Archive for August, 2009
The Big Thinking You Need to Move Sales From Now to “Wow”
Big or small, we should all be actively working to prevent our products and services from sliding in importance for our consumers and being recategorized as a low priority as our customers retrench and re-shuffle priorities in this new economic climate.
What are you doing to raise your profile with your prospects and customers, compelling them to spend their hard earned dollars with you instead of sitting on the sidelines waiting for better days?
In this downturn, some huge companies are pushing new innovations to enhance the buying experience. A few others are trying some far reaching ideas to connect with customers in a meaningful and personal way to gently nudge them into continuing to purchase their products.
Previously, I have written about what Kellogg’s is doing to make a bowl of breakfast cereal more important by tying breakfast cereal to our children’s education. I have also written about Domino’s Pizzas use of technology to enhance the pizza delivery experience.
Today I noticed Microsoft paired itself with the infamous Jack Welch and Suzy Welch as co-hosts of a new online program (everybodysbusiness.msn.com) delving headlong into the problems faced by brand name (Hertz & Domino’s Pizza so far) businesses. Jack and Suzy guide a diverse executive group in identifying some real challenges the company faces and then leverage the groups collective experience to find some legitimate solutions in a very candid way that makes you the viewer feel like you are sitting in the boardroom with them, watching and listening to an honest conversation you would otherwise never get to hear.
With the help of Jack and Suzy, Microsoft delivers valuable entertaining content that stands on its own, but still manages to drive the company message and squeeze in a stealth mini case study. I for one am happy to report I did not feel like I had just swallowed a twenty minute Microsoft infomercial.
After watching this was I compelled to run out and setup a server farm driven by Microsoft products? No, but I now understand in a subtle way that a lot of the technology Domino’s has in place across almost all of their stores, including their powerful online pizza delivery system is built on Microsoft technology, so Microsoft can probably handle the needs of my business. I am not certain, though, how Microsoft fits into the Hertz solution by watching the show.
I just consumed a Microsoft case study reframed as (and rightly so) as a content rich business dialog with Jack Welch, and I enjoyed every minute of it.
Enough about Kellogg’s, Domino’s, and Microsoft, how can we make your product a more compelling purchase? What can we tie your offering to that enhances you brand and ultimately sales? How can we take a product that has dropped in priority with your buyers and get them snapping up your goods again?
I know several of you out there, so I am going to offer up a few ideas that will hopefully get you and everyone else reading this to expand your thinking.
Mortgage Industry. – Could you put together real/virtual seminars providing honest advice and resources for people struggling to pay their mortgage and help them save their homes?
If you could help me keep my home, or cross the great divide from renting to home ownership, helping me avoid the pitfalls along the way, you would earn my loyalty in a way the cheapest mortgage rate on Bankrate.com never could.
Copier/Office Machine Industry. – Every business of any size has some form of copier they bought/leased, right? Could you setup business forums introducing clients that could benefit by doing business with each other? Could you setup a lead exchange program identifying a need at one client business and passing that information along to another client business to potentially fill that need?
Bringing my business real leads and I just might be more likely to accept a slightly higher price for my supplies. Real leads would certainly inspire my loyalty more than a cold-call walk-in four-legged (the new copier sales guy and his Sales Manager, typically) sales call ever could.
Can you think bigger?
Annual charity drives to collect reams of paper for a local school district or charity organization in your region? Could you put together a toner cartridge recycling program for your city? Have a big service fleet of vehicles? How about delivering or augmenting Meals on Wheels efforts?
What about every other business?
How can you raise your importance to your community and the need for your product? What programs or partnerships could you put in place to positively change the perception of your business and its support of your community?
Think out loud about your business and how you can raise customer loyalty and the priority of the problems your product solves in your customer’s eyes.
Think until you hear a “Wow” in your head, then tell me about what you came up with and let me know if I can help.
Q&A: Sales Process vs. Individual Sales Style – How Do You Strike a Balance?
Q&A’s are excerpts of questions I have answered as part of Sales Laundry or other forums that I am apart of. If there is a relevant sales message for the masses I post it here to share, gather feedback and discuss.
Q: At what point does process become so overbearing that the sales person comes across as unnatural, insincere or insensitive? Conversely, at what point does style independence create disorder, chaos and inconsistency?
A: A “Sales Process” should simply be a sales tool designed to get the greatest number of potential prospects successfully converted from “leads” to “landed” in the most efficient manner possible.
A “Sales Process” becomes overbearing at the precise point that it stops being a roadmap defining the most likely path for sales success and becomes an overriding dogma that must be adhered to regardless of customer, personality, situation or circumstance.
When adherence to the process becomes so important/rigid that the sales process itself becomes an impediment to the sales of the very product the process was built to serve, it is time for a change.
Conversely, a “Sales Process” becomes ineffective at the precise point that it stops being a roadmap defining the best path to sales success and becomes an exercise in “style independence” with so loosely a defined process that the process again becomes an impediment to product sales.
The rigidity of the sales process needs to be tuned to the product being sold. Very knowledgeable customers making repeat purchases of commodity items could benefit by a very clear and rigid (to the point of being automatic, even) process. The floor of the NYSE being one example.
Products being sold to customers with varying depths of knowledge or with wide ranging customer specific variations and infrequent purchase patterns require a more broadly defined “guiding hand” type of sales process, where listening, asking situation specific questions and conversation become more important than blindly following a rote process.
A well defined sales process should be malleable enough to bend to the needs of the product being sold and potentially the personalities selling it, as the product moves through its life cycle, anything else adds unnecessary friction.
President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Take on Effective Sales Presentations
Through an odd set of circumstances I found myself touring the Lyndon B Johnson ranch outside of Johnson City, TX a while back trying to give my kids some perspective on history.
While looking at the hundreds of photos and exhibits across the three or four different sites I ran across a picture that gave me some perspective I was not expecting.
Under an otherwise typical picture in the exhibit of President Johnson shaking hands with an old gentleman with a bushy white beard was a crisp little quote that I almost missed.
“A five minute speech with fifteen minutes spent afterward is much more effective than a fifteen minute speech… that leaves only five minutes for handshaking.”
- Lyndon B. Johnson
As I thought about that statement my mind immediately jumped to the hours I have spent watching boring PowerPoint presentations wishing a hunk of ceiling would fall on my head so I would have a legitimate excuse to escape.
Then it hit me, (and not a piece of the ceiling, mind you) that spending hours writing and developing a presentation with little to no time spent developing a strategy to work the room post-presentation to communicate the important points face to face was just plain silly.
President Johnson figured out a long time ago that influencing the key individuals in the room that could be catalysts for the change he was advocating was a far more effective strategy than solely focusing on a big fat presentation.
Presentations are best used to lay out the facts as concisely as possible and not used as bully pulpits to agonizingly persuade an audience. Face to face conversation, or “handshaking” as President Johnson put it, is where the deals really get done.
Long term success in sales is more determined by the network of prospects, customers, partners and friends you build than all of the killer 70 slide PowerPoint presentations you have spent all night cranking out.
Don’t get me wrong, a good speech or presentation can be essential to your eventual success but it does not have to last a lifetime in delivery.
The power in the room does not come from your presentation or your powers of persuasion but from the power of the prospects in the room and the strength of their desire to want to engage with you.
Presentations and speeches alike that are sharp, crisp, and to the point are, from my experience, much more effective than a gut-wrenching three-act opus that forces everyone to take a “bio-break” upon completion.
Use your speech to make them curious, use your handshake to make them customers, and that is a History lesson worth repeating.
Thank you, Mr. President.
Image courtesy of americandigest.org

