Lack Of Emotion Kills Sales. Why Facts Paralyse

Anthony Robbins teaches that selling is about changing someone's emotional state. I agree and add that selling is first and foremost about the transference of belief. Another sales legend, Zig Zigar, passed away in 2012 and he taught me that logic and facts makes people think but emotion is what makes them act.

Professional selling can be compared with being a musician... endless personal rejection requiring a deep well of determination and you have to give your all to be successful... no holding back! At the heart of success is an authentic passion for making a positive difference in how we communicate and make a positive difference in the lives of our customers.

Passionate belief is the foundation on which success is built for entrepreneurs, sales people and those in the performing arts

We've all seen it on American Idol or Australia's Got Talent or The Voice – Keith Urban telling the contestant that they "didn't really sell it" or Simon Cowell on X Factor saying: "I didn't believe you." The greatest songs take us somewhere emotionally because they tell a story of love, tragedy, redemption... they reach in and tear our hearts out or lift us to heaven with happiness.

Johnny Cash is an amazing example of being authentic and he learned his lesson about being authentic during his first and only record company audition. He was performing gospel music but didn't really believe in the lyrics he was singing. It was disingenuous and the record company executive challenged him to sing about what he really believed. The darkness that tempered his belief in God was one the reasons that Johnny Cash dressed in black. This scene starring Joaquin Phoenix portrays exactly what happened. Watch the transformation...

We don't need to be all 'sunshine and light' to cause people to act. Numbers and facts are important for supporting a decision and building a business case but too much information simply causes the person say 'let me think about it'. The music video below has had >65,000,000 views and presents important facts in a way that evokes emotion. Watch this and shed a tear... another performance will lift your spirits at the end of this post.

Emotion has far more impact than 'production values' in any performance. Passion takes you further than mere professionalism. Yes, you've got to be able entertain and sing pitch-perfect... but that's just the ticket to the dance concert. It's ability to tell powerful true stories and transfer emotion that creates Grammy winners and sales legends.

You've got to believe in yourself, especially when others don't. Don't let the song inside you go unsung or as Wayne Dyer profoundly puts it: "Don't die with your music still inside of you." Stop telling and start selling what you passionately believe. Show it and dare to wear your heart on your sleeve!

As you put emotion into your message be sure to lead with why your audience should care. Have purpose in what you do by Leading with insight, building relationships of trust and creating real value

We must stop leading with who we are, what we do and how we do it and instead "lead with why". Simon Sinek masterfully communicates the importance of this, even with bad sound equipment. 

Why should someone meet with you? What do you believe and why should it be important to them?  What's the difference you you can make in their life or business?

Pharrell is another performer who gets the concept of building in a unique differentiator and it won him a Grammy in 2015. His productions with N.E.R.D. cemented his prowess as a producer blending rock, funk and hip hop. He didn't sound like anybody else that came before: the hybrid synergy created an 'original' sound. Differentiating your product and service in sales is paramount. You can differentiate your own selling style by pulling from old school and new school approaches.

Pharrell understands the Ogilvy "one-word" brand equity. Just check out his signature hat by Los Angeles hat designer Nick Fouquet. The hat has become an icon as has his sound. Some sales people I know wear a pocket square or rock a theme color for their company. I'm not suggesting a gimmick but if it's an authentic point of flair it may make sense. In no case am I the arbiter of business fashion but I can equate his hat to something that makes you say: 'wow, how cool'! What part of your solution, product or service stands out from the crowd? How can you work to uniquely differentiate yourself in the marketplace?

The last piece that makes Pharrell a master salesperson and performer is his ability to be a super networker. He is one of the most connected men in the entire music industry. His productions were in such hot demand because he helped pioneer a new technology called Reason by PropellerHead software that made tapestries of sound against canvases and mash-ups all digitally emulating analogue capabilities. He pushed the software to the limit and everyone wanted one of his tracks as a backdrop. You need to become a super networker in your industry, test out cutting edge software for B2B lead generation, trigger event tracking, drip campaigns and marketing automation and push the envelope as a B2B content marketer with LinkedIn Publisher. Think to yourself: What would Pharrell do here? How might he innovate?

Now it's your turn: What's your song inside? What metaphorical music is dying to get out? What other parallels do you see between music and selling?  How do you embrace positive emotion to cause others to act?

