From a closed gate to an open door

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Six steps from A locked gate

Transcript of From a closed gate to an open door

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Six steps from

A locked gate

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To an open door

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Step One

Identify your target market

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Step Two

Identify specific target executive roles in specific companies in your market

CEO, CMO, CIO, Sales Director, etc

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Step three

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Step three - research

Use all the sources you can Ask yourself what are their priorities; As a company? In their role? As an individual?

How can you help them with their business & personal priorities?

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Step four – contact them all individually

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Step 4 – contact them all individually by..

The gatekeeper

...using the best channel(s) for each person

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Step 4 – contact them all individually

The best channel for most people – still!

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Step 4 – contact them individually

With a

message

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Step 4 – contact them individually

To achieve a single goal

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A meeting!

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Where you have their undivided attention!

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Step 5 – create your customised value proposition

In that company

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Step 5 – create your customised value proposition

For that individual

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Step 5 – create your customised value proposition

For that business problem

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Step 5 – create your customised value proposition

One that you can help them with

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You schedule a meeting

or

You get a “no thanks”

“No answer” does NOT mean “no thanks”

It means keep asking – nicely

Step 6 – Keep communicating until

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“I’d like to meet with you for 30 minutes to discuss how we can help you to <insert Value Proposition

here>.

“What’s the best way to do that?”

Your simple message

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The value proposition is designed to answer one

question only;

“Why should I give up 30 minutes of my valuable time to speak to you?”

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The unspoken answer to that question is

“Because I can help you fix a problem you really care about - but you have to meet with me and give me your full attention to find out how.”

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• Tell them what you can do for them (not how you do it) • Use their terminology, not yours • Make them curious • Make them feel their time will be well spent • Make sure your online presence (LinkedIn etc) is credible and matches your story • Tell the absolute truth • Focus on helping them • Mention similar companies you’ve helped – but only if necessary • Mention mutual contacts – only if relevant & needed

What to do

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• Try to sell them on you or your company – your only objective is to get a meeting • Tell them how you can help them – too much detail! • Offer to send them any collateral - at all • Talk about yourself • Talk about Gartner’s magic quadrant • Use your own terminology • Tell them about your awards, or your size or your recent wins or other stuff they don’t care about

Remember – they don’t know you and they don’t care about you – they only care about themselves and their problems

What not to do

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Some simple tips

The gatekeeper is not your enemy

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The gatekeeper is your friend

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Everyone wants to talk to the CEO

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But who does the CEO want to talk to?

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The CEO cares about talking to (in approximate order)

• The Executive team & the Board • Shareholders • Customers • Business unit managers • Other CEOs • The media • Existing suppliers • Their employees • Family & friends • The dog, the tax man • Anyone else other than a salesman

Or maybe a sales person – IF they think they can help them

So help them by focusing on what they care about.

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How do you get their attention?

• Keep it simple • Keep it short • Keep it consistent • Focus on a single objective • Use multiple channels • Speak to multiple executives • Repeat • Repeat • Repeat

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Use the right message

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And stand out from the crowd

• Be polite • Be persistent • Use multiple communication channels • But particularly the phone • Say less, not more • Do your research • Know what they care about (that you can help them with) • Remember – your only objective is to get a meeting to discuss how you can help them • Focus on them, not you

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And you’re off!!

This strategy will get you in front of senior executives in most of your target accounts There are many tactics – what to say, how to say it, when to say it, how often to say it, who to say it to, what not to say – that will dramatically accelerate your success. And developing the right value propositions requires thought and practice – different people care about and prioritise different things – so feel free to call me for help.

To contact me for more information email me at [email protected], see my LinkedIn profile or call me on +61 410 481 960 © Steve Hall 2016