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A review of the book, Pitch Anything, by Oren Klaff

Guest post by: Jeff Ogden

Article Overview: As President of the B2B demand generation company, Find New Customers, and a prolific blogger, I’m often invited to do book review. But after doing quite a few, one grows jaded a bit – so we ask tough questions. The two questions I ask every time I do a book review: Does the book bring fresh insights and perspective? Is the book well written and easy to read? Only a book that gets a “Yes” on both questions gets a 5 star review.

Free Download - Marketing Made Simple TV is looking for a few good sponsors By Jeff Ogden
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A review of the book, Pitch Anything, by Oren Klaff

By Jeff Ogden, President of the B2B demand generation consultancy, Find New Customers

A VERY interesting and different book on person to person executive level contact. The book Pitch Anythingis Pitch Anything by Oren Klaff. Frankly, the ideas in this book could apply to any seller – buyer interaction – even a job interview. Ideas like “people want what they can’t have” — applies in job interviews too.

This is how the book opens.

__

“Here’s the “big idea” in 76 words: There is a fundamental disconnect between the way we pitch anything and the way it is received by our audience. As a result, at the crucial moment, when is is most important to be convincing, nine times out of ten times, we are not. Our most important messages have a surprisingly low chance of getting through.”

Brain Science

Mr. Klaff introduces the concept of the “crocodile brain.”Brain In this illustration, the crocodile brain is the center stem. Around it is the mid-brain. and the outer part is the Neocortex.

To illustrate how these brain parts work: The way the brain works is a key concept from the book.

When you are walking to your car and you hear someone shouting, you first act reflexively with a bit of fear. (croc brain)

Then you see the person yelling, try to figure out who he is and place him in a social context (mid-brain)

Finally, you figure it all out and realize nothing is wrong. It’s just a man trying to get his wife’s attention. (Neocortex)

He uses this concept to share an innovative thought about how a meeting works.

The croc brain is used first, and up to 90 percent of your message is discarded before passing it on. Unless your message is presented in such a way that the croc brain sees it as new and exciting, it is ignored.

Finally, you figure it out by using the problem-solving part of your brain, the neocortex

A key idea from the book – you must appeal to the “croc brain” first. (A data laden presentation does NOT appeal to the crock brain.)

Frames

A very important concept in the book is the concept of “frames”. A frame is a persons perspective – encompassing their intelligence, values and ethics. Each person has a frame. But when frames come together, it’s not friendly. It’s a death-match. Frames don’t merge. They don’t blend. They collide and the stronger frame absorbs the weaker. Simply put, to win at frames, you must take control and impose your stronger frame.

This is the crux of the whole book. Frames are what happens below the surface of every business meeting you attend, every sales call you make, and every person to person business communication you have.

The beauty of frames is that they are simple. They require little talking and almost no technique.

To illustrate the power of frames, let’s look at a story in the book.

Huge money center bank. Meeting with senior executive for one hour only. Very expensive to fly everyone in, but worth millions if they won it.

They were escorted into conference room and extended pleasantries with Steve (the executive) and his team. Steve proceeded to spend 15 minutes talking about himself. Finally, after 22 minutes had been burned, they handed out the materials and began the pitch.

After talking for a time, he glanced over at Steve. He had flipped over the pitch book and was tracing his hand.

How would most salespeople handle it? It’s bad, but most would ignore it and soldier on. But using frames, the presenter realizes he is getting a power frame distrupter. “Steve, gimme that.” and pulled the pitch book away. Looking at Steve’s drawing intently “Hold on. Wait a sec. Now I see what’s going on. This drawing is pretty damn good. Forget the big deal for a minute. How about you sell this to me. Name a price.

Steve was stunned. And the deal was back on track.

Other ways to control the frame….

Hopefully, you get it now. Challenge the situation, but do it with a smile on your face. Very disarming for prospects. “When you are defiant and funny at the same time, he is pleasantly challenged by you and instinctively knows he is in the presence of a professional.

Here’s a situation all of us have encountered. You set a big meeting and you’re all ready to start – you’re just waiting for “Mr. Big.” But then Mr. Big’s assistant pops in and says “Mr. Big just called. He cannot make it to the meeting for another hour. He says to start without him.”

