Dec
2009
VisibleGains Live Episode 45
Ken Wax, principal of Ken Wax and Associates, is a leading sales improvement consultant. Today he joins Lee Phillips from VisibleGains to share his expertise on how to shorten sales cycles and building incremental revenue. Video topics covered include:
- How technology is driving B2B Selling
- How B2B buyers have changed
- Sales people and the use of technology
- Generational differences between young and old sales people
- Written words no longer evaporate
- Personality returns to Sales
- How competition has changed
- Define the purpose of the Sales call
- Can your sales people deliver a “stimulus”
- Technology role in Sales
Click here to read the full transcript
[00:00]
Lee: Good afternoon. I’m Lee Phillips, and this is VisibleGains Live. (applause) Thank you. My guest today is Ken Wax, he’s the principal of Ken Wax and Associates, and Ken has something we all want – expertise in shortening sales cycles and building incremental revenue. You know, he’s done just that for everyone from tiny entrepreneurial startups to giants like IBM, Monster.com, Progress Software, and Accenture. Ken is a writer with many, well over a hundred magazine articles to his credit. He publishes a blog on selling by Ken Wax at the KenWax.blogspot.com. If you wish, you can follow Ken on Twitter at KenWax or connect with him at LinkedIn. For the rest of you, you can reach him by email at KenWax@gmail.com.
Ken, welcome to VisibleGains Live.
Ken: Thanks very much, a pleasure to be here, Lee.
[01:07]
Lee: It’s great to have you. Now, Ken, you spend a lot of time in sales over many years, and sales improvement, sales training with organizations, and you’ve been witness to the change from personal-focused selling to technology-driven selling. I’m wondering, from your perspective and your vantage point, how those changes appear?
Ken: The biggest change is that, for the first time since the dawn of business, customers no longer need salespeople to learn about things. This is the first change and it’s undermined a lot of classic selling techniques in that it used to be, if you had a new product and I want to learn about it, I had to meet with the salesperson. Those meetings will develop a relationship, that relationship would, eventually, perhaps lead to a sale.
Not anymore. Now, I may never get to meet you. If a new product comes out, it’s on the website right away, I can get specifics, I can get stats, I don’t need salespeople. So, a salesperson who’s been trying to sell by informing, which is how most people have been selling, is in trouble because I don’t need information from you anymore. I need something more.
[02:18]
Lee: So technology, in this case, has really stepped in to take away part of the selling process.
Ken: It’s wiped it out.
[02:26]
Lee: It took it away.
Ken: And it did it quietly, subtlely. It was about, I’m going to say, about five or six years ago, website reached a critical mass. Until then, it was stopped being and all of a sudden, one day, they had it all. They had enough information, they had enough of the specs that customers wanted, they had the frequently asked questions. You could now serve yourself raising the question of, “Well, exactly, what do I need to meet with my salesperson for?”
Then, it got more complex because, at the same time, life got busier, more hectic, there’s more things to do. Do I have the time to meet with salespeople? The answer, more and more, was, “Not really. Can’t we do this through email?” So the whole construct of relationships, the rug was yanked out from underneath it.
[03:12]
Lee: But now, certainly, there must have been some changes brought about technology that were favorable to selling.
Ken: Absolutely. It made communications faster, cheaper. I can interact with you several times from afar. So, it’s brought magic. I mean, email alone. What’s the magic of that is being able to connect with someone even if they’re tied up in meetings. But then along comes the other side of the coin, which is, I don’t just have email, I also have instant messages. I also have my phone beeping, I also have all these distractions. And the biggest problem is that, technology doesn’t care who’s using it. So, if I’m trying to use technology to advance my relationship with you, an existing customer, at the same time, there are other people out there with new companies who are trying to get in to you. And you know what? They have the exact same technology, the exact same almost free cost.
[04:06]
Lee: Now, just as technology has changed the sales side of the equation, I suspect that you would observed that there’d been changes in both B2B and B2C buyers brought about by technology as well. How would you characterize what you’ve seen developed there?
