TIME, MONEY, HASSLE - You can make a sale on one of
the Three Little Words, but when you sell on two of the three,
youll have a very loyal client.
Youve have product training and sales training, you
reviewed your company's web site and literature, you
understand the demonstrations, and the marketing ideas
behind the exhibit design. Youre ready for the show.
But now youre standing in the booth and its Duh? time. You
can rattle off the features and benefits, but what does the
person standing in front of you want to know?
It can be boiled down to three little words - Time, Money,
Hassle.
They want you to save them time, charge less money and
cut the hassle. Actually, its what we all want when we shop
ourselves, whether for banking or broccoli, wine or widgets.
For example - We pay for chopped but bagged lettuce at the
grocery store. Saves us money? No, costs a lot more than a
head of lettuce, but it saves time and hassle because we
dont have to chop it. Go through everything you buy and
youll find an example.
You can make a sale on one of the Three Little Words, but
when you sell on two of the three, youll have a very loyal
client.
Frame your opening comments around these three words
and youll get peoples attention. Dont make them ask the
questions - be ready to find which of these words is most
important to them and match your presentation to their
concerns.
TIME - We all want time, more time, and trade shows are a
time problem. It is compressed - there are only so many
hours the show is open, so few hours to walk the aisles and
minutes to stop at a booth. Conversations are brief,
listening skills are strained and youll never have enough
time to go through the leisurely sales call process.
Here are 10 things people want to know about your
company and Time:
1. Whats your order-to-shipment time?
2. How long for custom orders and modifications?
3. How long is design time?
4. Do you stock everything I need, or do I have to wait for
parts?
5. When will a salesman call on me?
6. How long does it take to learn?
7. How long does it take to teach someone?
8. What training materials and people are provided?
9. How long does it take to put together?
10. How long will it last?
MONEY - Money is important, and saving money in tight
times is critical, but remember that beyond pure coin is
value. Value is what you should sell. The simple definition is
Value = Price + Performance. We all have something in the
closet or the garage that we were sold on price alone, and
we feel cheated.
Here are 10 things people want to know about your
company and Money:
1. How much is it?
2. Whats my discount?
3. Do you take credit cards?
4. Will you finance this?
5. What are your payment terms?
6. Whats your guarantee?
7. Whats my pay back?
8. Why are you higher (lower) than your competitor?
9. Do I have to pay for modifications?
10. Whats the best deal you can give me?
HASSLE - If time is money, hassle is both time and money.
If you save $500 when you buy, but it costs $1,000 in staff
time to get a problem solved, was that a good deal? Of
course not. These are the days of push-the-phone-button
customer service, of voice mail hell with no live people, of
cutbacks in staff who provided the corporate memory of how
things really work, and increasingly of look on the web site.
(Note - are you aware that more firms are adding a toll free
number to help you find what you cant find on their web
site? But you have to go to their site and read the small print
to get the number!)
Here's are 10 things people want to know about your
company and Hassle:
1. What are the most common problems with your product?
2. How do you solve those problems?
3. Have you ever called your own customer service
department?
4. Are you 24/7/365?
5. How long does it take to get parts?
6. Who does the repair and how long does it take?
7. Whats the guarantee process?
8. Who handles my account and what happens when she
leaves?
9. What happens if you merge or go out of business?
10. What if it just doesn't work for us?
We all have true stories about customer service and the
time-money-hassle factors. Here are a few of mine.
1. I needed a toner cartridge for an old and faithful printer.
The local stores didn't carry it and didn't want to special
order it, so I called the 800 number of a staple in the office
supply business because I had a 15% coupon. It took one
hour of call waiting, checking and finally my item was found!
It could not be sent to the store so I could use the coupon
and save the freight, but had to be sent to me directly. Now
I'm on their mailing list and receive a catalogue every week.
What a waste, but Ive been told its too difficult to take me off
the mailing list. Is this my favorite store? Used to be. Not any
more.
2. There are lots of ISP tales. Two years ago when the big
one bought my little one, I had 13 days of intermittent service
while they merged. This year, they changed something
(their term) and I could receive mail but not send it. I spoke
with 11 people over the course of a week, a total of 14
hours. I heard lots of music, lots of what have you done?
and lets just start all over. I spoke with supervisors, tech
support and marketing. Finally, I found a new kid, who said,
Oh, yeah, we changed something. There, its all fixed.
Without billing them for my time, I figure this one experience
cost the ISP five times what I pay in yearly service fees. Will I
stay with them. Yes, because Im afraid the next service will
be worse.
3. Since I refuse to do business with people who know less
about their company than I do, I often ask to speak to a
supervisor. Now, I keep pad and paper whenever I make a
call, and ask for name and extension. Recent responses -
all true!
* There is no supervisor.
* They cant take incoming calls. Leave a name and number
and theyll get back to you in 3 days.
* 20 minutes of music, then disconnect.
* Just disconnect.
* Call customer service. One hour of argument and being
passed along via long holding patterns. We cant, never
have and/or refuse to solve your problem. Hang up, call
same number. Problem solved in two minutes.
* Voice mail hell with no option to speak to a real person.
* Web sites without real addresses or phone numbers.
Contact us is an e-mail address which never responds.
Be Brief. Start your conversation with (My Company) can
save your company (time, money, hassle) and we support
our customers.
Do customer service problems appear at trade shows?
Occasionally. Do they happen after shows? All the time. The
more you can define Time, Money and Hassle for your
clients and prospects, the more profitable everyone will be.
Julia O'Connor
Speaker, Author, Consultant
Expert in the Psychology of the Trade Show Environment
Trade Show Training, Inc.
PO Box 17155, Richmond VA 23226
804-355-7800
http://www.TradeShowTraining.com