📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

6 Things to Focus on When Selling to Small Business Owners Small business owners are a special breed. They work hard, so they need their service providers to work hard for them.

By Andrew Gazdecki

entrepreneur daily

This story originally appeared on Bizness Apps

Shutterstock

Small business owners are a special breed. They work hard, so they need their service providers to work hard for them. If your business is built to serve small businesses, you'll need a sales approach designed to address their main concerns head-on.

Below are six tips that will help you connect with small business owners, keep them happy and build long-standing relationships that can lead to valuable referrals.

1. Demonstrate your value

Money tends to be tight for small businesses. Owners constantly worry about covering their expenses and earning some kind of a profit. Though they were willing to take a leap of faith and start their own business, they may have little appetite for risk left over.

This means that proving your value is critical. Testimonials, trustworthy reviews, guarantees and even third-party verifications all go a long way toward convincing a small business owner that you will indeed deliver on your promises. If there's any doubt in their mind, they'll probably put your brochure on the shelf.

2. Follow through

This ties in to the last point. Your sales promises all have to be kept, or better yet, exceeded. Make sure that your sales enthusiasm carries over into service enthusiasm or repeat business will drop to zero. Small business owners watch expenses carefully, and if they aren't getting immediate returns, they'll be quick to cut you out. The grace period after the sale will be quite short, so make it count. Follow through and follow up to seal the deal.

3. Help them today

Long-term benefits are nice for a well-funded organization that can weather quarterly ups and downs. A small business generally can't do this, so investing for long-term gain is difficult if there are no short-term gains to be seen. Make sure your value timeline aligns with the resources of your small business customers.

If your offering requires long-term investment, you'll have to work that much harder to demonstrate that it's worth the wait. You'll also have to be adaptable to their financial constraints in the interim, which may mean delayed payments or other creative solutions.

4. Make referrals easy

Small business owners are a community and they trust one another. If your solution helps one owner who's willing to say so, others will be inclined to give you a shot. Make it easy for your customers to spread the word (electronically or otherwise) and provide referrals so that you can get a foot in the door with new prospects and capitalize on your successes.

5. Show how you'll help them grow

All small business owners dream of growth and stability. If what you're selling ties into growth, be sure to highlight that fact. Since many of your prospects are constantly worried about generating enough business, growth means security. If your service will bring growth and security, you'll be a savior to your customers. It's also helpful to highlight customer retention benefits. Repeat business is huge for small operations, so show them how your product or service keeps familiar faces coming through the door.

6. Build relationships

You'll usually be dealing with a single person (the owner) when you work with small businesses. It's rare to have access to the top dog in most industries, so make the most of this special opportunity and build a relationship. If you become more than just an expense to the owner -- if you're dependable, understanding, and flexible -- you'll set yourself up for a long-term relationship that withstands even the off-season.

Andrew Gazdecki

CEO of BiznessApps

Andrew Gazdecki is the founder and CEO of BiznessApps

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Money & Finance

12 Books That Self-Made Millionaires Swear By

The bookshelves of millionaires can inspire you to build your wealth. Here are 12 must-reads they recommend.

Devices

Stay Focused and Accessible with These $40 Conduction Headphones

These headphones sit on top of your ears, so you can take calls while staying tuned into your surroundings.

Starting a Business

Clinton Sparks Podcast: Founder of Chuck E. Cheese, Atari Discusses Innovation and His Advice to Young People

This podcast is a fun, entertaining and informative show that will teach you how to succeed and achieve your goals with practical advice and actionable steps given through compelling stories and conversations with Clinton and his guests.

Devices

Keep the Office Cool This Summer with $10 Off a Klima Thermostat

The Klima Smart Thermostat can turn your existing mini split, heat pump, or AC into a smart unit.

Green Entrepreneur®

A Deer Invasion in Hawaii Has Turned Into an Environmental Crisis—And a Sustainable Business Opportunity

How Maui Nui Venison built a for-profit harvesting business that protects the land and helps the local community.