Ken: Well, it’s not just the technology, it’s what technology has brought, or taken away. What I mean by that is, when things started getting hectic and fast-paced and everything was working in the late ‘90s, something vanished quietly from business – the whole concept of mentoring. In the past, as people would be within organizations, they would either, directly or indirectly, have people they could pattern after, they had processes they could learn from.
When I used to be a buyer in retail many years ago, I would have a merchandise manager. And as a young buyer, I would say, “I think we’re going to replace this line with that.” He would say to me, “Ken, well, slow down. Are you sure?” And he would impress upon me the importance of those ongoing relationships and how it worked. That was good because, otherwise, my enthusiasm would have shaken things up. Mentoring is gone! So, a lot of the people who your B2B salespeople are trying to sell to, are, in a lot of cases, winging it, and they’re not exactly sure what to do, and that makes for problems.
[05:27]
Lee: That makes for challenges. That makes for challenges. One of the comments here that people oftentimes make is that technology is something that’s difficult for an organization to swallow. I’ve heard it said, in a number of organizations, that sometimes, the most difficult place to digest a new technology is in the sales side of the organization as opposed to, say, the marketing or the manufacturing side of things. What’s your observation? One of your blogs is on selling technology, what observations do you have about the adoption of technology by people in the sales process?
Ken: Well, technology is tough for the sales organization to adopt even if it’s terrific, because the sales organization, unlike just about every other department, is not always in the building, is not working together on things. They tend to be islands. Sometimes they are separated by thousands of miles in many time zones. In a lot of cases, they are just working on their own projects. So, in a different department, if a new technology comes in, I’m having a question on how to handle it, I can call over a friend and they can show me, “No, do it this way, do it that way.” If I’m in my remote office in San Francisco and my headquarters are in Boston or in Atlanta, and I’m not sure what to do, I’m a little bit lost. We now go also to the additional fact that salespeople don’t get paid to learn and master a new technology. Primarily, they get paid if they bring in the sales.
[06:58]
Lee: That’s right. It’s quota.
Ken: It’s quota, and time taken away to learn about technology, usually, does not reduce your quota. So, I want to go out there making the sales, I’ve got other departments saying, “You need to learn this.” It’s a challenge, and it also is a new way of doing things. Salespeople, including the most terrific ones, are reluctant to change.
[07:22]
Lee: Now, and you work with sales organizations, large and small. I’d imagined that you’d come in to contact with things that begin to feel like a generational difference or a generation gap between young sales people and old salespeople. Young salespeople maybe who have grown up with social media technology, isn’t really comfortable with technology. Then you’ve got the old dogs, the old salespeople who learned to use the telephone, maybe, as their one and only tip of the hat. Do you see that often or frequently now in organizations, or is that not a problem?
Ken: Well, it’s not a problem in that, if you look at someone and you’d guess their age, you’ll be able to predict how they’re going to act. Where it is a challenge, is what’s management focus on the right way to do things? For example, I’ve been brought into sales organizations where the salespeople, primarily, were sending out emails, and wondering why things weren’t happening. I think it’s really easy to understand why things aren’t happening by sending out emails because the person on the other end of the email is getting a lot of emails. OK? Their coming is a distraction, they’re parading off the screen, they scroll it away.
Not only that, if I want to do something, I have to look at your email that I wasn’t expecting anyway, push everything else aside, hopefully, I don’t get distracted, and then focus on it. So, selling via email is arguably not a very effective way of selling, and we’re really in a flux period. It’s a big flux period where we’re figuring out the right way to use the right technology and the right combination. A lot of people hide behind the technology. So, they send out emails, and really, they should be on the phone in certain situations. In some cases, an old hard copy letter will accomplish things that a ton of technology couldn’t.
[09:12]
Lee: Right, because they’re in your hands, it’s not parading by, as you’re saying.
Ken: Right, and they don’t get that many of them. When’s the last time you got a regular letter? I mean, they’re so easy to do.
[09:21]
Lee: The last time I had a child in college.
