If you’re a B2B salesperson, you’ve probably heard about SPIN Sales. It’s one of the oldest, most prominent sales methodologies businesses have at their disposal. The system gives reps a research-backed framework for working and closing complex deals with extended sales processes.
SPIN principles are versatile and worth understanding. In many cases, they actually fit seamlessly with other sales methodologies. The strategy focuses on asking good questions in the right order, using active listening, and translating the prospect’s needs into your product’s features — principles that align particularly well with inbound sales.
To help you implement the most useful tips, aspects, and templates from SPIN Selling, we’ve put together the following guide:
To get the full impact of Rackham’s advice, we recommend reading the entire book. Here’s the link to SPIN Selling book on Amazon.
Here’s a handy overview of the contents:
Section 1. Sales Behavior and Sales Success
Section 2. Obtaining Commitment: Closing the Sale
Section 3. Customer Needs in the Major Sale
Section 4. The SPIN Strategy
Section 5. Giving Benefits in Major Sales
Section 6. Preventing Objections
Section 7. Preliminaries: Opening the Call
Section 8. Turning Theory Into Practice
Questions are the foundation of SPIN Selling. Rackham and his team found top-performing salespeople rarely, if ever, pose random, low-value questions. Not only does every question have a clear purpose, but the order in which they ask their questions is strategic, too.
SPIN stands for the four stages of the questioning sequence:
Situation questions such as "Which tools do you currently use?" function as a way to gather information.
Problem questions such as "Does this process ever fail?" function as a way to identify the pains and problems prospects experience.
Implication questions such as "What's the productivity cost when it does?" help the sales rep underscore why those pains need to be solved.
Need Payoff questions such as "Wouldn't it be simpler if...?" lead the prospect to draw conclusions on their own rather than leading into a pitch right away.
Here are more examples:
Now that we know the function of each line of questioning, let's dive deeper into SPIN questions for each step in the questioning sequence.
Use Situation questions to learn where your prospects stand — from their processes and pain points to competitive plans and results. The specific questions will depend on your product.
For example, if you offer leadership training for mid-level managers, you might ask, “How do you currently teach first-time managers best practices and strategies?”
If you sell office supplies, on the other hand, you might ask, “How do you purchase office supplies right now?”
Here are some sample questions you can customize for your own use:
Note the lack of fact-gathering questions like, “How big is your company?”, “How many locations do you have?”, “Which products do you sell?”, and so on.
When Rackham published "SPIN Selling," there wasn’t anywhere near as much information available to sellers. Now that you can discover a long list of key details about your prospect with a quick online search, many situational questions are no longer effective.
Not only do they make buyers impatient, these questions also leave less time for the most important ones. Ask as few of the questions in this category as you can — and make sure you’ve done research before the call.
In this stage, reps identify potential areas of opportunity. In other words, what gap isn’t being filled? Where is the prospect dissatisfied? They may be unaware they have a problem, so delve into the common places your solution adds value.
Once you’ve identified an issue, figure out how serious it is. Implication questions reveal the depth and magnitude of your prospect’s pain point -- simultaneously giving you valuable information for customizing your message and instilling urgency in the buyer.
According to Rackham, they should have a new appreciation for the problem by the time you’ve finished this part of the conversation.
Rackham also says top-performing salespeople ask four times as many Implication questions than their average peers.
Need Payoff questions encourage the prospect to explain your product’s benefits in their own words, which is far more persuasive than listening to you describe those benefits.
You’re essentially asking questions that surface your offering’s potential to help with their core needs or problems. These questions focus on the value, importance, or utility of the solution.
Make sure your Need-Payoff questions don’t highlight issues your product can’t solve. For instance, if you help corporate recruiting teams identify potential engineering candidates, you shouldn’t ask about the impact of hiring better marketers.
Fortunately, it’s relatively simple to develop Need-Payoff questions — they should come directly from your Implication questions.
Sample Implication question: “Has a problem with X ever prevented you from meeting a deadline?”
Sample Need Payoff question: “If you could do X in half the time, would that make it easier to meet your deadlines?”
Be careful — Need Payoff questions can backfire. If they’re too obvious, you might come across as condescending. Try to reframe the solution in a way the buyer hasn’t previously considered.
For example, rather than asking, “Would your company benefit in saving money?”, you could ask, “Would redirecting $1,000 per week from your content creation budget and putting it into Facebook advertising drive significant traffic toward your blog?”
As you begin to implement SPIN questions when talking to prospects, consider the lifecycle of your conversation. Rackham says there are four basic stages of every sale:
SPIN Selling and inbound sales take the same approach to the first, or connect, call. Reps shouldn’t immediately jump into their product’s features and benefits — not only will this overly aggressive strategy turn prospects off, but salespeople will lose the opportunity to learn valuable information.
