No conversion, no conversation: consequences of retail salespeople disengaging from unpromising prospects
On encountering a prospect whom they believe unlikely to make a purchase, some retail salespeople adopt a sales strategy of limiting engagement with the customer, relying on a "no conversion, no conversation" (NC2) sales strategy. Is this a good or bad sales strategy? Based on a multisourc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science 2021-05, Vol.49 (3), p.502-520 |
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creator | Cron, William L Alavi, Sascha Habel, Johannes Wieseke, Jan Ryari, Hanaa |
description | On encountering a prospect whom they believe unlikely to make a purchase, some retail salespeople adopt a sales strategy of limiting engagement with the customer, relying on a "no conversion, no conversation" (NC2) sales strategy. Is this a good or bad sales strategy? Based on a multisource dataset combining salespeople and objective sales performance data, the authors examine retail salespeople's performance consequences of disengaging from a customer, i.e., of the NC2 sales strategy. Higher sales performance and sales growth arises from the use of an NC2 sales strategy when (1) salespeople are experienced professionals skilled in gauging customers' purchase likelihood, (2) store traffic is high, and (3) salespeople are oriented to building lasting customer relationships. However, (4) when store traffic is low and peers use the NC2 sales strategy as well, this customer disengagement strategy yields lower returns for salespeople. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s11747-020-00763-x |
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subjects | Behavior Business and Management Customer relations Customers Decision making Decision strategy Intuition Marketing Marketing research Methods Original Empirical Research Personal selling Purchase intention Sales Sales personnel Salespeople Salesperson–customer relationships Selling Shopping Social Sciences Time allocation |
title | No conversion, no conversation: consequences of retail salespeople disengaging from unpromising prospects |
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