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Dangerous Knowledge: What We Know Can Hurt Us
Keith Rosen
I recently purchased some advertising space in a national magazine. I have been a subscriber for years and knew everything I needed to know to select them as an advertising vehicle. I called them with one intention, to place an order.
When I called their office, the salesperson began doing what she felt was appropriate; to start selling me. She began with the history of the magazine, then moved into a discussion about her subscriber base, how effective an advertising campaign can be and ended with information about her ad design team. She was unaware that I already knew all the information that she decided to share with me.
She never took the time to ask what my intention was in running the ad or what information I might be interested in hearing more about. While she was speaking at me, I could only think about how many selling opportunities this must have cost her when dealing with prospective clients who didn’t have the time or patience to listen to information that didn’t fit for them.
This is not an unusual problem. Many salespeople spend much of their time during a sales call attempting to educate the prospect about their product, service and industry. They think it will stimulate interest and increase the odds of earning a new client. In many cases, this is the same strategy that compromises their opportunity to create a relationship with that prospect.
Unfortunately, this is the easiest way to lose their attention. Once a person hears something they aren’t interested in or if they feel you are providing information that doesn’t apply to them, their interest is lost and they stop listening.
A sales call is not the time prove how much you know. It’s the time to find out what you don’t know about the prospect and what the prospect doesn’t know about you. It is not your knowledge that sells, but how effectively you customize your knowledge to meet each of your prospects’ specific needs.
Before you can uncover a prospect’s individual needs and educate them on how your product will meet those needs, you must first uncover what your prospect already knows.
Your company’s presentation materials are designed to assist you in educating your prospects. However, it’s your job to determine and provide the appropriate information that will fit their specific situation.
Start your conversation by asking certain questions. Questions will enable you to uncover the relevant information to provide and identify the prospect’s objective and expectation of the meeting. Begin your meeting with the following questions. “What are your expectations of our meeting today?” “What information can I provide that would assist you in making the right decision when choosing a contractor? “Just so I don’t sound repetitive, what do you already know about …?” Then, based on the information you receive, you can craft your presentation.
Caution: When listening to what your prospect already knows, some of the information you receive about your product or industry may be inaccurate. Address this carefully. Instead of correcting them, simply add another truth to their statement by asking another question or adding to what they had said. Otherwise, while making yourself look right, you run the risk of making the prospect wrong, thus putting them on the defensive.
Most importantly, learn to put your ego aside and let go of your need to “sell.” The most effective presentation is going to be judged by the outcome that you produce. This begins with finding the right balance of information that your prospects want to hear.

KatherineEloise
about 1 month ago
2 comments
Yes, it is the best way to approach anyone you are going to build a trust with to sell. Asking questions and building rapport, what is the reason this person wants to speak to me, and what should my response be. We first need to, as salespeople, approach the client with what we can do for them, instead of the push to close, before the established rapport and finding out the needs and goal that the customer/client wants. Not WHAT we are selling and OUR AGENDA....ego..driven sales people about themselves and their company and specifics of their product without even asking...a canned pitch...only years of being on the road and thousands of sales can we develop this feel, or we can recognize the customer comes first from the beginning.
HarrietAlison
about 1 month ago
156 comments
good article. I know I need to take the time to listen more and let the potential advertiser tell me what they want and need and then respond appropriatly. I need to find out what part of their business would be affected by the particular advertising we are trying to sell.
rich34232
3 months ago
508 comments
this happens when you do the talking and ot the listening
flowergirlmt
4 months ago
48 comments
I hate to say that I have been sooo guilty of this. Thankfully I'm still new and learning, so my family and friends let this slide. I'm so proud of myself when I can remember something that is impressive about a product, that I can't wait to share that info with ANYONE :) This is something I definately have to approach with care until it becomes 2nd nature.
robholland
5 months ago
10 comments
I have enjoyed your story. I wonder did you school her at all on sales technique? It sounds like she would have been better off putting a booth up on a street corner and shouting at people as they walk by.
Hurricanemurph
5 months ago
52 comments
Keith, I can understand your plight when you called to place the advertisement order. Many sales people are guilty of running the sale into the ground. If I had been on the phone when you called, you would have had the sale closed in a few moments, even with a quality presentation. I would want you to feel happy and satisfied, and when it's time to advertise more, you would already know who the "GO TO" person is. Actually, LISTENING is a lot more fun.
sajidonward
5 months ago
32 comments
Style to start and presentation, is acceptable to close the business of sales, is unique.