Demand Creation Requires Urgency Creation

February 17, 2010
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What does Dwight from NBC’s The Office have to teach us about messaging?  In the thirteenth episode of the fifth season (“Stress Relief”), Dwight tries a unique tactic to teach fire safety (don’t try this at home… or the office).

Watch as much of this clip as you can handle:


You clearly don’t want or need to go to extremes, but creating urgency with context is the key to driving home your point.   How many times have you simply tuned out an alarm because you figured it was just another drill?

As I’m writing this, it’s Saturday in my small suburban community and the siren is going off, signaling it is noon.  But, no one gives it much attention in my house, or neighborhood.  It’s just the “noon whistle.”

Since I live near Milwaukee, WI, tornadoes, hail, and the ominous storms with “damaging” or “straight-line” winds can occur suddenly.  Interestingly, the siren that signals it is noon on a Saturday is the same one my community uses to signal a severe weather emergency.

The siren that is ignored on Saturdays at noon when the weather is nice can clear an entire park within minutes on a threatening summer Saturday.  I’ve heard that the only time the “noon whistle” does not happen is when the weather is bad.  Why?  The Public Safety department doesn’t want people to mistake it for a real emergency.

In other words, the siren uses the exact same sound, but you don’t know what it means without putting it in context.  The siren on a sunny Saturday at noon means nothing.  The same siren with dark clouds or wind means “take shelter now!”  Context gives the message its meaning.

Context Creates Urgency

It’s the same with your company’s marketing messages or value propositions.  Context creates urgency.  It’s what causes your prospect to take action versus listen passively to the same blah, blah, blah they’ve heard 100 times.

Many companies tell their story in a generic way, often comparing themselves to their competitors.  Hoping the prospect will care.  But, there’s no reason for a prospect to do anything different, if they don’t understand the potential impact on them.  Just like the siren during the sunny day vs. the cloudy day.  You need to clearly show your prospects the potential upside or downside of responding to or ignoring the challenges they face – not the features you offer.

This has never been more important for Marketing and Sales leaders to grasp.  As the economy struggles to escape the grips of a recession, you will be working harder than ever to create demand and create urgency — versus trying to beat competitors — just to build a respectable pipeline.

Sales Can’t Wait for BANT-qualified Leads

I recently spoke with a VP of Sales at one of the biggest software companies.  He said that his salespeople are spending significantly more time on “deal creation” than running traditional competitive sales cycles.  “Otherwise, they’d have nothing to do,” he said.

“Unfortunately, it’s the part of the job where they have the least messaging and least training,” he added.  “But, they know they have to do it if they have any chance of succeeding.”

Today more than ever, your marketing and sales efforts need to create opportunities before your prospects have determined a budget.  Why? Because there aren’t enough deals happening fast enough on their own to help your company make its number.

If you wait for Marketing to create awareness and then demand, and focus your sales people exclusively on managing BANT- (Budget, Authority, Need, Timing) qualified leads, you are going to hear a lot of crickets chirping on your pipeline calls.

One superstar salesperson recently told me, “If I had to feed my children based on waiting for Marketing leads, they’d starve.”  That’s why he approaches demand generation as a significant part of the job.

The Challenger Model

So many companies get their underwear wadded up over the competitive matrix.  You know the chart I’m talking about.  The one with all the competitors’ names and the images of half moons, quarter moons and full moons to show where you are different from your competitors.

That’s all well and good when you are buried deep in the weeds of a “competitive bake-off.” And you have all you can handle keeping up with RFP’s (requests for proposal).  But those days are a distant memory.  And, they aren’t coming back anytime soon.

You know what else has disappeared?  The days of the elongated, expensive dog-and-pony demo parades.  Prospect decision-makers are telling researchers they want a different kind of engagement with sales people.

According to the Corporate Executive Board’s Sales Executive Council (SEC), the sales profile most likely to succeed today is something called “The Challenger.”  Decision-makers tell SEC they prefer conversations with companies where they, the prospects, learn something new.  They want their sales interactions to provide a new, fresh insight by challenging the status quo and showing them a better way to do something.

Most companies struggle to equip their sales people to have these types of interactions.  Why?  It goes back to the initial premise of this article.  You have the context all wrong.

A company-focused context that emphasizes your product features and tries to take out your competitors on a competitive matrix has nothing to do with what your prospects are looking to accomplish.  You are arguing in your context, but the prospect is living in their context.

