We have all heard the
cliché ‘People buy from people’, in other words, being able to personally
connect with your client really matters. Yet many organisations send sales
people into the market with this personal connection way down their list of
priorities.
An example of this would
include meeting time wasted on overly complex power point presentations that
quite frankly bore people (even if it is all true). There is too much thought
put into the pitch not not enough into the people you will be interacting with.
Other examples are tactics employed by ‘inside sales’ teams where social media
or other on-line tools are used to inform and connect with clients or
prospects. These include tweets, special offer emails, circulating white
papers, hosting webinars. While they may convey a very credible sales pitch or
business case, these channels lack real personal context.
I recently read a paper in the Journal of
Applied Psychology which
looked at interview candidates seeking employment. When candidates completed an
interview they answered a series of questions on how they behaved, if they made
eye contact, if they had demonstrated a keen interest in the company or job.
The interviewers also answered a number of questions on what they thought of
the candidate, their skills, if they would be hired.
For those that did get
hired, the interviewers did not necessarily go for the best skilled or
prepared. They went for ‘pleasant people’. They hired people they liked. People
they connected with. Answers to complex technical questions or specific skills
mattered less than how the candidates came across.
This is in line with the
‘People buy from people’ school of thought and no great surprise. What struck
me however is that the paper was 10 years old (2004) and rather than that
making the findings less relevant, the opposite is perhaps the case.
It is not unusual to do
sales meeting on-line, via Skype or via a webinar. When we are not physically
meeting there is less ad hoc personal interaction than there would be in a
‘real’ meeting, the handshake, the small talk when taking seats, chatting when
waiting for someone else to join.
So if you do meet or sell
on-line, still try to fit in some of the small talk rather than sticking to the
webinar script. Perhaps make it your business to phone someone up with the
meeting confirmation or check if they got the log in details. While technically
this may be unnecessary, it could be your opportunity to kick off some small
talk, be nice and come across as a pleasant person. Technology aside people
still buy from people. Don’t let the on-line line omni-channel world get in the
way of that, it’s not an either or scenario. Make that connection.
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