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Dima Doskoch - Souls reflection (Autoportrait)

The Closing Myth (Sales Pressure Traps)

I often ask senior executives what they think the biggest weakness is within their sales team. A common answer is that their sales people need to get better at closing. But here is the thing I've learned from three decades in the trenches...

The perceived problem is rarely the real problem – inability to close is usually a symptom of deeper issues.

In both complex enterprise selling and simple or transactional selling (with one decision-maker) there is a universal truth that must be embraced if we are to improve results –opening is far more important than closing.

Opening is the most important phase of the sale because the way we initiate the relationship determines the likelihood of success. The two critical issues in opening are 1) selecting the correct role to engage within the customer organisation, and 2) creating a conversation that provides value (through insights) for them.

1) Opening the corporate relationship with the right person

A common mistake in selling is to engage with the people who most easily agree to take a call or meet face-to-face. Inbound leads often come from recommenders and information gatherers who act for others. These people are keen to obtain information but can quickly become blockers who seek to deny us access to the real decision making power-base. We must carefully select the right entry point into every opportunity and by definition this decision-driver will often be difficult to reach.

If you are already engaged at the wrong level and struggling to elevate your conversations in an account, these questions that can earn the right to go higher.

  • “What is the business outcome this initiative has to deliver at a business case level?”
  • “What are the biggest risks in this project and what is your strategy to manage those risks?”

These questions also set the right agenda when engaging a real decision-maker because leaders care about delivering results and managing risk. The business case and change management issues always figure high in their thinking. But how do you open a conversation when you are proactively reaching out to a senior customer executive? 

2) Setting the right agenda on value through insight

No senior leader worth engaging is interested in us, our company or our products, services and ‘solutions’. They instead care about their own results, stakeholders and career. Although we are wired to talk about ourselves, what we do and how we do it; we must instead lead with why a conversation should matter to the other person.

We can create conversations of insight and value by truly understanding our best customers and the disruptive market trends that are relevant to our new potential clients. Selling strategically also means engaging early and the most senior level possible, setting an agenda that creates a positive bias toward us while engineering the requirements and their process in a way that makes it difficult for the competition.

The best sellers are sponsored down into the buyer’s organisation by the leader to then develop inside knowledge and support where closing becomes a natural next step of partnership rather than a white knuckle adventure filled with misplaced hope and reliance on luck.

Here is a 2 minute interview I did with John Smibert on closing.

The 3 prerequisites for closing

Asking for the customer’s business must be earned and only attempted after the buyer has signalled they are ready to take that next step. The seller should never attempt to close until these three areas are covered, or to use a baseball metaphor, don't run for home plate until these three bases have been covered:

  1. Establish trust and rapport (by being authentic and transparent).
  2. Agree compelling business value (as defined by them).
  3. Understand their timing and priorities (and their process for evaluation, selection and procurement if in complex enterprise environments).

Many sales people make the mistake of pressuring their potential client when the buyer isn't in a position to commit to the purchase. Managers often push their sales people to offer discounts on one hand and threats of a price increase on the other if the buyer fails the meet the seller’s deadline. I’ve seen sales managers instruct sales people to go and sit in the customer’s lobby for days until the purchase order is secured... desperation is the worst way to attempt a close. 

The bottom line in closing

Difficulty in closing is almost always a symptom of not managing the sale properly. Closing must be earned and objections are usually evidence of the fact that the seller has made mistakes by pushing before trust and value has been established and without the necessary understanding of the customer’s timing, priorities and processes.

All managers need to know that they cannot ‘manage by results’ and must instead focus on driving activities and actions while coaching strategy and skills. Ask the right questions of your sales people right at the beginning of the quarter and help them identify and execute the right actions that create progression of the sale. Firing-up the blow-torch with just days to go for hitting sales targets, after neglecting the inputs that create success, is a sure-fire way to damage relationships, undermine credibility and drive-down price and margin.

Special note of thanks to Jonathan Farrington for allowing me to base this blog post on a magazine article I wrote for Top Sales Magazine, published in March 2016. FREE subscription to Top Sales here.

topsalesworld.png

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by: Hugo A. Quintero G. Follow Venus Fly Trap - "King Henry"

The V Myth (Value Traps For Sellers)

The E-Myth by Michael Gerber is one of the most important business books you can read. He masterfully explains the myth of entrepreneurship where competent practitioners fool themselves in believing that their technical knowledge and skills automatically translate into being good business people. Chefs rarely make good restaurant owners, Good pilots rarely run airlines well, being a carpenter does not quality you to run a building business.

