Ian, welcome to the same side selling podcast. I am
Ian Altman:your host. Ian Altman, one of the most common questions I get
Ian Altman:has to do with sales presentations. And people ask
Ian Altman:me, What should I include when I go to meet with a prospect, what
Ian Altman:should be my PowerPoint presentation? That's what we're
Ian Altman:going to talk about on today's episode. You're all set, you're
Ian Altman:ready to go to your meeting. You show up, and you have your
Ian Altman:PowerPoint presentation. Maybe you're really advanced using
Ian Altman:Keynote. Maybe instead of keynote, you're using some other
Ian Altman:AI driven tool, using beautiful.ai using pick it. It
Ian Altman:doesn't matter what tool you're using, but nonetheless, you walk
Ian Altman:into the meeting and you're ready to give the presentation
Ian Altman:of your life. Here's the problem, your customer isn't
Ian Altman:thinking, Oh, wow, I'm about to see the best presentation ever.
Ian Altman:Your customer, on the other hand, is thinking, Oh, great,
Ian Altman:there's an HDMI cable, there's a projector or a screen in our
Ian Altman:room. And this person's about to speak, I'm going to catch up on
Ian Altman:some much needed sleep right now, because it's nap time, I
Ian Altman:can get a good rest right now, and this is going to be
Ian Altman:fantastic. In fact, this is probably the best rest I'm going
Ian Altman:to get all week. I hope my Fitbit is dialed in with this,
Ian Altman:and I'm hoping the presentation goes at least three hours, so I
Ian Altman:get a good score on my Fitbit. It counts. It counts towards my
Ian Altman:sleep. Big mistake. So part of our challenge is that we walk
Ian Altman:into a meeting and we've set no expectations in advance. So the
Ian Altman:client is thinking, Oh, you're going to give us a presentation.
Ian Altman:The problem is, when we leave that meeting, the client doesn't
Ian Altman:think, wow, they really understood us. The client
Ian Altman:instead is thinking, wow, they covered a lot of stuff in that
Ian Altman:meeting. And I don't know whether or not they can help us,
Ian Altman:but they certainly spend a lot of time on their slides. Because
Ian Altman:what's in a typical presentation where a typical company's
Ian Altman:presentation includes five or six slides about your company,
Ian Altman:it may even include a picture of the building that you work in,
Ian Altman:like anybody cares. Maybe if you had animation of the building
Ian Altman:being constructed, it might be interesting, but otherwise,
Ian Altman:there's really no reason to talk about your building. Then
Ian Altman:there'll be a bunch of slides that talk about your products
Ian Altman:and services. We have this product. We have that product.
Ian Altman:Maybe there's something that talks about how many employees
Ian Altman:you have. You may as well talk about how many memory cards you
Ian Altman:have, or how many spare HDMI cables you have around the
Ian Altman:office, or what kind of mouse you use. It's all irrelevant to
Ian Altman:the client. They don't really care about any of that stuff. So
Ian Altman:you've got that presentation, and then maybe you have a case
Ian Altman:study or two. And a case study usually says, here's this
Ian Altman:client, and here's why we were so brilliant in helping them. So
Ian Altman:I've now given a presentation that talks about me and my
Ian Altman:company, maybe talks about our buildings and number of people
Ian Altman:and how many widgets we have somewhere. Then we talk about
Ian Altman:the different products that we have, and then we give some case
Ian Altman:study examples. At that point, our client has probably slipped
Ian Altman:into a coma, and maybe the hope is we convince them to buy some
Ian Altman:of our stuff. What should we do instead? If you want to get top
Ian Altman:results for your team, take a look at these same side selling
Ian Altman:Academy. Just visit same sideselling.com to learn more.
Ian Altman:Well, instead of taking this approach of talking about
Ian Altman:yourself, first thing you want to do is you want to set an
Ian Altman:expectation about the meeting that says, hey, we're going to
Ian Altman:be out there next Tuesday from nine to 10. I don't yet know
Ian Altman:that we can help you. I'm going to spend at least the first half
Ian Altman:of the meeting asking questions, to learn about your situation,
Ian Altman:to see if we can even help. How does that sound? Oh, it sounds
Ian Altman:great. Okay, by the end of the meeting, you and I will either
Ian Altman:conclude we don't have a fit looks like we might. We'll add
Ian Altman:our next steps together. How's that sound? That sounds great.
Ian Altman:So now I've just set an expectation that says I'm not
Ian Altman:coming to give a presentation, I'm coming to learn about them.
Ian Altman:It allows us to navigate through the same side quadrants that we
Ian Altman:teach in same side selling. It's in chapter four. It's on page
Ian Altman:76, of the actual paperback and hardback of the book. And it
Ian Altman:talks about us getting information about the client,
Ian Altman:about what they're trying to solve, why they need to solve
Ian Altman:it. How important is to solve that, what results or success
Ian Altman:looks like, and who else needs to be involved. That way, we
Ian Altman:have all the information they need to build a business case to
Ian Altman:make an informed decision. If you want to have a PowerPoint,
Ian Altman:what you can do is you can do what I call the Jeopardy board.
Ian Altman:So the Jeopardy board is similar to the board game. Jeopardy.
Ian Altman:People get to pick a tile. You can create a grid on the page
Ian Altman:with different topics, and then when the client brings up a
Ian Altman:topic, what you can say to them is you can have the screen blank
Ian Altman:the whole time and say, look, I've got some slides. If you
Ian Altman:mention a topic that I have something relevant to share with
Ian Altman:you, I'll turn the screen on. I'll show you that, and then
Ian Altman:we'll go back to our conversation. Has that sound
Ian Altman:great in that. Example, what you want to do is then be able to
Ian Altman:say to them, so here's someone else who was having a similar
Ian Altman:problem. Here's what that problem was costing them, here's
Ian Altman:why it was important for them to solve it. Here's what they were
Ian Altman:looking for in terms of an outcome. Fortunately, we were
Ian Altman:able to help them. And here's the outcome that they had. They
Ian Altman:ended up with this great outcome that's really almost utopian.
Ian Altman:How similar or different Do you think that would be to your
Ian Altman:situation? Now I turn off the screen, and now I'm back to a
Ian Altman:conversation. And in PowerPoint, you could just hit the letter B
Ian Altman:and it'll blank the screen, and they'll just get a black screen.
Ian Altman:And once that happens, the customer says, oh, now I'm back
Ian Altman:to this conversation, if I leave the PowerPoint up. The whole
Ian Altman:time. We've been taught since we were in kindergarten that it's
Ian Altman:nap time, and now I can catch some z's. Remember when you're
Ian Altman:going out to speak with people, it's not about you, it's about
Ian Altman:them. You can either show up as someone who is there to sell
Ian Altman:something, or someone who is there to solve something. We
Ian Altman:want to make sure we're showing up as someone who is there to
Ian Altman:solve, not sell. If you look, sound and act like a
Ian Altman:stereotypical salesperson, you're likely to get the
Ian Altman:response, no thanks just looking. If instead, I show up
Ian Altman:as someone who's there to solve. If I navigate the conversation
Ian Altman:so that we're having a discussion about what the
Ian Altman:client's trying to solve and how we might be able to help them,
Ian Altman:that's how we shorten sales cycles. Shift the focus from
Ian Altman:price to results and achieve better outcomes across the
Ian Altman:board, there are topics you'd like me to address. Just drop me
Ian Altman:a note to Ian at Ian altman.com and I will see you next time on
Ian Altman:the same side, selling podcast. So long you