New to the HG Sales Leadership Blog, we welcome Elliot Epstein, CEO of Salient Communication; a specialist coaching and training consultancy.
Elliot’s company has a strong presence in the IT sector throughout the Asia Pacific Region, coaching senior sales executives in Sales, Negotiation, Leadership and Presentations.
In today’s post, Elliot shares some of his client’s high stakes ICT selling experiences and asks:
“Where has all the creativity gone in presenting and selling ICT solutions?”
Given the economic turmoil surrounding us, there appears to have been such focus on the rational measurement of business such as head count, expenses, cost of sale, salaries etc that this spreadsheet mentality has crept by osmosis into sales teams, stripping them of much needed creativity.
When all you hear is ‘where’s your forecast, your pipeline is narrow and by the way there is no bonus and commissions are halved for next year’, it is understandable that the vibrant, creative gene that lives in every ICT BDM, Sales Manager and Channel Manager lays dormant.
It is now time to wake it up.
In research conducted on ICT decision makers, they actually want creative solutions, not the robotic quotes and PowerPoint prattle.
Here are some creative examples of themes and ideas we’ve used with clients to help them win the attention of clients.
Bedroom Poster Treatment
We all had giant posters in our bedrooms of Shane Warne or Johnny Depp or Brad Pitt, Halle Berry, U2 or AstroBoy/Ben 10 (insert gender/age preference here)
We connected with that image and its visual power over us.
One pitch theme is to plaster the walls of the presentation room with a combination of large AO or A1 size visuals including:
• Testimonials from clients with photos
• Key outcomes of your solution in the client’s language, not yours eg Reduce Help Desk Head Count, Increase Storage Capacity by 30% for Zero Cost, Transfer our expertise to your staff in 3 months.
• Theme Visual eg Ferrari for speed to market, Huge photo of a Judge for governance/compliance
Now, some of you are thinking ‘gimmick’. If it is a single image, then you’re right because it looks like a cheap afterthought. If it’s an entire room –it’s a powerful visual image that definitely resonates with clients when they leave.
We worked with a company pitching retail oriented technology.
We actually borrowed a guy who used to work at Bunnings for the presentation. He came suitably attired with overalls, beard and paint stains to present how easy it was for him to use this technology and how customers responded favourably. Of course a site visit can have a similar result, but it’s still not as impactful as a live person in the room at the pointy end of the sales cycle.
Interactive Presentation
Pick up your PowerPoint presentation, kiss it gently goodbye, say ‘it’s not you, it’s me’ and dump it!
One of the most successful pitches I’ve seen recently for $2.1M in professional services was where the sales team stood up after 3 months of diagnostic research and wrote on the white board ‘ Current State and Future State’.
They spent just 7 minutes facilitating and checking they had the right information and understanding of the client’s current position and desired outcomes and then without a slide in sight started dialogue about how best to get there. This included having the courage to resist pushing a methodology and asking the client to step up to the white board with pen in hand and write down their preferred way of using these professional services. The client shared ideas that hadn’t previously been uncovered and they sold themselves on how best to engage that company.
It was interactive, engaging, real, persuasive and all the vendor had to do was say ‘yes, we can do your preferred way’
It is so easy to just ramp up the laptop, go through the motions and hope it still works, but it’s time now to re-activate the creativity gene and differentiate your bid.
In the words of George Bernard Shaw ‘You see things; and you say, “Why?” But I dream things that never were; and I say, “Why not?”
If you would like to share your stories of how creative pitching has helped you succeed, please comment below.
Elliot Epstein – CEO | Salient Communication
Author Profile
Elliot Epstein
Elliot Epstein is the CEO of Salient Communication. Elliot has trained and coached over 3000 people throughout the Asia Pacific Region and is a sought after keynote speaker on Sales, Negotiation, Leadership and Presentations. Elliot has an impressive list of testimonials from the likes of Computershare, MYOB, HP, CBA and Ericsson and has spoken at over 300 conferences and conducted over 450 programs. -view Elliot’s posts
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Hi Elliot,
I really enjoyed and agreed completely with your article. I’ve been in sales over 25 years and try and break with traditional sales pitches as much as possible.
I’ve recently joined a smaller I.T. firm after working for a multi-global organisation With my previous employer, our entire sales force were moving towards more ‘creative’ presentations based on the different kinds of businesses we were dealing with, i.e. doing the white board demo as you mentioned in your article – we called it a ‘cooking demonstration’ – getting the recipe right for the client’s needs. We also did the stick it on the wall messages and other ideas.
In my current role most of the sales presentations are done remotely via “Go To Meeting” as clients request a demonstration of the software and could be from anywhere in the country or overseas so now find it difficult to get away from doing a quick pre-power point to illustrate company/product credentials.
Any ideas you have here would be really helpful. We actually have an interactive whiteboard which I’m sure I could use if someone would train/show me how to use it? I like the idea of running a video show casing one of our happy clients and including that, or finding some statistics to support the value of the software in a “Interesting Numbers” slide. As we are a small growing company and there is basically me find it hard to get support/budget to change things.
Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks Diane,
I’m really pleased you have implemented so much as a lone voice!!
I like the video idea as long as they talk about business outcomes not features.
One suggestion is what I call ‘The Warm Up Guy” Here’s how it works.
Ask for the emails of all attendees. Send a 5 slide pre-demo PPT or Video in advance outlining your credentials and most importantly tailoring the content to that audience or market. Then end it with the agenda for the forthcoming demo a bit like a movie trailer with enough of a tease which ensures they turn up.
You could also ask them to send through areas of interest from the PPT or video so you can cover it in your demo. It engages them in advance, establishes credibility, gives you interactive access and warms them up before they turn up so you can start with ‘Hi..before we start the demo, what are your thoughts on the information we sent you last week.? ..and you’re away
For the full article ‘The Warm Up Guy’ go http://www.salientcommunication.com.au and click on Articles
Hope that’s of benefit , Diane
Cheers
Elliot