Ken: (laughs) There you go. So, is that the right tech? No, that’s not the only way to do things, but there are some ways to reach the right people that require a little bit of creativity, and not just going through the motions. That’s the enemy of selling is salespeople who are going through the motions and not using creativity.
[09:41]
Lee: Now, I’ve heard you used the expression, “words evaporate.” Certainly, in today’s world, whether it’s a Twitter, whether it’s a very tight reign on what people can say or email or other technologies that use words, it would strike me that there must be some corollary to the notion that words evaporate. Why don’t you pick up on that for a moment?
Ken: The spoken word disappears like smoke in the air the moment it’s articulated. So, if you and I were having this conversation without a video camera, and I had said something, as soon as it’s said, if you didn’t capture it, remember it, assimilate it, and decide to take action with it, it’s gone, it’s gone. In a lot of ways, the same thing happens for the onslaught of raw text. Who here doesn’t get enough emails?
You know, I remember, I would ask when I give speeches, “Who here gets more than 10 emails a day?” Joking, and very often, the number would go up to 50, 75, a hundred emails a day, people have to triage. Now, even if I have to spend only 20 seconds going through them, you add the Math, I don’t want it. Not only that, I don’t want emails from my salespeople, from people who are trying to sell to me because that’s not my priorities. So, there’s too much of everything, and somehow, we have to find a way to become important to that person. Nothing will happen unless a salesperson and their key message, not 20 messages, but their key message or two becomes important.
[11:15]
Lee: So, they should use things like PowerPoint, presentations.
Ken: Sure, that’s the answer. And not only that, it’s only 20 slides long and they only each have seven bullets on them, so what’s 140 points? PowerPoint is a marvelous technology, and when it came in, it changed the world, arguably, in unpredictable ways. When word processing first came in, companies said, “Here it is, do your own typing,” network. When PowerPoint, and back then, other technologies came in, companies said, “Well, we no longer need graphic artists. We don’t have to make 35-mm slides anymore.” Make your own slideshow.
[11:57]
Lee: We had the genographics machine, and then that was the beast that you had to feed.
Ken: That’s right. That’s right. Before PowerPoint came in, and it’d be younger to say the early, the mid-‘90s is going to really got locked in. The most powerful person in the entire corporation, the one who could tell the CEO, “No, you can’t have that,” was the graphic designer. They could say, “I’m sorry, you can’t put more than four bullets on a 35-mm slide even using our marvelous technology.” And guess what? They had to do it. Then, all of a sudden, slides came in. The key about the slide is a slide is not about putting words on to the screen, it’s about putting ideas into people’s heads. That is not something that (snaps fingers) comes automatically like that.
[12:43]
Lee: Sure. Sure. It’s not a skill that we’re trained. We’re trained to write and learn English or another language and we know how to put together a sentence, but it’s tough to communicate an idea.
Ken: It really is. And, how often our people are taught about how other people perceive? For example, when someone’s giving a presentation, whether it’s over the Web or whether it’s in person, who has been taught about a good way to start it? I don’t want to go too deeply into presenting, but when a slide comes up and it says, “The name of my company,” and you know, “why we’re terrific,” a lot of people just close up. So, for example, the best way to start something like that is with a question. What are companies learning form this or that. So, there’s a lot of ways of doing things using technology that are more original. They can use up a lot of time and they can use up a lot of one’s access.
[13:30]
Lee: Sure. Now, but to its credit, PowerPoint and other technologies, did change things by making it possible for your presentation to travel, for it to move into an organization and have an impact after your departure.
Ken: And it still does, and it can really be very powerful, particularly, if it is combined with some voice over, or whether it’s combined with some video clips or whether it’s combined with something that brings it something human. Too often though, a salesperson will say, “I’ll send you over the slide deck,” and that person will now receive more slides than they ever wanted. Slides that they can’t make sense of on their own, and those are not going to travel. If I want to make you a hero on your company, I’ve got to somehow get something…
[14:20]
Lee: Which is your objective.
Ken: I’m not going to get the sale unless you have something that’s big enough to make your boss and your boss’s boss say, “This is worth the money.” So, if I want to do that, I can just rely on words. I’ve got to give you something that you can use so you don’t look like a show, you don’t look like you’re showing a commercial for me. That’s what’s going to have the impact, and it touches every part of selling.
