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SALES
-- May 2001
by Jeffrey GitomerIt's
About You
Selling the group from the front of the room
Sell the whole audience.
Give a talk and everyone buys. Theres a challenge.
Group sales dynamics are delicate. Win the right one in
the audience, and you can sway the whole group. Lose the
wrong one you may never recover. Its about
credibility. Yours.
People are not buying the
product or service theyre buying you. If
they buy you, your product or service has a shot. If they
dont buy you, your product or service has no shot.
They buy your message only if they buy you. You know the
old story dont shoot the messenger. Well it
started from people giving lousy performances.
Here are some elements
that will help make your front-of-the-room talk hit
people in the heart (of the checkbook):
- You can do it if you
believe you can. Your presentation will only be
as good as you believe it will be (and that you
have prepared it to be).
- Create a mood of
upbeat excitement. Music, slides, video.
Something to put the crowd in the right frame of
mind.
- Ask engaging
questions. Questions about satisfaction, finance,
technology, use of product, satisfaction with
service, quality, or future.
- Make them laugh, but
dont tell a dumb joke. Whats a dumb
joke? Youll know one second after you tell
it.
- Make a high-powered,
concise, compelling presentation (not more than
15 minutes) that creates a desire for
involvement. Rehearsed and presented with
professional speaking skills.
- There are eight
elements of presentation that make it hit or miss
(make the audience cheer or hiss). Tone, vocal
variety, eye contact, enunciation, posture,
gestures, and dress combine to give the clarity
of message a chance to shine through.
- If you use
multi-media (slides, computer graphics, or
video), make it brief and dynamic. There is a
science to using any image projector when
to turn it on and off are critical to the
attention of the audience, and the penetration of
the message. The words of caution are: Master it
before attempting it.
- Create a sense of
urgency. A compelling reason to act now. The
ability to create a fear of loss is crucial to
your overall success.
- Get a roadie to push
the buttons, dim the lights, and pass out the
handouts. Arrange it before the talk starts.
- Attention spans are
short and people are impatient. Get to the point.
Make good points. Make concise points. And make
an exit.
- Solicit spoken
testimonials of those who have already acted. The
more testimonials, the more people will buy.
- Anticipate all
questions, and answer them in your presentation.
To build credibility, you must answer (dispel)
doubts. A word about Any questions?
Take them (if you must) before the end of your
talk, then give your final remarks.
- Even if you stink,
your story can save you. If you prepare one
thing, prepare a great story and deliver
it with passion.
- End with a laugh, a
tear or a powerful statement. Or give someone
else the applause with a powerful introduction
segue to the next speaker after your last
statement.
- Confidence breeds
confidence yours breeds theirs.
Words of caution: Some
people may just be doing it (selling the group) for the
money. They will be smelled out in a minute they
shall be known as Phoenicians
weve shortened it over the years to phonies. Do it
because you believe it passionately.
Words of advice: Talk too
long and theyll leave. Leave them wanting more, and
theyll buy.
Jeffrey Gitomer is the
author of The Sales Bible, and Customer
Satisfaction is Worthless, Customer Loyalty is Priceless.
He can be reached at 704/333-1112 or e-mail to salesman@gitomer.com.
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