The Presentation Trap |
|
|
| Communications - Presentation skills | |||
| Written by Jeff Thull | |||
|
The irony is that most of this effort is lost on customers. Presentations that are too early in complex decisions are largely a waste of time. Conventional salespeople hate to hear this because the presentation is usually the key weapon in their sales arsenal. It is their security blanket, their comfort zone, and they loath giving it up. They seem to be on a mission to relentlessly educate the customer because, after all, they will not buy what they don’t understand. Exactly right, customers will not buy what they don’t understand. A presentation can take customers to a higher level of understanding, but it is one of the least effective methods for accomplishing that goal because… 1. A presentation—even one that includes advanced multimedia elements—is, in its essence, a lecture. The salesperson is the talking teacher and the customer is the listening student. The big problem with teaching by telling is that little information is remembered. People retain only about 30 percent of what they hear. The use of visual aids (e.g., a PowerPoint slide show) boosts retention rates to 40 percent, but the generally accepted rule of thumb among learning experts is that more than half of even the most sophisticated presentation can be lost. 2. A typical sales presentation rarely devotes more than 10 to 20 percent of its focus on the customer and their current situation. Generally, 80 to 90 percent of a typical sales presentation is devoted to describing the seller, its solutions, and the rosy future if you buy. Therefore, while a presentation may raise the customer’s level of understanding, that gain is usually centered on the solution being offered. All too often, salespeople are dealing with customers who are not sure of the exact nature of their problems, how your products and services impact other areas of their business, who would be concerned about it and what is the cost in absence of it. Nevertheless, those salespeople are focusing on the solution and not the implications in the customer’s business. As a result, while customers may be greatly impressed with the offering being presented, they still lack a compelling understanding of how it applies to their situation and they do not know why they should buy it. Look at this from the customer’s perspective. Based on what we said about the customer’s area of comprehension, it is highly likely that two-thirds or more of the information that customers hear falls outside their area of comprehension. Further, what they do hear sounds very much the same. What does the customer understand? Price. As you may already expect, everyone is now starting their downward spiral to commoditization…the natural outcome of presenting too much, too soon and too often. To help you avoid falling victim to the Presentation Trap, ask yourself these five critical questions: 1. What percentage of your sales presentation/proposal is devoted to describing your company and your solution? 2. What percentage of your sales presentation/proposal is devoted to describing your customer’s business, their problems and objectives? 3. How well do your customers understand their own problems? 4. How much of your presentation is focused on persuading and convincing? 5. How well can your customers connect your solutions to their business situation? Second, customers may also respond by not responding. They listen politely as you “educate” them, thank you for your time, and promise to get back in touch when they are ready to make a decision. Finally, some customers may actively respond. They may ask you to justify the information you have presented or challenge the viability of your solution. This is the response that every conventional salesperson is expecting. The customer objects and the sales professional goes to work overcoming those objections. When this happens it is apparent that there has been a disconnect along the way and back-pedaling is often the only way out. Ultimately, sales presentations exacerbate communications between buyers and sellers, leading to frustration, misunderstandings, conflict, and adversarial relationships—all of which impede the salesperson’s ability to create cooperative and trust-based relationships with customers. The advice I share with sales professionals wishing to avoid the Presentation Trap is “Don’t present.” Instead, use a diagnostic approach—simply stated, conduct a thorough diagnosis to uncover problems and expand the customer’s awareness of their situation. Once the problem is clearly understood and the customer perceives all the ramifications of that problem, the salesperson is justified in making recommendations, and a presentation will not be necessary. When you guide your customers through this process, you will be establishing a high level of credibility and find yourself jointly developing optimal solutions, which will ultimately benefit both you and your customers.
| |||
View all articles by this author
Set as favorite
Bookmark
Email This
Hits: 4443 Comments (0)
|
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Sales Articles
| Communications |
| Compensation |
| Industry Specific |
| Lifestyle |
Sales Articles
| Marketing |
| Networking |
| Productivity |
| Relationships |
Sales Articles
| Sales Advice |
| Sales Leadership |
| Sales Mindset |
| Sales 2.0 |



Why Making Presentations Can Cost You the Sale


