The New ABCs of Selling: A Is for Attunement

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What is attunement in reference to sales? How can you use attunement to move others?

In the new ABCs of selling, the A stands for attunement. Attunement is the ability for a salesperson to tune into their buyers’ needs and to change their approach depending on the circumstances and the needs of the buyer.

Continue reading to learn all about attunement as part of the new ABCs of selling.

A Is for Attunement

The economic and technological changes gave rise to a whole new philosophy of selling, also called the new ABCs.

Traditional ABCs

  • Always Be Closing”
    • The dynamic between seller and buyer is akin to predator and prey
    • The singular goal is making the sale

The new ABCs

  • Attunement, Buoyancy, Clarity.
    • Each of these serves the newly dominant skillset of “movement”
    • You need all three to effectively move people

This article explores the quality of attunement. Attunement is having the capacity to tune into the context or perspective of others and align your own perspective or behavior accordingly. Like a frequency, it allows you to adjust depending on the circumstances, and the needs of the buyer or target. There is a difference between attunement and lying, however. It still needs to be human-centric (not mechanical, or transactional).

There are four forms of attunement we need to effectively move others:

  1. humility
  2. strong emotional intelligence
  3. curiosity
  4. adaptability

#1: Humility

When you are humble enough to allow the other person to be the focus, to have the power in a transaction, you are more likely to move them.

#2: Strong Emotional Intelligence Without Overt Focus on Emotions

This demonstrates a form of attunement where you are connected to the emotional needs of the buyer, but are also considering their thoughts and beliefs. This helps them to feel supported in the transaction. For example, let’s say you have a devout Christian buyer who wants to find a catering company for her wedding. She says she wants the cheapest option. You have a cheap option you can offer her. You also have an option that costs a bit more, but the company offering it has a Christian background. Considering both emotional needs and belief systems, you might suggest the Christian catering company. While the cheaper company would fulfill her immediate need, the Christian company would likely create a better overall experience for her. 

#3: Curiosity

Another form of attunement, demonstrated by being thoughtful about the buyer, and asking lots of targeted questions. For example, if you’re a salesperson trying to sell an iPhone, you can ask the buyer what some of their favorite daily activities are. Let’s say their answer is something relating to exercise—you might later show them the benefits of Apple’s “health” app. 

#4: Adaptability

This is the ability to receive and respond quickly to changes in your selling environment. It also allows you to attune to changing needs of the buyer. Ambiverts, who adapt their qualities of introversion and extroversion to their environment, are great at this (which is why they often make fantastic salespeople).

Tools for Practicing Attunement

To properly practice attunement, use these three Core Tools.

Tool #1: Practice perspective-taking

In order to sell effectively, you need to understand the preferences and biases of the buyer. Many assume empathy is the best way to achieve this. Empathy is an effective connection and persuasion skill, but it’s emotion-based, and it can be detrimental by limiting creative solutions or sacrificing self-interest. An example of this is overly-empathizing with a customer who doesn’t have great finances, making a sale that serves them but doesn’t allow you to profit at all (sacrificing self-interest). Another example is catering to a buyer’s emotions so much that you lose objectivity, and fail to suggest otherwise effective solutions. 

Perspective-taking, a head-based approach, is more effective at moving others than empathy. Individuals are not islands—they are connected to other people, circumstances, and greater contexts. Perspective-taking is the ability to get outside yourself and deliberately imagine the experience of others. It facilitates openness, clarity, and achieving efficiency without sacrificing profit. Let’s say you have a client who is from a different generation from you. You can consider their needs from that context. For example, you’re probably not going to sell a 20-year-old a life insurance policy.

Good salespeople have the ability and willingness to think outside of themselves to get into the heads or hearts of others. That way, when a customer comes to you with a problem, not only do you find a solution, but you identify additional problems, and provide solutions for those too. 

Perspective-Taking Test

Employers who want insight into their employees’ openness to perspective-taking can use this quick exercise. 

  • Ask your employee to use their dominant hand to snap their fingers 5 times as quickly as possible, then ask them to, with the same speed, draw a capital E on their forehand with that same dominant hand.
  • Whether they draw the E as though they will be reading it, or as though you will be reading it, determines whether or not they have the natural inclination to think outside of their own experience or needs enough to consider the needs and experience of others. They can use this information to improve their sales skills.

Tool #2: Empower yourself by assuming you don’t have the power

Manipulation, coercion, and ignoring the needs of the buyer are all practices that prevent success in today’s sales environment. The shift in balance from sellers holding all the cards to buyers having equal power makes perspective-taking a crucial component of selling, and perspective-taking is impeded by assuming you are the one with the power. When you believe you have the power, you are more attached to your own perspective and dismissive of the perspectives of others. The perception of power causes you to attune less to those around you, obscuring your view of reality. 

The New ABCs of Selling: A Is for Attunement

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Hannah Aster

Hannah graduated summa cum laude with a degree in English and double minors in Professional Writing and Creative Writing. She grew up reading fantasy books and has always carried a passion for fiction. However, Hannah transitioned to non-fiction writing when she started her travel website in 2018 and now enjoys sharing travel guides and trying to inspire others to see the world.

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