In my 35 years in business and professional selling, I've seen many fall into a similar trap with the product, service or solution they seek to sell in their markets...

The V-Myth
The features of what is being sold equate to benefits and value for buyers

Software sales people are often the worst offenders, showing potential buyers endless screens, menus, reports, tabs, or even lines of code; wrongly thinking that the amount of functionality builds perceptions of value. But the reality is that over-emphasis of features and functions can actually create price concerns in the mind of the buyer... "Wow, that looks complicated; how will our people use that without lots of training." Or "Upgrades and administration looks complex; our IT team is already stretched."

Sellers can easily fall into the trap of 'projecting value' on the basis that every aspect of what they offer can create a benefit for the client. "Feature - Function - Advantage - Benefit"... Really? Here is what the legendary Neil Rackham taught me about 'client benefits... "It's only a benefit if it solves a specific problem, acknowledged by the customer as being important."

"Value is in the eye of the buyer, not on the lips of the seller.

Sellers need to develop relationships of trust to be effective in their roles, but buyers are not lonely and looking for new friends. Buyers are instead busy and they need value from every interaction. Providing mere information is not enough; sellers need to provide genuine insights that educate and shape the way in which the buyer views their problems and opportunities. The very best sales people therefore focus on ‘value creation’ rather than ‘value projection’. They lead with insight and then ask well conceived questions designed to help them understand how the buyer defines value and how they assess risk.

The key to creating value is to understand the language of business and the language of leaders.

  1. The language of business is numbers, evidenced within a thorough and compelling business case! The basic equation for value is: Business Value = Benefit minus Cost and this is why it’s so important to ensure all ‘benefits’ are expressed in monetized form wherever possible. Yes it’s true that not all benefits save or make money for our customer. As examples; less stress or risk, improved productivity, less risk in non-critical areas… all of these can be difficult to justify in financial terms. But the language of business is nevertheless numbers, not words, so always ask yourself: How does this benefit drop to their bottom line or improve their balance sheet.
  2. The language of leaders is 'delivering outcomes and managing risk'. This is the currency of their brand... their ability to make the important things happen within their organization, for their customers and stake-holders.

These two factors above ensure that the customer is committed to purchase and here are some questions worth asking your potential client once you've established trust:

  • Where do you see the potential value in working with us?
  • What needs to be achieved at a business level with this initiative and where do you see the risks?

Once buyers are committed to change they then usually seek Value For Money (VFM) as they evaluate their options. Beyond Return On Investment (ROI) or Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), they usually have a weighted selection criteria to determine the best supplier.  Here is my formula for defining Value For Money (VFM). Is it Fit For Purpose (FFP) and from the supplier with the Lowest Risk Profile (LRP). Risk is an important factor often missed by sellers when they seek to show value for money. How does all of this compare with Total Cost of Ownership (or perhaps Payback Period)?

Think about this formula as you engage with customers who make comparative decisions, contrasting you with your competition. It is essential that we meet the exact requirements and also be perceived as representing the lowest risk. These two factors are then weighed against the total cost of ownership but take the effort to really understand how they assess this internally; don't make assumptions.

All of your assertions concerning value and risk need to be considered from the customer’s point of view… after all, the market determines the price and only the customer is qualified to call something a solution and determine the value to their business.

Once value is identified, you can then focus on crafting a value proposition which is unique and compelling in the way it delivers and manages risk. The way we sell is more important than what we sell and this is the essence of competitive differentiation.

It is usually best to position as the supplier in the 'Goldilocks Zone'. Big enough to deliver but small enough for them to be an important customer and have influence

Differentiation is essential because customers always have a choice of suppliers who can do the job for them. Whether you are selling soap or semiconductors, widgets or ideas, products or services, bundled value or real solutions – your value proposition must be compelling.

The solution must go beyond mere features of your product or service because the real problem is almost never uniquely solved by one particular product over another. Rather than the product you sell, maybe the customer actually needs a reliable supply-chain, prompt service, effective change management or something else. The product or service you sell is not a solution until it is fully aligned with addressing the real problems and delivering genuine business value.

