Archive for Presenting

Give Your Customers an Action Plan

// August 18th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Presenting

At the end of most of my sales workshops, I always ask the group to determine their next steps following the learning they’ve just enjoyed. Experience tells me that if I don’t, many of them won’t take the action steps needed to put the learnings into practice. I’ve been known to photograph them with their action plans, and email these to them a few weeks’ later as a gentle memory jog.

Sales Lessons from the Oil Spill

// August 13th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting

What a terrible tragedy the Gulf oil spill is for everyone concerned with effects far and wide.  Fisherman, hoteliers and FTSE100 investors.

WIIFM

// June 13th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting, Prospecting

WIIFM Broadcasting. No it’s not an American Radio Station broadcasting out of Los Angeles.  It’s something all customers ask themselves when you ask something of them. It’s also a motto for the Gen Y’s Generation – these guys are coming of age now, and are potential customers.

WIIFM should be the guiding principle for every customer interaction we do.  Let me tell you more.

Fly in the Pan

// May 8th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Coaching, Inner Game, Personal Sales, Presenting

Having two early teenage boys faces us with a major problem.  No, its not mood swings, empty fridges or Pizza complexions…no, its missing the toilet pan. Boys are just bad aimers, if you see what I’m saying.  Quite frankly, this is a man thing not just teenagers.

We tried everything.  Telling them, encouraging them, shouting at them, rewarding them and nothing improved the situation. Until we bought a packet of fly stickers and stuck one to the pan just like this.

Detail, detail, detail…don’t give me detail

// May 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Coaching, Negotiation, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting, Prospecting

I read at the weekend about a British firm who legally acquired the souls of thousands of their online shoppers.  How bizarre?

How to get your people to want to perform better

// March 14th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting, customer care

Keep your Customer Posted

// March 6th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Presenting

Customer Hot Buttons

// January 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting

Last week we had colossal dollops of snow hit our tiny island, something we’re not used to. Or can cope with.  People say it’s the coldest winter since 1963 here in the UK.  Let me explain how a freezing winter can help you really clarify your customer’s needs whilst selling your product or idea.

As a result, everything ground to a halt – schools closed, the road system jammed, businesses sent workers home and gas supplies had to be imported from Norway to cope with the central heating demand.

But we all had a whale of a time. Euan was outside as soon as it was daylight sledging and playing snowballs with his friends, Lewis thought it would be extra time on Xbox Live with his Xbox Crew, Bethan wanted to phone her girlfriends to say how wonderful it was, Claire was happy for the day off surrounded by her family and me…

…I was glad to be at home that day and praying that the Broadband and electricity stayed on and I could contact my clients.

You see, snow means diverse things to different people and when we’re selling things, products, services or ideas, we need to appreciate that our customers see things differently and like varying aspects of whatever we’re selling.  Just because we think our widget is great for this or that doesn’t mean that our customer thinks the same.

Customers have “hot buttons” which they attach to things they buy. The five global hot buttons are:

When they apply these hot buttons to our product/idea/service it’s called their buying criteria and it helps us to see what they want from our product.

For example, I’m really into convenience, I guess I’m quiet lazy, so I need products to help me save time and effort and make things easy for me.  So when I bought my VW Golf a couple of years ago knowing that the service interval was 25,000 miles really ticked my box.

A customer might be into power, so you show how your car can make them look good in their neighbourhood, stroke their ego a little.

Your client is into comfort so knowing that your investment product has built in professional discretionary management, might float their boat.

Now my wife gets me to do DIY around the house by threatening to call a man who can do do the job.  She knows that my pride will certainly make me do the job – my power hot button.

So next time you’re with your customer ask them about the pain you’re solving and what it means to them personally, to find out their buying criteria. “What are you looking for in…” is a great question to ask.

And is it the coldest winter since 1963?  I don’t know yet it’s still going on, but what I do know if it wasn’t for the cold winter of 1963, I wouldn’t be here now. Apparently it was so cold without central heating; people had to go to bed. Now there’s some buying criteria for you.

10 Trends for Salespeople and Sales Managers for 2010

// December 30th, 2009 // No Comments » // B2B, Coaching, Negotiation, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting, Prospecting, customer care

Here are ten trends that will affect sales people and their sales managers in 2010, brought to you with my complements and in time for you to be one step ahead of your peers. Do share them please.

Websites on iPhones

Hands up how many readers have an iPhone or one of the hundreds of clones available out there?  2010 will see virtually every business person having access to a device with fast internet access. Their first port of call will be your website, blog, social page. One question?  How does your site appear on these small screens, how navigable is it?  Access your site now to see.

Sales Resilience

More than ever before sales people must be able to handle their “Inner Game” a term lifted from the sports world to cope with the inner talk and self dialogue. There’s been so many changes to the traditional sales model over the last few years, sales people can be forgiven for being a tad stressed with it all.  Coupled with the economic downturn, sales people must be better equipped to have sales resilience more than ever before.

