How does "Selling"
really
happen?
Collison’s Axiom of
→
Selling
is
"‘Selling’ isn’t happening when your company is talking; ‘selling’ happens
when
your targeted
prospect is talking." "Why, yes, of course," reply company founders
and workshop participants I meet across the country. Here’s a field report on
what really happens.
The eager
→
Entrepreneur
has gotten an opportunity to meet with a potential corporate
partner, customer, or
funding source. The
entrepreneur understands that the natural form of such meetings is for the
entrepreneur to "go first" and to provide lots of information about the
→
venture's development
work, its
→
capabilities,
and its special insights about the
market, etc. The other party is not on the
spot to reveal very much about its own program. The prospect
may provide such information because it needs to be sure that there is a
good "fit" between its interests and needs and those of the
entrepreneurial
company.
At this stage, the driving issues may
not be strictly, or even primarily, financial. Your prospect may be
→
considering potential synergy
with an existing product (or, for investors,
synergy with a portfolio company), a
need to diversify into a new area, a compliance or regulatory issue, or some
other linkage that you couldn’t possibly know about in advance. What you do
know is that the other party would not be meeting with you unless there is some
potentially beneficial basis for doing so. But you can’t understand what that is
until the source actually communicates the information to you (and you recognize
the information for what it is). You need to understand how that can happen most
effectively.
→
Selling Is
Problem Solving
Imagine that the
entrepreneur’s presentation has been clear and interesting. Then picture the
prospect, impressed, now starting to make its own comments. Then picture the
entrepreneur literally interrupting in order to provide additional detail about the
entrepreneur’s own efforts. For a complete image, picture this happening not
once or twice but for an entire meeting.
|