Every product, service or solution is only worth what the market will pay for it. Your value proposition must therefore be focused on specific and tangible benefits for the customer, and directly linked to the resolution of their specific problems or opportunities – the bigger the better. Features do not necessarily equate to benefits or represent genuine value for the customer. The most powerful differentiated value propositions usually include your people, expertise and methodologies; not just your product and service. Government buyers assess value from a blend of functionality (fit for purpose) and perceived risk; price is then included in the equation to ultimately determine value for money.

Individuals and organizations universally seek best value and lowest risk. The cheapest product or solution can be perceived as higher risk and inferior value. Value is defined by the buyer, not the seller. Comparative perceptions are determinative so when seeking to identify and leverage your unique value, ask yourself the following:

  • What do we offer that is of business value to the prospective customer, aligned to their specific needs and delivering tangible benefits?
  • Is our product, service or solution part of a strong business case?
  • How does the buyer prioritize projects and are we aligned with the required return on investment, payback period or net present value calculation?
  • Who and what is the competition, and what are our comparative strengths and weaknesses?

Beyond these things, what combination of the following represents a compelling overall value proposition compared with the competition?

  • Product or service features enabling business benefits
    • Service offerings that reduce risk and deliver business value
  • Individual and team skills and proven domain expertise, industry knowledge and methodologies that assure successful delivery and cultural fit with the customer
  • Business model or geographic presence enabling lower risk or providing better efficiency

The market determines price and only the customer is qualified to assess value for money. Everything we sell must help customers improve revenue and/or margin; or reduce cost, time or effort; or reduce their serious risk.

How can you create value for your customers? What insights do your offer? What business outcomes can you help them deliver? What risks can you help them manage?

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: GotCredit - Value

Nine Conversations For Sales Leaders

I first met Bernadette McClelland online as a result of the LinkedIn experiment I was undergoing by posting a blog a day for 90 days. We had a couple of conversations and she followed up by sending me a copy of Seth Godin’s book ‘What To Do When It’s Your Turn’.  That engagement resulted in us being part of a collaborative effort to elevate the profession of selling here in Australia through the formation of the Sales Masterminds Australasia with John Smibert.

Shortly afterwards I read Bernadette’s published book, ’The Art of Commercial Conversations - When It’s Your Turn To Make A Difference’ and what struck me is that it addresses nine (9) commercial conversations that all salespeople, business owners and sales leaders must have, not just with their customers, but also with themselves.

Her book is based on the innovative and trailblazing ‘Conscious Selling Model’ - a model that has been designed based on us now being in the Connection Economy and we know we are all deserving of a new discussion that helps us better adapt and align. 

Her model highlights three areas of leadership needed today for all salespeople - Personal Leadership and the approach to market salespeople need to take, Thought Leadership and the focus of commercial conversations and Sales Leadership which peels back the layers on what a salesperson’s intention must be to become a cutting edge modern day seller.

What I thought was extremely beneficial for my readers was the following ‘Manifesto for Conscious Sellers’ based on her nine commercial conversations.

  • CONVICTION - The Art of Rebellion - It’s more than loving what we do. It’s having the courage to be seen, to rebel, to take our turn, to change our rules, to step outside our fears and love what we bring to the table.
  • CONNECT - The Art of Mindfulness - It’s more than kumbaya and yogis. It’s the opportunity to centre ourselves in a busy and noisy world so we can stand grounded and confident and be present to our buyer.
  • CONTACT - The Art of Social - It’s more than a playground where we go to play. It’s the auditorium where we have the opportunity to team up, play our hearts out and be seen by those who will pay to see us.
  • CONTENT - The Art of Story - It’s more than features, advantages and benefits. It’s the ability to tell a story that captivates, and spread that story to the world through messages that create value.
  • CONSULT - The Art of Tension - It’s more than asking questions. It’s creating a space to get personal, to be bold, to push the boundaries for all the right reasons and to create change in our clients’ worlds.
  • CONTEXT - The Art of Meaning - It’s not about what you think it’s about. Its essence is in interpretation, variation, listening for understanding and being prepared to get it wrong.
  • CONTRACT - The Art of The Ask - It’s not about closing the deal. It’s about learning to say yes and learning to say no, and understanding the magic that happens in between.
  • CONSPIRE - The Art of Collaboration - It’s not about keeping in touch, customer service or moments of truth. It’s about working together, joint ventures and collaboration.
  • CONTRIBUTE - The Art of The Start - It’s not about the money or the profits or shareholders. It’s about the meaning and the purpose and the stakeholders.

