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Have your customers’ IT requirements changed just because their IT
budgets have been cut? Does this long recession we are in mean that
those ancient PCs at your customer site are suddenly good for another
year or two?

Of course not. Your customers still need the
technology. What they don’ t have right now are the funds to pay for
it. The real question is this: Is it possible to help your customers
buy the technology they need in a way that is friendly to their new IT
budget constraints?

And the answer is: It just may be.  Last
year Cisco introduced a new way to sell its unified communications
solutions through its reseller partners. Cisco broke down the price
into a hardware-as-a-service-type structure. With that restructured
pricing, Cisco and its resellers could talk to customers about
how  the unified communications solution would cost end users "pennies per user per day."

"If we break the price into monthly chunks, that’s a much easier
conversation than ‘Could you write me a check for $30,000?’" Brad
Kowerchuk, president of Bralin Technology Solutions, a Cisco partner in
Saskatchewan, Canada, told Channel Insider last year.

"I think hardware as a service is where we ultimately can go with
this," he said. "Photocopier guys have known this for decades. You pay
them a maintenance fee, cut them a small check every month. With
hardware as a service we are really just going in those footsteps."

To offer this kind of low-cost, hardware-as-a-service-type pricing,
Cisco and its channel partners used a tool that may seem
counterintuitive in today’s market: end-user financing. It’s a tool
that can be applied to many deals and offered as an option to customers
to help break down that giant price into smaller, monthly, digestible
chunks. Such a strategy can ease the price objection, something that
could be crucial to closing the deal in today’s market.

Cisco and its resellers were able to use end-user credit to help make
those sales because they made it easy for the customers. They didn’t
just sell the technology. They also sold how easy it was to buy it.
They didn’t just talk about the benefits of unified communications
technology and then dump a load of loan documents on the end customer’s
desk. They talked about "pennies per user per day." That’s a compelling
message.

And while headlines all around us have pointed to the drying up of
credit over the last six months, including some in the technology
space, other credit offers have become available to the reseller
channel during the same time. Computer hardware companies that are
nervous about sales in 2009 are offering some great credit deals. For
example, Dell is offering 0 percent financing on EqualLogic storage
products, HP is offering 0 percent financing on all its hardware
products, and IBM is offering solid deals on financing for its
hardware, too. Dell also has just announced some 0 percent financing
deals on other Dell technology, including laptops. Technology
distributors such as Ingram Micro, Synnex and Tech Data also often can
help resellers put together offers to take to end-user customers to
help those customers use credit to finance their deals.

Take advantage of these offers and put together a compelling message of
your own for end-user companies. Your customers are losing productivity
every time their employees’ PCs crash. As the trusted adviser, it’s
your job to help them find a way around that. Sure, you can fix it.
Again. But why not offer another option, too? Why not offer customers
the technology they need today in an offer that they can pay for over
time?

Jessica Davis is senior editor at Channel Insider.