The real winners create and deliver messaging in a customer-focused context that points out problems and pitfalls that are threatening your prospect’s ability to meet their objectives, and then aligns your solution to their context.  You also show them how you can help avoid the landmines and pains others like them have experienced.

By getting into your prospect’s context, creating urgency to solve a problem, and showing them how you can uniquely help, you will significantly increase the chances they will care enough to start a buying cycle with you.

And, after all, that’s job #1 today.

- Timothy Riesterer
CMO and SVP Strategic Consulting at Corporate Visions Inc.
Co-author of Customer Message Management


Do You Take the Stairs?

November 16, 2009

Fun theory shows once again that human decision-making isn’t rational.

I always like to think that logic and rational thought rule when my prospects make a decision.  But, time and again I’m proven wrong.  That’s why you always hear us say in Power Messaging – “people decide on emotion and justify with facts.”

When I ran across this video it showed once again how emotional decision-making can be.  You and I know that taking the stairs instead of an escalator will provide more exercise.  And, we are fully aware that exercise is good for us.  (There’s plenty of research and data to prove that.)  So, it would be logical to assume that if we know what’s good for us, we’d always take the stairs instead of the escalator.  But, we don’t.

Watch this less than 2-minute video to see an interesting social experiment on getting more people to take the stairs.  It proves once again how we underestimate the power of emotions to impact a decision.

It’s the same when you go into a sales pitch with too much information.  Too much data.  Too many rational arguments.  You leave wondering why your prospect has paralysis by analysis.  It’s because you put her there.  And, as a result, she can’t clearly see enough reason to change from the status quo.

In fact, recent research indicates that 40% of sales cycles end in no decision.  Meaning your biggest competitive enemy is no longer an arch rival competitor, but prospects doing nothing.  In truth, however, this could be your biggest opportunity.  Taking market share from tough competitors is always difficult.  Getting a prospect to make a decision vs. waiting may be your next big growth opportunity.

Loosen the status quo with emotion
Just like the stairs were transformed into a piano, you need to create some emotion and excitement in your sales message.  If you want to loosen the status quo, you need a story that inspires your prospect to see the need for change.  Think about the video.  They were still stairs.  Weren’t they? They were still healthier for you than taking the escalator.  Right?  The “product” called stairs and the benefits of using them didn’t change.

Only the brand new story and the experience created around the stairs changed.  In fact, the stairs themselves became a giant prop to help sell the concept of stairs.  It engaged people’s body and mind in the product called stairs.  It made people want to try the stairs in a way that rationally explaining the benefits never did.

Where can you inject emotion?
You need a great story for your products and services.  The greatest stories are facts, wrapped in emotion.  For example, “the King died.  The Queen died.”  Those are the facts.  But, when you add emotion saying, “the King died, and the Queen died of a broken heart,” then you have a story.  You have a story that pulls people in, engages them and connects in a way that just the facts can’t.

We worked with a corporate, after-hours cleaning services company that offered a unique approach to cleaning.  It was a multi-color, microfiber cloth system that eliminated 90% of bacteria compared to just 33% with traditional cotton cloths.  You would think that fact would be enough to get prospects to bite.  It wasn’t until the company added a mini-story (drama and props) about how the multi-color cloths helped make sure your cleaners weren’t using the same cloth to clean your bathrooms as they did to clean your office telephone that they really got people’s attention.

Don’t be afraid to make your sales messages connect emotionally with your customers.  Help them see the need for change.  Help them see change is coming fast.  Help them see the impact of not dealing with the change vs. the impact of successfully adapting to the change. Creating enough emotional contrast between their current pain and the potential gain they can achieve by working with you.  And, then make your solution critical to their survival.


Making it Real: Using 3D Props to Help You Sell

March 17, 2009

A congressional hearing on tainted food might be the last place you’d expect to find powerful sales messaging.  But, when a congressman recently wanted to elevate the concern over unsafe food on supermarket shelves, he unleashed an emotionally potent presentation technique.

Check out this brief clip:

Your Brain Wants Concrete

A by-product of the information age is that many of the “solutions” being sold today are no longer physical objects. They have no shape, substance or concrete form that can be seen and touched.

