3 Reasons Most Presentations Fail
Make your sales presentations more
compelling and interesting.
When sales presentations and pitches
fail, it's almost always because the presenter made one of these three basic
(and fortunately correctable) mistakes, according to Dean Schantz, CEO of DNA Field Branding:
1.
Presenting Too Much Information
Presenting features and functions is
like describing plastics used to make a telephone, rather than what that phone
can mean to your life. What your solution IS and DOES has much less emotional
impact than what it MEANS to them. Do this instead:
- Limit your presentation to three key relevant "value propositions" that are unique to your solution and important to this buyer.
- Highlight the unique value your solution and company alone can bring them.
- Make your unique value come alive in their world using tangible, concrete, simple and visual examples.
2.
Presenting From the Wrong Point of View
If your presentation is all about
you, like how long you've been in business, your huge stable of existing
customers, and your office locations around the world, the customer's likely
reaction is a big "what does any of this have to do with ME?" Do this
instead:
- Present from the customer's point of view, so they can imagine how your solution will benefit their business, financial, and personal life.
- Build your agenda around the customer's needs, pains, and desires, and how your solution will work to change their world.
- Ask for the customer's feedback whenever you notice that you've peaked their interest.
3.
Not Explaining Why You're Different
It is hard enough for prospects to
make intelligent choices, so don't make it harder. If you cannot articulate and
prove the difference between you and your competitor--how can you possibly
expect your prospects to do so?
- Have a simple (i.e. one sentence) message that encapsulates what you do better than anyone else.
- Know the three to five problems or challenges you KNOW your solution can uniquely solve.
- Use customer stories that highlight the before and after contrast as proof that your solution works.
Geoffrey James http://www.inc.com/geoffrey-james/3-reasons-most-presentations-fail.html?cid=em01016week20b
No comments:
Post a Comment