How to Create a One-Two Sales Knockout Punch
The events that stimulate a prospective customer's buying behavior are outside of your control; regardless of how great a sales team you have. If a prospective customer doesn’t perceive a need for what you are selling, you can call on them until you are blue in the face without success. They will only respond favorably if they feel you can help them solve a problem.
Problems come in many flavors: your prospective customer may be expanding their operations and need new equipment or components, they may have just had a request for a quotation that requires your product, or perhaps their vendor has just had a price increase, quality issues, or botched a delivery. Therefore you want to have your company’s products in front of prospects when an event arises. This will provide the greatest likelihood of success.
Ideally, it would be great to be right in front of all prospective customers at all times. But that isn’t realistic; especially for small companies. The next best thing, of course, would be for you to be lucky enough to be making sales calls on the day when one of the above events takes place. Practically, however, the best way to meet this challenge is to maintain widespread visibility without spending a fortune. And the best way to accomplish this is by implementing a well-executed product publicity campaign that targets a wide range of media outlets.
Competing for mindshare is critical to “having the door open when a sales opportunity arises.” When prospective customers read about your products as news in their industrial and technical magazines, publications, and on various Web sites, they remember and respond. Whether your customer is an OEM, a distributor seeking a new line, a dealer, or an end-user, product news in these media outlets is the most cost-effective way to assure that - when a prospective customer has a need your product or service fills - you will be visible to them. Obviously, this increases the odds that they will contact you or that your sales call will be constructive.
To use a boxing analogy: the relationship of product exposure to sales calls is like the relationship of a left jab to a right cross. The better and more consistent the jab (product exposure), the more likely the right cross (sales call) will score a knockout punch. Product publicity to sales is the one-two punch every successful business organization needs. It assures you that when a prospective customer’s level of interest piques to take action and buy; your product will be fresh on his or her mind. This is the practical application of “branding.”
So, even though you have no control over the timing of an event that might create the need for your products or services, you can control your ability to keep your products in front of prospective customers so they will be seen when the time is right. No marketing tool can achieve this one-two punch as effectively as product publicity.
So, even though you have no control over the timing of an event that might create the need for your products or services, you can control your ability to keep your products in front of prospective customers so they will be seen when the time is right. No marketing tool can achieve this one-two punch as effectively as product publicity.
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© Steven M. Stroum
Steven M. Stroum is the founder and president of Venmark International, an industrial and technical product publicity firm located in Wellesley, Massachusetts. www.venmarkinternational.com His firm has created more than 14,500 product announcements and has been recognized as the “best in the business” by many leading editors and Web hosts.
An advocate for those less adept at presenting their ideas to the marketplace, Mr. Stroum was elected as a regular member of the California Inventors Council in 1975 before returning to his native Massachusetts. In recognition for his contribution to the success of many smaller companies, he was elected to serve on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Small Business Task Force and was later appointed by Governor Edward J. King to serve a four-year term as one of 18 small business advisors.He also served on the board of directors of SBANE (Smaller Business Association of New England).
Mr. Stroum’s contribution to the small business community was recognized further when he was selected by the International Rotary Foundation to join a five-man Group Study Exchange Team and tour South Korea for six weeks as an ambassador. He has also been listed in “Who’s Who in the East,” was an executive member of the American Marketing Association, and addressed the Inventors Association of New England at MIT, and the New England Chapter of IEEE. Mr. Stroum was also appointed to the Norbert Weiner Forum at Tufts University to study the impact of technology on society. He has been a guest lecturer at Babson College, Boston College, Northeastern University, and has addressed numerous business and civic groups.
© 2009 Steven M. Stroum







