A four-step process that encourages user engagement and promotes habit formation.
Classic framework in marketing, helping business understand and influence each stage of the customer journey.
Adapts traditional marketing concept to the digital landscape.
Amodel redefines digital marketing by focusing on measurable growth and customer retention.
Optimize each stage of the customer journey, from brand awareness to loyalty.
focusing on how brands can guide prospects from awareness to advocacy.
A classic framework that provides a clear, structured approach to marketing.
For building customer-focused marketing strategies.
Understand how context, location, and environment shape mobile customer decisions.
Align your marketing email with the proven customer journey strategy.
Highlight product value, connect with customer needs, and build long-term trust
Uncover real customer pain through thoughtful, guided questioning.
Better fomulate your brand’s marketing strategy.
Gives sales people a clear roadmap to follow.
Build a clear system to improve content, ensuring long-term marketing impact.
Help you stay focused, filter noise, and improve output, which is deeply aligned with your intent.
Uncover real customer pain through thoughtful, guided questioning.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
One of the biggest problems in sales and marketing is that many customers don’t clearly understand their own problems, or they can’t express what they truly need.
Sales conversations often jump straight into presenting solutions, without fully exploring what’s really bothering the customer. This leads to misunderstandings, missed opportunities, and sales that don’t close.
We may hear vague replies like“ We’re not ready,” or “This isn’t a priority now,” but the real issue is deeper: the customer doesn’t feel enough pain to take action.
The SPIN selling model is designed to help sales professionals uncover these hidden pains.
Developed by Neil Rackham after studying more than 35,000 sales calls, SPIN is a structured questioning technique that guides the conversation through a logical flow.
This model helps customers recognize and verbalize their real needs. This is why SPIN remains one of the most powerful tools in consultative selling.
This step helps gather basic facts about the customer’s current environment. It’s meant to create context and uncover relevant background.
For example, “What system are you currently using?” It’s important not to ask too many of these questions, and instead integrate them into the conversation smoothly.
This type of question reveals clear pain points.
It’s used to bring out dissatisfaction or inefficiencies.
For instance, “Have you experienced data loss before?” These questions help the customer express their frustrations.
Implication questions expand the consequences of the problem.
They are used to help the customer understand the potential impact if the problem continues.
For example, “If the data loss happens again, could it cause major losses?” These questions raise the sense of urgency.
This final step encourages the customer to see the value of a solution. It moves them to imagine how things could be better.
An example might be, “Would it help if you had a cloud product that could automatically back up your data?” When asked correctly, the customer begins to sell the solution to themselves.