Ignorer la navigation
The Prime Solution
Book

The Prime Solution

Close the Value Gap, Increase Margins, and Win the Complex Sale

Kaplan Publishing, 2005 plus...

résumé audio créé automatiquement
résumé audio créé automatiquement

Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Jeff Thull is a highly regarded consultant whose client list reads like a who’s who of big business. He is also the author of the insightful book, Mastering the Complex Sale. Does this new volume live up to the promise of that one? It depends on what you are seeking. Given that its title, The Prime Solution, sounds like a brand of steak sauce, be prepared to chew your way through terms like "decision acuity" (i.e., help your clients understand what’s really going on), "solution opportunities" (i.e., answers) and "value promise delivery" (i.e., implementation). Such stylistic nuisances aside, the book diagnoses and documents a "value gap," the shortfall between the value that buyers receive versus what they feel they bought. Thull attributes this gap primarily to flaws in how providers of business-to-business products design, sell and execute their complex "solutions" or offerings. He suggests ways to address those flaws, along with many useful cases and good practical advice for consultants, particularly in the last three chapters. getAbstract.com recommends this book to experienced consultants who sell solutions. Our one caveat: just don’t beef about the vocabulary.

Take-Aways

  • Sell your clients "prime solutions."
  • This means well-implemented solutions that create extraordinary value and ROI.
  • Business-to-business solutions are increasingly complex and the results frequently disappoint clients.

About the Author

As president and CEO of Prime Resource Group, Jeff Thull is a leading strategist and corporate adviser. He is the author of Mastering the Complex Sale.


Comment on this summary or Démarrer une discussion

  • Avatar
  • Avatar
    R. T. 3 years ago
    This gets a relatively bad rating on GetAbstract, but in a world of failed digital transformation, this “solution advice” seeming comes into its own. I personally think it’s better than its press might suggest.