The purpose of the connect call is to get the buyer’s attention and start to earn their trust. Lead with a compelling insight or thought-provoking question.
Investigation is the most important phase of SPIN Selling. It’s equivalent to the discovery call: You’re figuring out how your product can help the buyer, identifying their priorities and buying criteria, and gaining credibility by asking relevant, targeted, strategic questions.
According to Rackham, a strong question strategy can improve your close rate by 20%.
Once you’ve connected the dots between your solution and the prospect’s needs, you need to prove that connection exists.
There are three basic ways to describe your product’s capabilities, Rackham says:
Features are most useful when selling low-cost, simple products. A feature for a cup might be, “It can hold 10 ounces of liquid.” End-users tend to find features more compelling than decision-makers, who care about the bottom-line results.
Advantages describe how a product’s features are actually used. Like benefits, they’re useful for smaller purchases but less persuasive with larger ones. The advantage of a cup might be, “You can use it to drink both hot and cold beverages.”
Benefits go one step further and show how a feature can help the prospect. They typically have a financial component and meet your customer’s need(s). A well-crafted benefit gives the buyer a reason to buy your product.
The benefit of your cup might be, “Since you drink coffee in the morning and iced coffee in the afternoon, you’ll appreciate this mug’s versatility. Now you can enjoy both beverages with one cup.”
The FAB formula gives you another way to think about features, advantages, and benefits.
Because [product] has [feature] …
[user] will be able to [advantage] …
which means [prospect] will experience [benefit].
Let’s fill in this formula for a salesperson offering employee gamification software.
“Because our platform lets you set up leaderboards for your service teams, customer support reps will get a real-time overview of their performance compared to their peers. That means they’ll be motivated to raise their average satisfaction rating and respond to tickets more quickly.”
In every deal, objections are inevitable. In fact, you should worry more if you’re not getting them — that means your prospect has reservations they’re not sharing with you. Your goal is to discover why the buyer hasn’t already pulled the trigger on this purchase, then help them understand why their concerns aren’t true blockers.
(Of course, if there’s a valid reason your product isn’t a good fit, you shouldn’t persuade them otherwise.)
Rackham states there are two types of objections:
Capability objections can be further broken down:
It’s important to prevent as many objections as possible. The majority of objections are actually avoidable if you avoid selling too soon.
Rackham’s research revealed that reps can cut the number of objections in half by using implication and need-payoff questions to build value before presenting a solution.
In the traditional sequence, the salesperson asks a Problem question. Then they use the prospect’s answer to offer the corresponding product feature.
However, the rep usually doesn’t have enough context to truly understand what the prospect is trying to accomplish or what’s blocking them. Their generic, one-size-fits-all answer prompts the buyer to push back — and they're probably not going to listen to any of their future suggestions.
Try the SPIN sequence instead. Ask a Problem question, probe into the consequences with Implication questions, then ask the buyer to recognize the value of a solution with a Need-Payoff question.
Transactional salespeople often move through all four of these stages in a single sales call. However, reps working on larger, more complex deals might take two months to two years to complete them. In cases like these, there are four possible outcomes for each sales call in the SPIN selling methodology:
To help mid-market and enterprise salespeople measure their progress, Rackham uses the concept of “advances.” An advance is an action the buyer commits to that brings you closer to a purchase.
The operative word is action. It’s tempting to interpret your prospect’s request for more information or a proposal as a buying signal, but that puts the ball entirely in your court. If the buyer is actually interested, they’ll agree to do some work as well.
A continuation is a sales conversation that ends with an undesirable outcome. In other words, when you finish the call or meeting the buyer hasn’t agreed to any next steps that will advance the deal.
Example advances include the prospect reviewing your pricing page and sending you their questions, signing up for a free trial and exploring the tool, or introducing you to a key stakeholder.
Come up with as many valuable advances as possible. The more paths to the sale you have, the likelier you are to get there. When your prospect turns down one of your advances — for example, an introduction to Procurement — you can calmly accept the rejection and then propose something else.
An order is the third potential outcome of a sales call. The buyer agrees to purchase your product and shows their strong desire by signing paperwork. For large deals, this is usually the last outcome in a series of progressively larger closes.
A no-sale is the fourth (and least desirable) outcome. Your prospect rejects your request — you can’t meet with the decision-maker, they won’t schedule another meeting, or at the most extreme, they say there’s no possibility you’ll work together.
“SPIN Selling” was published more than 30 years ago. Although its core techniques and principles hold true, the typical buying journey has evolved. If you’re going to use the SPIN model, you should update it.
