In his best-seller, The SpinSelling Fieldbook, Neil Rackham describes the sequence used by
high-performing, large-project salespeople.
Extending Rackham’s research to
include leaders, here is an analysis of
the questioning sequence used by per-
suasive leaders.
288 SECTION 9 TOOLS FORLEADING ANDINFLUENCINGOTHERS
Situation
Questions
Problem
Questions
Implied
Needs
Implication
Questions
Need-payoff
Questions
Explicit
Needs
Benefits
Reprinted with permission from McGraw-Hill. Neil Rackham, The Spin Selling
Fieldbook: Practical Tools, Methods, Exercises, and Resources. McGraw-Hill, 1996, p. 49.
- Situation Questions
“How many people are affected?”
“What process do you currently use?”
- Problem questions
“How satisfied are you with the current
situation?”
“What problems are you having?”
- Implication questions
“How would that increase your costs?”
“How does that impact your productivity?”
“What effect does this problem have on
your success?”
- Safe and easy questions to get back-
ground information about the
client’s situation. - Often begin with “What?”,
“Who?”, “When?”, and “How
much?” - Helpful to start a conversation, but
it’s better to do your homework. - Questions about the problems,
difficulties, dissatisfactions of a client
that you can solve with your
solutions. - More effective leaders ask more
problem questions than situation
questions, and they ask them sooner. - The best problem questions get at
concrete needs. - These are “What will happen if you
don’t deal with this problem?”questions. - The most powerful of all questions,
these ask about the implications of
not solving the problems identified. - These questions are about the
effects or consequences of the
client’s problems. - Put bluntly, these questions induce
pain by having the others
themselves point out the negative
consequences of not solving the
problem, thus creating a strong
need to solve the problem.
❑ Successful persuaders do ask these
questions, but use them economically.
❑ These questions are not highly
correlated with persuasiveness.
❑ The more senior the manager, the
less he or she likes answering these
questions.
❑ Problem questions are effective to
the degree your products or services
provide a solution to a client’s
problem.
❑ It is helpful to think less of
solutions than the business
problems that are solved by your
solutions.
❑ For new leaders, these questions
can help you become more
effective quickly.
❑ The most persuasive leaders
introduce solutions late in the
discussion, after questions about
the situation and problems.
Type of question What they are Comments/tips