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Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

March 28th, 2008 @ 5:30 am

10 Comments

Categories: General, Humor, Management, Motivation, Sales Tips

Tags: Software, Sales, Geoffrey James, Geoffrey James

Lying sales professional?I’ve previously pointed out that political campaigns are like sales campaigns, with each candidate trying to make the case that his or her “product” is best. And, like sales teams, political teams start doing weird things when it’s pretty clear they might lose the sale.

In the case of Hillary Clinton, for example, she’s started telling whoppers in order to make her “product” look good in response to a major competitive threat. Clinton’s ridiculous story about dodging snipers at an airport reminds me of the time when a software sales guy that I was working with claimed we had customers using our new software — even though it had been released for beta testing. The lie helped close the deal but could easily have backfired had the customer asked for references.

Of course, lying is pretty much par for the course for politicians, although usually they limit the duplicity to campaign promises, rather than easily disprovable anecdotes. In software sales, the equivalent of a campaign promise saying “yeah, we’ve got that feature, too” when a prospect was convinced that a competitive product was superior. Sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn’t, but when it did, the end result was either an irritated customer (because the feature didn’t exist) or a frustrated programming staff (who were often expected to interrupt what they were doing an code the required feature.)

The overriding concept, of course, is that it’s justifiable to lie as long as you don’t get caught and as long as you close the deal. So I’m curious what you folk think of this kind of behavior. Needless to say, we’re all committed to the concept of having strong customer relationships, based upon mutual respect and trust and all. But when it comes down to actually closing the deal…

Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

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  •  
    1

    Aimee333

    03/28/08 | Report as spam

    That's why they keep coming back!

    In my CURRENT job position "marketing" there is salesmanship sometimes confused with lying...but our business is regulated by the IRS. If I lie...we all go to jail. So, no lying here.
    However, when I was a Producer/Director in Advertising...I knew way too many individuals that did. I made it my own policy to tell is like it was. If a project was going to increase in price by $30,000 because the client wanted changes, that was known up front! I never hid anything, or lied about production and for 13 years I had consistant happy clients, that kept coming back!

  •  
    2

    LWeller2

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    Your list for "Would You Lie to Close the Deal?" didn't include:

    Never because it's wrong and permanently ruins your reputation.

  •  
    3

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    Good point.

    I should have add that one.

  •  
    4

    LWeller2

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    One other thing. Didn't Reagan tell stories that turned out to have been from movies he had been in? Was that Altzheimers, falsification, or something in between?I think Clinton's memory was based on what the "protectors" around her were saying/exaggerating (it makes them look better). She probably has that stuck in her mind so doesn't remember the less dangerous reality of the situation.

    Whatever.

  •  
    5

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    Clinton

    The problem here was that the story had been debunked numerous times in major publication -- and she kept telling it. You might want to check out Frank Rich's column in last Sunday's NY Times:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/30/opinion/30rich.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

  •  
    6

    Lorenzo H

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    A dishonest salesperson is a dead salesperson. You need a good reputation and repeat business.

  •  
    7

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    Depends on the market

    Selling computer systems before the Y2K hoax was like shooting fish in a barrel. And every computer company was lying through their teeth about the threat, which was minimal.

    I have yet to see any computer company apologize for convincing their customers to buy computer systems and upgrades that were simply not necessary.

    So it is entirely possible to get away with lying to customers and take no hits from it. It just depends upon market conditions and the credulousness of the customer base.

  •  
    8

    Pat Schnably

    03/31/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    No. My philosophy about everything is always: Do the right thing and do things the right way. There is never regret and doing what is right is key to one's credibility. Credibility is key to the longer term relationship, which is just as critical as the sale.

  •  
    9

    boblw

    04/01/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    Absolutely never. One of the problems we're facing in American business these days is the loss of ethics, integrity, honesty, and personal character. I couldn't even respond to the questions in the posing because "Never. There is too much risk of getting caught" is honesty based on what you can get away with rather than a commitment to building relationships with clients based on trust that is never betrayed.

    Bob Wall

  •  
    10

    abu3abdalla

    04/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Would You Lie to Close the Deal?

    mostly so many people do that , so to follow your competitors u need to do that . but i think that will reduce your respect in market. cause they will know that .

    i think for long time relation you do not want to lie.

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