To finish up, Bernadette also adds by asking this question: 

'How Relevant Are You?

Just like anything in nature, if something is not growing and contributing, then it is dying. Business is no different. Business is a living organism and anyone who thinks differently will die the death of a thousand extinct sellers. Just like Willy Loman in ‘Death of a Salesman’, if you aren’t making change happen, developing personally, or being self motivated, people won’t believe in you. It’s not as simple as Willy thought, “about being likeable through fakery, looking good, charming people and cracking jokes.” People know when you are faking it. People buy people. If you’re not for real, they won’t buy you. People want the real deal and the human element.'

Today, it’s all about measuring your relevance in the market through ideas you have for your customer’s growth, in addition to the level of connection you have with your buyers. But more than that, it’s about contribution - to your customers and for your customers, and the five word formula found in the intention of one simple question, ‘How Can I Help You?’

Bernadette McClelland leads the conversation around Conscious Selling. She successfully works with SMB’s and sales teams around the world to help them differentiate themselves when they don’t know how or when they’re not making their numbers and they don’t know why. You can visit her website here  orpurchase a copy of her book here.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by: Bernadette McClelland

Jaw-Dropping Marketing That You Won't Believe

Have you ever wondered if we will look back at this period in time and shake our heads in disbelief... how did we allow technology to make us dumber and create societal disengagement. If you had a career in sales... how did I allow the product to be the message?

Every bad idea seemed good at the time

 Do we now live in the age of digital narcissism? Are we witnessing the destruction of good manners and etiquette? Is written language being butchered by social media shorthand? Is the facade of 'social following' masking the absence of human connection? Is the avalanche of content across our screens driving digital distraction and destroying our ability to ponder and learn?

This short clip from Mad Men is more documentary that entertainment... and the advertisements below it are from the same era. They will make your jaw drop with laughter or anger... yet they are all 100% real. The appalling thing is that these types of ads are still happening today in many third world countries! 

How anyone can look themselves in the mirror while they sell a product that kills their customers is beyond me. Advertising reflects the values of society and wow we have changed. I never knew that my dad wore his business shirt and tie to bed so my mother knew who deserved breakfast in bed the next morning!

But at least wives had Pep to get them ready for the evening after a day of house work... I think I am digging a hole I may never escape from...

And for the children in the home who were not satisfied with second-hand cigarette smoke, there was always cocaine gum to stop the whining and get them off to sleep...

Or maybe beer flavoured breast milk to help them sleep through the night... not to mention the nutritional benefits of hops and malt. Who would have ever known that beer is an appetizing and stimulating tonic?

And to get them going in the morning, nothing works better than a massive sugar hit... adding caffein is all the better.

No-one in marketing or sales should push anything they don't believe in. Here is a brilliant example of how marketing and sales can make products attractive to consumers. It highlights how the talent of those who know how to influence can be used for good.

Make sure you believe in what your product, service or solution does for your clients. Be a force for good in world and be clear about the positive difference you make for all stakeholders. Then transfer emotion rather than information.

Click here to see why the power of belief is truly amazing

Join the conversation here. How do you make sure your sales and marketing efforts are completely ethical and that they will remain so after the passage of time?

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

 

Is LinkedIn The World's #1 Blog Platform?

Top Sales World is the world's leading magazine and online community for those in professional sales. Once a year they publish their list of the top 50 sales and marketing bloggers globally. Last year when I reviewed the list I was struck by the fact that not one awarded author was primarily publishing on LinkedIn – the biggest blogging platform in the world.

"But if the world's #1 Blogging platform is LinkedIn, why has no-one who publishes exclusively on their platform been recognised as a leading blogger?"

That's exactly what I thought and last year I set the goal of being the first author to be be independently recognised as one of the world's best bloggers while publishing exclusively on the LinkedIn platform. Today that goal was achieved when Top Sales World recognised me in the 2016 global Top 50 bloggers in the field of sales and marketing. Click on the image below to see the full list.