No one can tell the story as well as you can. You must speak to Mr. Big.

Here’s what the author usually says:

So you guys are asking me to delay the start? Okay, I can give you 15 minutes to get organized. But if we can’t start by then, let’s call it a day.” You simply need to say “I can wait 15 minutes, but then I have to leave.

A common situation is the Customer who says “Hi. I only have about 10 minutes to meet with you, but come on in.

Salesperson: “I really appreciate your time. Thanks for fitting me into your busy schedule.

That is the common way salespeople work and is business etiquette – but it is the wrong thing to do.

You: “No, I don’t work like that. There’s no sense in rescheduling unless we like each other and trust each other. I need to know – are you good to work with, can you keep appointments, and stick to a schedule?

Target “Okay. You’re right about that. I sure can. Let’s do this now. I have 30 minutes. Come on in.

You’ve just broken the target’s time frame, established that your time is important, and now he is giving you his full attention.

There is a lot more good stuff in the book.

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Home > Marketing > Jeff Ogden > A review of the book Pitch Anything by Oren Klaff >
Article Tags: b2b demand generation, b2b lead generation, btob demand generation, btob lead generation, demand gen, demand generation, demand generation companies, demand generation company, find new customers, lead gen, lead generation, lead generation companies, lead generation company, sales lead generation

About the Author: Jeff Ogden
RSS for Jeff's articles - Visit Jeff's website

President of the B2B lead generation company Find New Customers. Also the host of the B2B marketing show, Mad Marketing TV. We help companies rapidly grow revenue by transforming the ways they attract, engage and win new customers.

With 8 out of 10 companies saying the lack of quality sales leads is their biggest problem, they need help. SiriusDecisions also found that fewer than 1 out of 10 companies that implement lead management software went beyond the basics. They need help.

We help companies implement world class lead generation programs. Companies need quality sales leads, so they need sales lead generation programs including social media marketing. They need to implement lead nurturing programs. We are considered one of the best leads generation companies in business today.

Click here to visit Jeff's website
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Re: Kevin's Case Study #7 - How do you promote your new book? Re: Kevin's Case Study #7 - How do you promote your new book? - [quote="litekepr":1x32rraa]You can't really guarantee a positive review although many people do make the effort to find something positive to mention in the book. Even paid reviews don't guarantee a positive review. Well, you could pay someone that is willing to "sell" a good review, but those don't carry any real weight. I always hate waiting for the first few reviews. I don't send any of my books to the publisher until they are the best I can make them, but you never know what reviewers will say. Sometimes I do limited free book giveaways and in the tours I coordinate, we do a free book for a random commenter during the month. But, I created a promotional e-book for each of my book series and I use those to giveaway. They give plenty of information about the books in each series, the first chapter, introduction, background information and much more. Its a great way to give readers more information, without giving books away. There are some Yahoo groups where 20-30 books are given away every week or more. That doesn't really help any of the authors. Bad reviews are definitely done -- one big problem with reviews is that you're at the mercy of a reviewer who just doesn't like a particular style or is being rushed by a deadline or that is just having a bad day. Shri[/quote:1x32rraa] Hi Shri, So how much does it typically cost to pay someone to take the time to read and write a review on your book? (i.e. for a review without the guarantee of being positive)
Re: Kevin's Case Study #7 - How do you promote your new book? Re: Kevin's Case Study #7 - How do you promote your new book? - [quote="litekepr":1q16azra]I haven't researched it - but I've seen ads for reviews from $20 to $300 or so. Sadly, a good number of newbie authors go this route instead of taking the time to learn how to do it a better way. Shri[/quote:1q16azra] Hi Shri, I agree with you because if you pay for someone to review your book, then you'll lose credibility if consumers find out as they'll assume the published "review" is biased. However, it takes time to read and write book reviews, so I'll side with Barbara in that one should only feel obligated to review a book if he/she requested it from the author. I mean, it's always good to try and help out other entrepreneurs, but sometimes there just isn't enough time to read more books.
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