[14:47]
Lee: Sure. You know, it’s interesting, it strikes me that with the sacrifice of the personal contact form of selling and the substitution of technology, one of the things that got lost along the way was the opportunity for an organization to communicate its personality – the personality of the salesperson, the personality of the CEO, of the engineers, all of the people who are involved in making and distributing a product. That’s something that’s been lost forever to technology. Are there ways back? Is there a way to bring personality back into the selling process?
Ken: Sure. Again, we’re at a point where the pendulum’s swung this way in terms of just give them a row of text, send them to the website. Now, people will think that’s a marginal approach, so…I’m sorry, I lost track of where we’re headed though. Yes, if I can get people back to the very human desire to connect with other people, go back a hundred, 200 years. Your grandfather made his living probably the same way his grandfather did, your grandfather’s grandfather did. My kids are doing nothing, pretty much the way I did it when I was their age. But, deep within us is the desire to connect. People buy from other people, people have faith in other people. There’s a saying, “I’m not going to purchase something unless I look across the table and I see that person.” So, how can you use the technology to make that come alive? That’s really what we’re doing these days.
[16:17]
Lee: So, we’re doing a video, for example.
Ken: We’re doing a video. Imagine if a clip of this video could be captured. I bet you have imagined that because you [xx].
[16:24]
Lee: I bet you will probably going to do that for you by the time it’s all done, said and done. Exactly.
Ken: This gives me, if I’m inside a company, a real powerful tool. If I’ve got even a minute and a half, little clip, and I want to get on my boss’s radar screen, I can easily say something along the lines of, “I know that we’ve been told the mandatory 20% reduction in all purchasing, or 30%. But, boss, this is something that I think we need to actually invest in even more. I’ve attached a short clip about two minutes will give you an idea of the three reasons why I think this is the case.”
I can send that off with pretty good confidence, and my boss or boss’s boss, only has invested a minute or two, and things can happen. Otherwise, it can die right there. If I can’t give you the tool you need to get them involved, I can meet with you all day long. I can talk to you in emails for weeks and months. It’s not going to happen.
[17:19]
Lee: Right. Right. So, the whole role of competition has changed with the advent of technology. Now, we’ve seen the old axiom that everybody looks large on the Internet. Everybody is global, everybody’s got this, that, and the other. Everyone can compete in every marketplace when they’re competing on the Internet. How do you see that impacting the world of sales these days?
Ken: It has made it easier in a lot of businesses for new competitors to pop up and to [xx]. It used to be, if I want to be seen big, I had to have all sorts of quite expensive brochures and booklets and materials professionally created and published. Now, it’s not that hard to have a good-looking website. So, how does that customer – remember, unmentored – how do they come to conclusions about you? It’s a challenge. In fact, I’ve got a client right now who has competitors coming on saying, “Well, you know, we’re global, too.”
But they’re not, they’re not. But to that customer, what’s global? Global is global, isn’t it? It’s around the world. Well, no, it’s not. So, we have to do what we’re doing now is we’re helping their salespeople explain, without saying bad things about any competitors, when we say “global,” here’s what we mean. We’ve got people and engineers and analysts on the ground, living, working, and knowing all the players in this region, in that region around the world.
Some people say “global,” when they only have people who fly over or if they have a mailing address. So, as you look at us and our competitors, now they’re more knowledgeable. Now, we’d helped that customer become a more discriminating purchaser, which, hopefully, works to the advantage of that particular client.
[19:10]
Lee: So, the challenge here would seem is in probably that, really, find the right way, the right technology or use of technology to differentiate yourself. Because everyone’s going to send their PowerPoint deck, everyone’s going to send their written proposal, everyone’s going to do pretty much everything the same way because technology has level the playing field.
