When "Transparency" Goes Wrong

When “Transparency” Goes Wrong

May 7, 2019 | Blog

I’m often asked, “When does transparency go wrong?”

The simple answer is – there’s a difference between positioning your solutions as being (as Tyra Banks calls it) “flawsome” versus positioning as though you suck. Remember, when a website is acting as the seller, a 4.2-4.5 star rating sells better than a perfect 5.0. Imperfect sells better than perfect. That same concept applies to human-to-human selling.

Here’s an example of doing it wrong:

On April 30th, I made my mortgage payment via the bank’s website.

This morning I noticed the payment hadn’t cleared. I went to the bank’s website, and it still showed a May 1st due date. So, I called. They informed me that I had entered my bank info incorrectly. Their site doesn’t save my payment info…meaning I have to re-enter every month, so that’s entirely possible.

I asked, “Were you going to tell me? An alert of some sort, call, smoke signal, something? I happened to notice on my own.”

The CS agent replied, “We typically call – after the grace period.”

“So, you don’t tell people their payment didn’t go through until after the due date is passed and a fee is assessed?”

“Yes.”

Being transparent about an easily solvable policy drops you below a 4.2 – creating the impression that you suck.

Being transparent about a flaw at the cost of being great at what’s important is how you position yourself as a 4.2-4.5. IKEA tells the world that you’re going to pick and pack your furniture yourself on a rickety cart, jam it into your car, then assemble it with instructions created by a 4th grader – but that keeps costs down so you can have modern, Scandinavian-designed furniture you didn’t pay a lot for. They are the largest furniture retailer in the world for the 8th straight year.

Your products aren’t perfect. What feature or function are you sacrificing so you can be great at your core value proposition?

This is 2019 – with the proliferation of feedback on everything we do, buy and experience, your business isn’t long for this world with faulty products or harmful policies.

Embrace your flaws – but don’t take it too far. If your product truly sucks, fix it! If you have a policy that’s intentionally designed to capitalize on a customer’s mistake, rethink that policy!

#CommonSense #TransparencySale

0 Comments

Other Articles You Might Enjoy

Selling is Teaching – But If We Don’t Know How We Learn…

Selling is Teaching – But If We Don’t Know How We Learn…

“If we don’t know how we learn, how on earth do we know how to teach?” - Leo Rafael Reif, President of MIT I teach. It’s the primary purpose of my business. You probably teach, too - if you’re in sales, marketing, leadership, enablement, etc. Everything you’re doing...

read more
The Pioneer of Sales Enablement – Mark Twain

The Pioneer of Sales Enablement – Mark Twain

William Faulkner called him “the father of American literature”. From my research, Mark Twain may also be “the pioneer of sales enablement”. Here’s the story: Ulysses S. Grant led the Union Army as Commanding General in winning the Civil War, then became the 18th...

read more
Your product sucks (to somebody out there)

Your product sucks (to somebody out there)

Your product sucks. Or at least someone out there thinks it does. My book, The Transparency Sale, has won 3 best-sales-book awards, but there are people out there that think “free is too much for this trash”. (yes...that's a quote from the review shown below) This is...

read more
Todd Caponi
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.