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Your Boring Presentation -
Getting it Sold
I was watching television on Friday evening and
found myself crying at the end of The Ghost Whisperer.
Are you kidding me? Me? But then I thought about it and
realized that this isn't exactly unheard of. When we train
management teams on how to effectively recruit and select winning
salespeople we use a clip from Field of Dreams and I
get choked up every time. And I've seen that
clip dozens of times! I suppose that I don't usually watch the shows
that would choke me up as opposed to it not being possible for me to
get choked up.
So I'm sitting there crying like a baby and
apparently, even then, my mind won't let me be because it makes
another connection to sales excellence. Perhaps, in the way that
Google has learned to crawl my Blog
multiple times per day in search of my latest post, my mind has
learned to find the sales connection in nearly everything I
experience.
At that moment it occurred to me that when we cry
from simply watching someone else pretend, they have really
succeeded at selling us on:
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the drama - they have us hooked.
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the reality - it seems real even though it
isn't.
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the emotion - if they get tears you have
become emotional.
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the connection - the only way they get the
emotion from you is if you somehow connect their event to a past
or potential future event in your life.
So if a combination of efforts from writers,
directors and actors in a theatrical production can be sold to so
many, with such effectiveness, why can't we do the same thing?
I believe we can be every bit as effective as the
entertainers. If you begin to associate your presentation with a
screenplay rather than as a presentation of features and benefits
you would recognize that your prospects think that:
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Your presentations are boring.
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Your presentations are too long.
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You talk about stuff that they don't care
about.
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They aren't getting hooked.
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There isn't any drama to it.
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You are boring.
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You don't get them emotionally involved.
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You don't get them to make the connections.
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There is less reality to your presentation
than the theatrical productions you react to.
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You've presented the information so many times
to so many people that even you are bored with it!
For example, pretend that today's Baseline Selling
Tip is the script for a presentation. Go back to the
beginning, reread this article and identify where:
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the actual presentation begins
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I get you hooked
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I cause you to make connections
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the drama takes place
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where you would get emotional - you don't have
to cry; you simply reacted by agreeing, disagreeing, becoming
upset, angry or excited.
If you have a copy of Baseline Selling, review the
chapter on Running Home, especially the section on compelling
presentations. If you don't have a copy of the book, ask
somebody to buy you one for the holiday....or get one for yourself!
This week, make some changes to the way you
present and
let me know what is different in the way your prospects react.
For those of you who follow the Baseline Selling
process, this is not permission to present any earlier than between
3rd base and home, it's simply an opportunity for you to rework how
you present between 3rd base and home.
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