Ken: They all have the same tools, but how you use the tools is what depends on whether or not you’re going to make a beautiful work of art or whether it’s going to appear quite clunky. In the same way, if you look at the world of direct mail, there’s an old business. Someone writes a creative letter and it gets sent out to a lot of people. A lot of money is spent in the actual mailings, but the real key is the creative work. So, everyone had the same tools, the same envelopes and postage and letters, but those who could home in on what matters, what will speak to the customers, what’s going to make something rise up to become priority, they win, they’ve won.
The same thing is here. What we do when we work with sales teams, is we encourage them to think like their customer. That’s a real challenge because they’ve never been with that customer. In fact, even if they were with their customer, employed there a year or two ago, they’re still not that customer anymore. Things have changed. But if I can get in to your head a little bit and go, “All right, busy person, got a lot of priorities, a lot of confusion, a lot of distractions,” and I can then, on you with things that will have you self-motivated to champion this, armed to do it without taking too great a risk, and I can make the steps easy, we’re going to win.
[20:42]
Lee: Now, I can be a hero.
Ken: I want you to be a hero.
[20:43]
Lee: In fact, if you’re doing your job as a salesperson, you’re creating heroes everyday.
Ken: Nothing’s going to get bored, unless someone can justify it. And, an interesting thing, because sometimes we teach salespeople how do you sell to senior managers? Senior executives, see quest, because very often, that’s where sales die. I work with lower level, it moves up, it’s good, it’s good, it’s good. I finally get in to the big meeting with the major decisions we made, and that senior executive has got some concerns, I was ready for it. So, we teach them how do you approach that. The salesperson who understands, and can sometimes even help their contact sell higher, because the contact doesn’t know how to impress [xx].
[21:23]
Lee: Because it’s not their job to sell your product.
Ken: That’s right, nor they even know how, because they don’t know how senior execs think either. So, if we can help them understand, senior executives, for example, they live slightly in the future. They’re looking for competitive in the marketplace advantages, not feature benefits. They’re looking for big, not little. That’s going to be an interesting meeting. If a salesperson comes in to a meeting, whether it’s over the phone, on the Web, or in person, and they’re completely surprised when the senior exec hits them with something, it doesn’t work.
[21:56]
Lee: They’re dead. They’re dead in the water.
Ken: They, certainly, aren’t having a good day, or it’s not as good as they’d thought they’d have.
[22:01]
Lee: One of the more provocatively worded blogs of yours that I saw recently was entitled, “What’s the purpose of this sales call?” I was intrigued by that, because you would have thought, or one would have imagined, that the purpose of the sales call is immediately known. Right?
Ken: Make money. They get the sale.
[22:23]
Lee: Sure. Exactly.
Ken: What do I do when I get the sale?
[22:25]
Lee: But that’s not exactly what you said. Why don’t you share that with our audience.
Ken: OK. OK. I’m going to lead into it, because you made such a good build up. Most salespeople know one way of selling, and it’s not to their detriment. They learned one way of selling along the way and they’ve been doing that. Unfortunately, it’s been by informing, and the Web has taken away that job. So, these days, and to companies who want our people to be more consultative. Well, I will use you as a consultant if I see value in it. What’s the job of a sales call? The job is to create desire. That’s it.
Now, a different point in the sales process is a different sort of desire you need. For us meeting with you, I want to create desire for you to learn more, so I want to make sure you grasp some big benefits, and important benefits is not feature benefits. Then, as we rise up, it’s different. When we finally get to meet, whether if it’s a major purchase, senior executives, I want to be creating desire for the advantages that your folks will have. I want them seeing themselves with it. I want them imagining, “If you had this working for you right now instead of doing it this way, your folks will be doing it that way, you’d be benefiting this way, this way.” If people can envision themselves already owning and benefiting from your product, they’re probably going to move ahead because it’s in their own best interest.
[23:43]
Lee: You know, that’s an interesting point because it’s almost rationale for fly into B to C world conventional advertising, in media, was so powerful, particularly around things like motor vehicles or other large ticket purchases. Because your people will really challenge in the ad to put themselves in that car, to really feel what it was like.
Ken: That’s right. Actually, if you would go into the dealer, they know how to do that, too.
[24:11]
Lee: Sure. Give them to take a test drive.