Sales Meeting Preparation

The traditional sales meeting meant to spend time with your prospective customer finding their problems, needs and challenges. In 2010 this is still to be pushed but customers expect salespeople to already know these even before the meeting.  Buyers will not give salespeople the time to conduct “fact find” missions anymore. This has to be achieved via other means, primarily the internet.  Be careful salespeople, as the customer will know more about you and your company, than ever before.  Aim to match this at least with the amount of preparation you’ve done on them first.

Everyone must “sell” culture

Gone are the days when just people with sales in their title did the selling – that happened in the 80′s, 90′s and 00′s. For 2010 everyone must have responsibility to do “selling”. Everyone from the car park attendant to the CEO must sell the brand, the culture, the product and service, the innovation, the ideas. Selling mustn’t ever be regarded as a dirty word ever again.

Problem solving

Selling is no longer about giving information to customers. This hasn’t been the case for a number for years now but 2010 will be a critical year to appreciate this.  Salespeople must provide value and this value is their expertise in solving the customer’s pains or problems.  We are problem solvers and 2010 will prove this.

Sales Person Self Development

The future of training and development for salespeople has to be more ownership; sales people must own their training is short sharp bursts.  No more 8 hour courses instead get regular development. Use the internet – podcasts, videos on YouTube, Webinars, Blogs to learn and unlearn and lean again. Sales Managers should assist this.

Sales Managers Metamorphosing

The role of the sales manager is no longer providing information or motivating the troops but to become more of a trainer and coach. Of course this has been evident during the noughties but 2010 will require all sales managers to shed their traditional skin and evolve into trainers and coaches. Training Departments need to help sales managers achieve this and provide all the tools they need to do this training/coach role.  Sales meetings must be training and development events and the sales managers must follow this up with their coaching.

Telepresence

Telepresence has been described by Corbin Ball as a video conference on steroids and he is spot on with the description.  It can, and will, replace meetings in 2010 but a new innovation will make it available to us all. Renting.  Individually telespresence set ups cost thousands but hotels such as the Marriot chain are creating Telepresence rooms to rent. Conference and training centres seeing the fall in income from traditional meetings are investing heavily in this area to survive the digital change to their income stream.  Remember everything that can be digitised, will be digitised and meetings are just one example.  The internet touches everything.

View Social Networking as a Customer

We all know about the explosive growth of Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter. 2010 will see customers increasingly turning to these for advice and recommendations before they buy from you.  Studies show that customers believe website feedback on you and your product as long as it is freely given. Just take a look at how eBay works and how petrified sellers are at giving bad customer service. Sales people in 2010 must learn how to interact with these social networking sites and sell to them, not just individual customers. No, this is not a job for marketing, but a sales person skill. Free knowledge exchange is the key.

If you’re in the Book Business Beware

If you publish or sell books, pamphlets, brochures, leaflets, newspapers – that’s training companies, publishing houses, customer service departments, building societies, insurance companies…in fact anyone who publishes things on paper.  Get ready for the eBook reader.  Prices will plummet in 2010, Apple will be launching their iSlate and boy this will kill paper publishing. PDF everything and make it readily available online now.

Happy New Year, use these trends to keep you at the cutting edge of your profession.  Hope to see you personally in 2010, which is shaping up to be a fabulous year for us all.

Have you Iggy Popped what you really sell

// November 8th, 2009 // No Comments » // B2B, Personal Sales, Phone, Presenting, Prospecting

Outside Gloucester Rail Station I just had to photograph this billboard. It’s such a great ad. I bet you’ve seen it before.

You know its selling motor insurance, or I should say Iggy Pop is selling insurance in his unique fashion.

You also know, that Iggy says that he’s not selling insurance…he’s selling time, hence the stopwatch on his forehead. And that’s Swiftcover’s main USP. You free up time to spend in other areas of your life.

I remember buying my first car insurance, when I was 19, from a insurance broker in town. It must have taken me a whole day if you factor in travel, queuing, the application process, sweating whilst you await approval, the smelling salt recovery after the premium was quoted.

But now it takes just 60 seconds.

So what about you? What product, service or idea do you sell? And what does it really mean to people if they buy it. Have you Iggy Popped the ultimate benefit of your product or idea?

Today I’m meeting a new client to talk about telesales training for her teams. If I went storming in to talk about my workshops, exercises, training equipment….

…then I’m missing the point.

No, I’ll talk about the outcomes of the training, in other words the increased sales numbers, mightier motivation from the sales force, higher staff retention figures and increased revenue…as a result of the training.

And do you know what’s really weird?

Sales of Swift Cover, which is owned by AXA, increased by a third, so great advertising. That’s not the peculiar thing though.

The Advertising Standards Authority said the motor insurance advert was misleading as the rock star would not be eligible for a policy in real life. So AXA had to change it. That’s bizarre.

Remember to Iggy Pop what you really sell.