A Failure to Plan a Trade Show Is a Plan to Fail a Trade Show

03.18.2012

Okay so we’re borrowing a phrase to make a point but it’s true. If the goal is to just be there or to “wow the audience” with the best giveaways you are missing the point!

Investing and truly getting ROI starts and stops with a successful plan. Like most things, careful planning, timing, resources, and budget all play a part in a successful trade show. Here is a closer look at those components:

Timing: Companies that don’t properly plan often will try and force their way into an event/exhibit, overlooking who will be attending and who will be exhibiting. Fundamentally, this directly leads to the wrong target audience and ultimately a total waste of time, resources, and budget.

Location: Did you ever sit behind a support beam at Fenway Park better known as “Obstructed Seating”? I have when my friends and I walked up ten minutes before the first pitch and got what was available. Don’t use this strategy to book your exhibit at your next trade show. Rest assured you will find you and your crew will be setting up in a dark corner, a dead end aisle, or next to the annoying life insurance guy for the next three or four days.

Match your product or services with a more than adequate staff: This means if your product requires in depth knowledge and expertise, your staff should be trained to at least engage with your target audience and “shuffle along” those who just stopped for free giveaways. Ideally, you would also want to have at least one expert on-site, someone who can build instant credibility and make a great first impression by being able to answer the tough questions.

Wow Factor: If you sit around and decide your exhibit is going to consist of “Pipe and Drape,” you better have an iron clad plan to succeed.

Here’s the real WOW Factor to a successful trade show plan: hire an outside firm to:

  • Warm up your prospects
  • Have pre-set appointments booked and confirmed
  • Ask attendees to fill out a brief survey
  • Educate while making the trade show experience fun!
  • Follow-up! Follow up! Follow up!

The key is to talk to and identify hot prospects, that is prospects who have the authority to influence buying decisions for their company. That’s the real return on your investment. Every company should come away with a tangible treasure chest of new prospects and leads! Anything short of that and you’re just spinning your wheels. So if I could ask, do you have a TREASURE CHEST of new leads from your last trade show? I bet I know the answer…

Working Your Way Down the Sales Funnel: Some Helpful Hints

03.12.2012

Most of us know the fundamentals of a basic sales funnel. You start out with a hot lead from varying areas. This ends up as an opportunity for business. You send out a proposal for services. And, hopefully, in turn you have yourself a new customer! A sales funnel starts at the very beginning of the new business stage when you initially capture the attention and interest of your prospects via your website, social media efforts, a well stated voice mail or phone call, newsletter, or maybe even a referral. Yet, no matter which way the sales funnel begins, once it begins, making sure you stay on target is key to making sure the end result is more prospects becoming clients.

One way to ensure that the process stays on track is to maintain regular communication with your current clients, referral sources, and potential clients, while making sure they have a clear understanding of not only what you can do to help them, but also that you really do want to help them and not just sell to them. Sometimes this process is pretty quick, requiring only one or two conversations to “close the deal.” Other times those seven to thirteen calls it usually takes to get a prospect to trust you enough to talk about the issues you are looking to solve are necessary; in these cases a fair amount of nurturing needs to take place over time.

In general, there is a direct correlation between the length of the sales cycle and the overall cost of a deal. This is one of the reasons why I never understood the process used for purchasing a timeshare. The larger the cost, usually the longer it takes to make a sale.

So, how do you know that you are working your way down the sales funnel? Sure, you can pick up almost any sales book and find a description of a sales funnel in there, all just a little bit different. For me, I have six simple guidelines:

  1. First, evaluate what it is you are going to sell. What is it? Who needs it? Why would they want it?
  2. Think about the decision process of your potential customer or client. If you are selling a pack of gum, the decision process will be relatively quick and simple. If you are selling a high end business to business service, a high tech piece of software, or a large piece of industrial equipment, there will likely be several meetings and maybe a few plant tours involved.
  3. You can’t get a yes if you are not talking to the people who can give you a yes, so identify and develop relationships with all decision makers and influencers. Again, pair this with the complexity of the sale. You don’t expect the person at the store selling you a pack a gum to see if they are one of the four out of five dentists who have partially influenced your decision to purchase a particular brand.
  4. You cannot sell something to someone if I do not know what they need. This is a key point that a lot of people miss. They try to sell what they have rather than understand the prospect’s need.
  5. Prospects will not buy if they do not have the money. So, before asking for the sale or even presenting a solution, get an understanding of their budget and make sure it is in line with the solution you plan to present. I heard someone say once, “I want it fast, I want it good, and I want it inexpensive,” to which we replied, “We can most likely help you…PICK ANY TWO.”
  6. The most overlooked part of the process is time. If you present a solution, can they implement it now? Does testing need to occur prior? Is there another contract that needs to run its course before implementing your solution? When this part was skipped, deals fall through.

Hopefully this advice was helpful, and, if you need additional assistance working through this process, Randolph Sterling, Inc. is well versed in all levels of it, from qualifying prospects for the top of the sales funnel, to setting meetings for your experts with the decision maker at target company, to helping you close the deal!

 

Are You Offering Something Great, But Wondering Why No One Knows about It?

01.16.2012

Do you have a great product or service everyone wants? Can you offer your product or service at a fair market price?

Now, if only people knew about what you are offering. Of course there is the whole marketing side of things which is very important and plays a big role in the success of your business, but what about the sales side? How is your marketing team complimenting your sales team? Are your sales people using any marketing concepts to sell your product or service? Perhaps you are saying – what sales and marketing team?

So far you know you have a great product or service and you know you are not going to put it in the hands of just anyone. You need someone who can funnel through the right sales channels for you. Let’s call them the “subject matter expert”.

Once all your marketing has been put to the test and it seems to be working, who is at the end of the sales and marketing funnel for your company? Once you have someone interested, is it the sales experience that will really make your customer want to buy? You bet it is! Having a salesperson, or “subject matter expert,” who understands what someone experiences when they buy from you will allow you to put the right sales channel and experience in place, and, if done properly, this will increase your sales tremendously.

Think about yourself as a consumer and see if you feel if this rings true.