Ken: They do that, but [xx] they go, “Mr. Phillips, can you imagine how this car would look in your driveway? Can you imagine driving up to a friend’s house in it?” And, what they’re doing, because the automotive business, they know what they were doing because they’d done the same thing for so many decades. What they’re doing is they were using your imagination against you. They don’t know what your driveway looks like. They don’t know what your friends’ houses look like. But they’ve got you in that car driving up, feeling good, and it worked.
When you’re dealing with B2B business, these are professional buyers. Particularly if you get a higher up, but nevertheless, they’re all sufferings in ways that they won’t usually tell a salesperson because it’s confidential. But if you can have them imagining, and particularly, if you can have them appreciating what other companies are doing right now, then, it becomes so easy for them to say, “I, at least, think we should be exploring this.” If I can get them exploring it, then we’re on our way to a sale. It’s much better to have someone exploring something than to say, “We’re going to wait another six months. Times are tough.”
[25:11]
Lee: Sure. You bring up a point when you talked about the person on the buying side of an equation. Another one of your more provocatively worded blogs was entitled, “Can your salespeople deliver a stimulus?” I thought that was a wonderfully, shameless way of borrowing from the controversy in Washington. But you have a point to make in that blog posting, don’t you?
Ken: Yes. It’s that a lot of people out there, people with a lot of power to purchase and to guide their companies have never been through this sort of times before.
[25:47]
Lee: Kind of economic uncertainty that we’re in.
Ken: Absolutely. They have not been through challenges, setbacks, in some businesses, the whole world has changed. It’s very easy to panic. It’s very easy, particularly if you’ve got young kids and a mortgage, to want to do nothing risky, nothing risky at all. If the company says, “Our goal is to not spend,” a lot of people will immediately not do that. Now, they’re not saying that. What the companies are really saying is, “We’re not going to spend on something unless it’s crucial and important into our future.” The company still wants great ideas to come forth if the company doesn’t want to close up shop. So, sometimes, a salesperson has to gently teach their contacts what companies are looking for. The best way to do that is by talking about experiences of other organizations.
[26:34]
Lee: Sure. Sure. I want to wrap us all the way back to the first question in the beginning. It goes back to this notion of technology – the technology that can help and the technology that can hurt or impede.
Ken: Or distract.
[26:51]
Lee: Or distract, which is just as bad. Exactly. That’s a good point. You know, I’m curious. If you were to just use a baseball analogy, the season is over now, unfortunately, for us, I suspect. But, there’s a baseball analogy that comes to my mind, and all of a sudden, you’re going to be the manager of the All Star Sales Team. What kind of technology bats would you want to have in the hands of your homerun heirs(?).
Ken: OK. I can’t just say I want to hand them technology, because technology, for its own sake, can waste a lot of time. I’ve seen companies where they were sold a bill of goods that the answer to all of your sales problem is to bring in this marvelously complex sales monitoring technology, and your people put information over here. It was all internal, it didn’t touch the customer. So, what’s going to work is the technology that can touch the customer and touch the customer in the way that, in a lot of organizations, the CEO, knows how to do.
In almost every company, one of the best salespeople is the CEO. They can explain situations, they can get people excited. That’s what they do, they do that all day long. They do it with analysts when they meet them, they do it at high levels. If we can take the salespeople and give them a little bit of that knowledge, of that comfort telling the stories, and then arm them with the tools to get it across. What’s the right tool? It depends.
If I can’t get through to you at your company, if you’re a company I want to crack into, I can’t get to you, I can’t just send you emails. I can’t send you links, it’s going to take me nowhere. I have to get creative. And, there are creative things you can do in almost every business. So, if I can get creative, now I get in to meet you, or I talk to you on the phone, I create a little interest, a little desire, I now feed you a little bit more. Maybe it’s a link with a provocative [xx] – which you’ve been so good with in this discussion – maybe it’s a video, maybe it’s something that makes it easy. I want to, hopefully, with the sales ladder, the whole concept of holding people up, up.