Have you noticed that consumer software is sold in very elaborate packaging? It gives you, the buyer, the illusion that you are getting something substantial for your money. In reality, with the advancements in digital storage technology, you could easily sell the entire Microsoft Office Suite on a disposable chip the size of a postage stamp.

Why is it harder to sell intangibles? The answer goes beyond the logic of “getting something for your money.” The reason lies deep in the wiring of your brain.

Behavioral science has taught us that humans are more likely to be motivated to act or to change a behavior based on a stimulus that is concrete. Scientists describe “concrete” as something that can be experienced through one of your five senses (Touch, Taste, Smell, Hearing, or Sight).

Using a prop, a three dimensional physical object, when describing your solution is an effective technique to make your solution appear more “real.” The concept of unsafe food on supermarket shelves, while unsettling, is not as emotionally potent as a plastic jar full of potentially tainted products, and an accused executive having to take his chances by taking a bite.

Here’s One You Can Use

Let’s say that you have a solution that offers greater flexibility to your customers. How do you communicate an intangible concept such as flexibility?

golfTry this. Hold up a golf ball and say: “This golf ball represents your business. Golfers know there are three types of clubs that are used to drive this ball forward. If you want power to drive great distance you use a driver.  If you want a combination of power and accuracy you will use an iron. Lastly, if you want even greater accuracy and finesse you use a wedge or putter.”

Then say: “What’s unique about the solution you are seeing today is that it gives you the flexibility to have everything you need in your bag to ensure you move your company forward the best way possible.”

By using the golf ball as a prop, you take an abstract, sometimes overused concept and make it real and more meaningful to your buyer.

In your next face-to-face customer interaction, bring a prop into the message.

  • Make sure it is relative to the needs of your prospect
  • Make sure it supports your message rather than steals the show
  • Keep the story around the prop very concise and to the point
  • Bring the prop onto the scene and then take it off. Don’t continue to hold it once your point is made.

Using this simple messaging technique, you can make whatever you sell seem more real. Plus, you have just made it easier for your prospect to buy.

Have a good example of how you used a prop in a presentation?  Email us your story with My Prop Example in the subject and enter to win a wireless PowerPoint remote.


Just the Facts, Ma’am

October 14, 2008

What do webcams and Oreos have in common?
Well, not much, except that both are a part of a perfectly executed message. How can you tell a perfectly executed message apart from the others? Watch this video and ask yourself the following questions:

  • What is this commercial selling?
  • What do I remember?
  • How did it make me feel?

Business travel whisks me away from my family frequently. I am away from home two nights a week. How do I keep in touch with my kids? With a webcam, of course. If you have one, then I am willing to bet that you immediately connected with this advertisement. After seeing it only once, I could recite the dialogue, “Good night, Buddy.”  “Good morning, Dad!” I bet you could, too.

Do you remember details like the Asian music in the background? Do you think you could confuse the Oreo brand with some other brand? No way! Will you forget who brought this message to you? No way! It’s “milk’s favorite cookie.” They were able to convey a lot of emotion and brand-building in only 32 seconds.

So how can you quickly connect your message with your customers? How do you get them emotionally invested in what you’re selling? Do you do it by using “techno jargon” or “industry speak?” Those riveting and compelling words like integrated, flexible, and scalable?

Or, do you connect your message to the problems and challenges your customer is trying to solve – those ‘hot buttons’ that are holding them back from growing their business and accomplishing their business, financial and personal goals?

Create a vision for them. Show them what they’ll be able to do differently, how they’ll be able to solve those pains and problems that are holding them back and slowing them down. You’ll be well on your way to getting them emotionally hooked and connecting with them in a meaningful way.

Back to the Oreo commercial:
If I didn’t have a webcam, I would go out and buy one after seeing that commercial. I would go as far as saying that this commercial will sell far more webcams than Oreos! So why is it a perfectly executed message? Because they connected to me on an emotional level, and that emotion helped me remember their message. The ad connected the Oreo brand to my feelings around my family and that is a strong brand connection.

Use the creative half of your brain to find that connection to your audience, and don’t be afraid to stretch a little.

by Larry Florio,
Director, Partner and Channel Sales
Kronos Talent Management Division

Corporate Visions alumni are always on the hunt for good messaging examples. This video and accompanying article were sent to us by one such long-time alumnus.

Have you seen a great messaging example lately?
Let us know and get published.