit. The old-way is pushing and the new buyer wants to pull.
Buyers and more of them every day want to pull to them want they need and then build a relationship. Quite frankly with the speed to action available through technology today. Buyers what to act, and buyers expect to be treated fairly and when they need assistance they expect cooperation as a way of doing business.
Buyers do not purchase relationships they buy desired outcomes. If the means to those outcomes fails the customer will replace them, and in reality, most of the replacements are with someone they do not have a relationship with.
Understanding the relationship required of the deliverable is essential. Times are changing, and it seems buyers are changing their buying habits quicker than sellers are changing their selling habits.
Selling must live in two worlds for those who provide both goods and services. These two worlds are re-shaping commerce across the globe. Understanding how to navigate between the Digital World and the Physical world is a must as this defines the new world of selling and the new world of relationships.
Today Customer Experience will win over Customer Relationships. Sellers cannot merely focus on relationship building or taking advantage of their relationships they must concentrate on giving the better experience and in 2019 and beyond that better experience might just be without a relationship as defined by 1990.
In Closing:
“You can be the vendor with the greatest relationships and lose to the innovator who delivers a better experience.”
If you wish to connect here on LinkedIn send me an invite be well.
Ray Stasieczko
CEO/TEASRA, The Innovation Channel and Host of The End Of The Day With Ray! visit my website here