The real concept, the real secret to the sales ladder is not the notion of moving people up. That’s easy. The problem is that, to the customer, you may not have the rungs they need. So, if I said, “Come over to my house and help me fix my roof.” I bring out my ladder and it’s missing some rungs, you’d go, “I’m not going to do that, it’s too risky!” So, the customer sees things differently. I want to arm my salespeople with the comfort, the knowledge, the tools, and knowing how to use them, it’s going to make that customer go, “Oh! That’s not too risky at all. I’ll take the step, I’ll take the step.” If I’ve got the right solution for them, I’m doing it with high integrity, a good percentage of them will arrive at the top of that ladder and it would become a sale.
[29:44]
Lee: There’s another thread that I picked up at one point in your blog postings, and that was about the importance and the value of creativity. I recall you telling a story about that phenomenal activity in the old days, back when you and I were younger and working together at Lotus. The phenomenal trick that was done when you’re at COMDEX, that, literally, I use the shirt on people’s backs to really command attention and to sell.
Ken: It’s more of a marvelous marketing story, but it really shows you what some real good thinking can do. There’s a lot of bright people in every organization, and it goes like this. One year COMDEX was coming up, and it was Borland that predicted this. Borland was a relatively small, not a startup, but they were not as big as the big players. They wanted to get people to their booth. Well, you can spend a small fortune on the booth or you could do what they did. They printed up, I believe it was 200 t-shirts, 200 or 300 t-shirts, and they then hired very attractive models, because the people going to COMDEX, typically, were male. They went to the airports and they could, at those times, and as people got off flights, and you could tell the profile who’s going to COMDEX, they gave out t-shirts. The t-shirts said the following, “Follow me to Booth – with the number – to see Borland’s…” I forgot the name of the product.
So, the next day, the show starts and what happens is Borland has, walking through the show, hundreds…Also, by the way, if you wear the t-shirt, here’s the payoff, if you wear the t-shirt and we spot you, we may give you a hundred dollar bill. There’s the incentive, there’s the incentive. So, for what, a thousand dollars or so of hundred dollar bills, the t-shirts cost to nothing, they had walking billboards going through at that huge tradeshow bringing business to them. It prompted a new rule, the very next year, no longer would any sort of promotional t-shirts be allowed in anybody trying to enter the place.
[31:43]
Lee: (laughs) It’s a great story.
Ken: You can bring creativity like that to a sales call as well. If you’re going to a sales call or even on the phone, by starting with a provocative question, that’s creative. By saying, “What are companies like,” and you name some competitors or companies in their genre. What are they benefiting from through this technology? It makes some good, “Gee, I didn’t know that. I don’t know. Let me find out.” So, maybe it become more valuable to my company. At the very least, I won’t be vulnerable if a senior exec comes in and says, “They’re doing that, why are we doing this?”
[32:18]
Lee: Sure. Ken, before we sign off today, I know one of your favorite phrases is “to sell like a CEO.” I’m sure you use that constantly and thought it might be a good chance for you to share that observation, that meaning with our viewers.
Ken: Most CEOs know how to tell a terrific story. They can, because let’s face it, no one’s going to say to them in the company, “You should mention that.” So, when I come in to work with a company, very often, one of the first things we’ll do, even in the discussion stages, is I’ll get to meet with the very senior executives and I’ll listen to what they bring up. I’ll say, “What are the challenges you’re fighting?” because there’s always challenges. And, they usually have great answers. I go, “If we can just take the sort of things that I’ve heard at this table,” because, typically, it’s senior execs in the first meetings, “and we can make it so that your people have this knowledge, access to it, we can shift the bell curve over. So, all of your people,” the whole goal is to get more sales, more effects than this from the same people. If we can make them sell a little bit more like the CEO, the curve shift is over and everything works better. Every sales call is now more valuable. It’s more valuable to the customer and, therefore, it becomes more valuable to the company.
[33:37]
Lee: And, brings in revenue, shortened sale cycle, and hopefully, gives opportunity to person like yourself.
Thank you, Ken, for coming in today. It’s been a pleasure chatting with you.
Ken: Thank you.|”