Prospects simply don’t have the patience to do your homework for you. They don’t want you to identify the pain points they already know about — if that was the case, they’d simply buy the solution by themselves. You’re valuable because you can find opportunities or pain points your buyers don’t yet know about.
With that in mind, use thought-provoking questions such as, "Has your organization ever considered [new strategy]?", "Do you know [surprising statistic]?", and "Would you like some recommendations for preparing for [impending industry event]?"
Rackham didn't give these questions their own category, but they're definitely useful in modern sales.
When Rackham came out with "Social Selling," LinkedIn didn't exist. Now you have far more insight into your buyers' perspectives, priorities, and personalities than salespeople in the late '80s could ever have dreamed of. Don't let this valuable resource go to waste.
Read your prospect's profile(s), browse their group comments and any articles they've written or shared, check out their Recommendations section to get a feel for their work ethic, and so on. Become as familiar with each individual as you can before your kick-off sales call so you can engage them like it's the fifth meeting, not the first.
As the average number of stakeholders involved in every B2B deal grows larger, and internal buying processes become more complex, your expertise gets more valuable.
Prospects need you to help them purchase your product like they never have before. Come prepared with the job titles — and potentially names, if you can find them — of their coworkers who need to be informed or consulted.
Tell your point of contact what their manager is going to want to know before they approve the decision, and send them materials to make their presentation more compelling.
Work with your contact to anticipate and avoid roadblocks. Liaise with Procurement and/or Legal when necessary to get the deal over the finish line as quickly and easily as possible. Although Rackham didn't give these recommendations in "SPIN Selling," they're one of the most effective ways to differentiate yourself in modern sales.
As you might expect, SPIN sales training covers the fundamental skills salespeople need to master to have a firm grasp of the SPIN selling process. Here's what that can include.
Successful SPIN selling rests on a salesperson's ability to uncover prospect's pain points organically and effectively. That requires knowing how to identify and express certain conversational patterns — letting reps demonstrate value and make high-impact benefit statements. SPIN Training provides the insight that can inform that kind of dialogue.
SPIN Sales is a brand of consultative selling — a method that requires a personal touch. If you're going to have a one-on-one, advisory conversation with a prospect, you need to be able to tailor your approach to suit them as individuals. SPIN sales training gives you the right questions to ask and tactics to leverage that will help you get there.
SPIN selling is about taking a more human approach to sales. That's why many SPIN training programs include time dedicated to finding and understanding alternatives to product-driven sales pitches in favor of efforts driven by articulating value.
SPIN tactics aren't reserved solely for immediate conversations with prospects — they can also have a place in broader communications like proposals and presentations. Many SPIN Training programs offer guidance about how to incorporate those strategies into those kinds of efforts.
There are a few different outlets that provide SPIN training to salespeople — two of the most prominent being The Miller Heiman Group and Huthwaite International
The Miller Heiman Group offers both virtual and in-person SPIN sales training. Its program focuses primarily on elements of the methodology like uncovering buyer urgency, increasing the value of the sale, tackling buyer skepticism, and accelerating the sales cycle. They provide in-person training at your location, and pricing information is available upon request.
Huthwaite International is another SPIN training option that has both virtual and in-person courses available. It boasts an impressive list of clients served and offers a robust suite of classes related to different applications of the methodology — including SPIN coaching, marketing, and account strategy. Like Miller Heiman, Huthwaite International's prices are available upon request.
There are a few factors that dictate whether you're better off paying for a full-scale training program or just reading Rackham's book — namely, your team's size, your familiarity with the methodology, and the degree to which you're interested in incorporating the strategy into your operations.
If you're looking to incorporate the SPIN methodology into a bigger team's operations, you're probably better off paying for a full-on training program. It's tough to rely on everyone in a large organization to read a book on their own time.
An actual course makes it easier to hold your team members accountable and on the right track. If your team is smaller — or you, personally, are interested in learning about the methodology on your own time — it will probably serve you to go with Rackham's book, itself.
If you and your team are starting from scratch when it comes to understanding SPIN selling, you'll likely want to invest in a full course to better understand the ins and outs of the methodology. If you've incorporated these kinds of tactics into your sales efforts and are interested in a refresher, reading the book is probably more appropriate.
Are you trying to make SPIN Sales your primary sales methodology? Or are you thinking about giving your team a bit more perspective on the tactics that comprise it? If you're more interested in the latter, you'll probably need to invest in a course. If the former suits you better, you should probably just have your team read the book.
SPIN Selling is a methodology that reconciles empathy with effectiveness. If you're interested in incorporating a thoughtful, consultative approach that delivers results into your broader sales efforts, consider looking into the strategy.
Editor's note: This post was originally published in August 2020 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.