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Sales Tips for Trade Shows and Major Accounts
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| Guest post by: Dave Kurlan |
Article Overview: The exhibitor and visitor attendance is more good news relative to confidence, spending and outlook in the business sector. The bad news is that the exhibitors were clueless as to how to get people to stop at their booths and engage.
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Sales Tips for Trade Shows and Major Accounts
Two topics that I don't seem to write
about much came up in last week's episode of Meet
the Sales Experts. My guest was Sales Development Expert Chris Mott from Kurlan
& Associates and we had a very good conversation about Trade Show
Selling. We discussed the difference between an industry show, where
buyers come specifically to meet with vendors and acquire new lines,
versus general business shows, where most visitors attend for the event
itself. At recent general business shows where Chris exhibited, he
noticed just how few exhibitors had activity at their booths despite the
fact that these shows were significantly busier and better attended
than similar shows just a year ago. The exhibitor and visitor
attendance is more good news relative to confidence, spending and
outlook in the business sector. The bad news is that the exhibitors
were clueless as to how to get people to stop at their booths and
engage.
Chris provided some timely tips for getting
people to stop and chat. He suggested that instead of exhibitors
sitting or standing behind their booths they should stand out in front
of their booths, in the traffic, saying hello to people as they walk by,
calling their names (from the name tag) and asking, "why didn't you
stop to say hello?" I love that!
The bottom line on Trade Show
selling is this; When salespeople are successful in getting visitors
stop, it's easy to get them engaged by asking what they do and instead
of going into a sales pitch they should continue to ask questions to
learn whether they have an issue your company can help with. If the
visitor has an issue, your salespeople should simply get permission to
call after the show.
Chris and I also discussed major account
selling. Obviously, the number of contacts, length of the sales cycle,
people who influence the decision, and the relationships are
substantially different and more significant than selling to small and
mid market accounts. One of Chris' points that I liked so much is the
need to prove yourself first. This ties nicely into the question I posed
in last week's article, Best
Sales Strategy for Your Company. It supports the strategy of
getting in with something small enough to get the opportunity to prove
yourself first. He also talked about the importance of having patience.
I have always believed and taught that there is a
fine line between too much and too little patience. In a major account
specifically, your salespeople must be impatient enough to cut through
the superficial points and get to the compelling reasons why the
individuals in front of them would buy, yet patient enough for the
opportunity to develop. They must be impatient enough to keep the
opportunity moving forward, yet patient enough to allow people to do
what has to be done in a big company to achieve buy-in and approval.
They must be patient enough to wait for the opportunity to become closable, yet impatient enough to
get the opportunity closed when it becomes closable.
My guest
on this week's episode (Live Wednesdays at 12 Noon ET) is Sales
Development Expert Rick Roberge. Do you have any questions you would
like answered on the show? You can email them to me
and we'll try to (we usually do) get to them.
Article Tags: amp, bad news, booths, bottom line, business sector, confidence, development expert, exhibitor, exhibitors, general business, good conversation, html target, images, name tag, picnic table, salespeople, timely tips, traffic, visitor attendance
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About the Author: Dave Kurlan RSS for Dave's articles - Visit Dave's website Dave Kurlan is a best-selling author, top-rated speaker and thought leader on sales development. He is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development. Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit. He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine. He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball. He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling (Dan Seidman), Stepping Stones (Deepak Chopra and Brian Tracey) and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2 (David Riklan). Click here to visit Dave's website Salesperson Selection Visual Pipeline Predict Sales Turnover |
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