In a down economy,  it is important for technology and professional services companies to adapt to  the existing business climate to generate revenue. In this economy, the prospect's  response "I cannot afford it" may actually be a real objection! To improve  your technology sales closing ratios in this economy, try the following closing  methods:
 
 1. Find your prospect's pain and be a doctor!
  
 Although the economy is flat, companies are still buying technology and professional  services. It is just a question of priorities. In today's market space, people  are only buying technology that improves corporate earnings. It is the pain that  gets the funding. Clients are paying for major surgery, not band-aids. During  your client discovery conversations, you must focus on finding the prospect's  biggest pain, so you can be a doctor and fix it with your technology or professional  service. If you don't know what your prospect's biggest wound is, then you will  not get the deal. People are spending money, but only on high priority projects.  Be the doctor, find the pain and fix it.
 
 2. Why are you talking to a prospect with a director's title?
 
 Mid-level managers and directors in small privately owned firms and Fortune 1000  companies are not the decision makers. Bypass them immediately and go directly  to VP's or above. My general rule of thumb in technology sales is, if the person  you're dealing with does not have at least a VP title, then you do not have a  qualified prospect for your sales forecast.
 
 3. Hand deliver every proposal and discuss it in person
 
 When selling IT, technology and professional services, set up an appointment to  hand deliver your proposal to discuss the business details. Email and overnight  delivery services have reduced the personal closing techniques and sales skills  of technology salespeople during the last ten years. You need to walk thru the  proposal with the prospect in person to keep the one-to-one relationship perpetuating  forward as you deal with the proposal's objections. Hand deliver all proposals  and you will close more deals. 
 
 4. Offer pricing options over time to initiate purchases
 
 Times are tough and cash is tight. Like other industries that sell capital investments,  technology companies need to offer better financing terms to their prospects to  spur purchases. As long as you are comfortable with the prospect's business viability,  stretching payments over time (while delivering the professional service or technology  on the original schedule) may close a tabled deal. 
 
 5. Cut up your application or service purchase into time pieces
 
 Another method to reduce the prospect's upfront investment is to cut your project's  price point into smaller more budget digestible pieces. Find out what budget cycle  your prospect is currently in and spread their investment over multiple fiscal  quarters (i.e., Phase 1 during Q2, Phase 2 during Q3, etc.) 
 
 6. Turn your product into a service
 
 During tough economic times, companies postpone capital investments that have  been assigned as a budget item because of their perceived high cost. To bypass  the capital budget item issue, turn your product into a service and sell it as  a cash flow investment option (i.e., selling application software as a multiple  year license that's paid monthly, etc.).
 
 7. Offer a discount that is attached to a specific date
 
 Giving customers a real discount to close business by a specific date may push  a hesitating buyer to invest now instead of 2002. However, it must be a real discount  and the date needs to be enforced. Letting the client buy later at the discount  price makes you loose all creditability. (P.S. Remind your CFO that discounting  to get revenue is better than having no revenue.) 
 
 8. Give a bonus
 
 People who make business decisions for technology purchases are just like you  and I. They buy houses and cars and vacations in Bermuda. Like you and I, they  want a great deal. One way to repackage your price point is to give something  for free (tied to a purchase date) that clients value highly (i.e., sell an 18-month  maintenance agreement for a 12-month price or give them a free web site redesign,  etc.). 
 
 Selling IT services and applications has never been easy. Complicated by the worldwide  changes economically, successful technology firms need to modify their corporate  business model to maximize revenue. These eight suggestions should help.
Paul Dimoca is  President of DigitalHatch, Inc. (www.digitalhatch.com)