I asked Jonathan Farrington at Top Sales World if anyone else in the Top 50 blogged exclusively in LinkedIn and he responded by telling me I was the only one. But why is this the case when LinkedIn boasts well over 400 million members with more that 1 million who actively publish more than 150,000 posts a week. Beyond these staggering numbers, consider these reasons for why authors should embrace the platform:

  • It can reach an audience based on context and relevance with their powerful Pulse Channels and intelligent mobile apps to enhance content readership and interactive engagement. Below are the free subscription channels along with the audience numbers.
  • It has unrivalled reach within the more than 400 million members. The average post is viewed by professionals in 21 industries and 9 countries.
  • It maps the business social graph with deep analytics and reporting
  • It engages a community in discussion while providing incredible detail about those who like, share, comment and engage in collaborative conversation.
  • It is simple to use and elegantly designed for PC, laptop, tablet and mobile devices
  • About 45% of readers are in the upper ranks of their industries and this includes managers, directors, vice presidents and CEOs.

These are the factors that convinced me 24 months ago to stop blogging on my own website and go all-in on LinkedIn. I decided that I needed to go and be where my clients are [LinkedIn] and surrendered the desire to capture contact details for a mailing list or newsletter... I had an epiphany:

"I must stop seeking to 'interrupt and push' with sales and marketing and instead 'attract and engage' through relevant insights and high value content."

This meant that I chose to allow my potential clients to be in complete control. I allowed them to choose whether to contact me based of the value I provided in advance of me ever charging them a fee or attempting to pitch my value or services.  So, what were the results and do 'social selling' strategies actually work? Hell yeah!!!!!

I have attracted 85,000 followers of my LinkedIn blog and incredible connections in just 24 months. I have more clients than I can cope with. I've been recognised as the #1 influencer on professional selling in Asia-Pacific. I have been paid to speak at numerous events as a direct result of my LinkedIn publishing and activity.

I have also been recognised as a Top 50 blogger globally using LinkedIn exclusively and I am in negotiation for new book publishing contracts. When I took a white paper I wrote and re-purposed it to be LinkedIn blog post,it received in excess of 235,000 reads. Click on the image below to see the power of moving away from a website where this content received less than 100 reads as a white paper and onto LinkedIn where the audience and customers are.

I've adopted an altruistic approach where I freely provide my insights and intellectual property and avoided any form of 'click-bait'. I am well on my way to one million reads of my content and 100,000 followers in LinkedIn. But publishing content is not just important for authors. Here are four reasons for sales people to write content with their managers and marketing department supporting them with ideation, proof-reading, editing and publishing tools:

  1. Educate yourself and develop domain knowledge and expertise
  2. Connect with industry leaders to build your sphere of influence
  3. Attract clients and an audience to support your business goals
  4. Build your personal brand evidencing credibility, value and insight

In an online world we are known by who we are connected to and what we publish. According to IDC research, 75% of buyers research the seller before engaging. What do they see when they view your profile? We want people to see a credible domain expert worthy of trust and an investment of  time. We must also create a strong personal brand and here is how to begin.

The 'Updates' section of LinkedIn is also very powerful, and scheduling tools such as Buffer make the process easy for sharing other people’s articles, blogs, research, infographics and Tweets. Content can easily be sourced by identifying influencers in the market and individual content capture and scheduling is as simple as clicking a button in the web browser.

Sales people must consciously associate themselves with leaders who are respected by their potential clients and transform their LinkedIn profile to be a personal brand micro site instead of an online CV. Connect with leaders admired by your clients and then share their content as a 'content aggregator' who adds your own insights... working with other people's content is the easiest way to begin your content publishing journey.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Warrior of Persuasion or Engineer of Value?

The world of sales is tough and seems to be getting tougher.  I recently had a conversation with John Smibert, the most influential person in professional selling in Australia, concerning the emerging challenges facing B2B sellers in 2016 and I provide recommendations on how we need to respond in order to succeed.

The global economy will continue to be flat for years to come and the lack of economic confidence, combined with significant changes in the way buyers execute their procurement research and vendor engagement, means that sellers must continually adapt the way they sell. 

Warriors of Persuasion must learn to become Engineers of Value.

The challenges we face in 2016 and beyond include the fact that the customer are becoming more risk adverse - they are applying committee based decision-making to achieve consensus. Average deal sizes are also getting smaller which means sellers must figure out how drive greater efficiency to achieve sales quota. Other factors include the need for sales and marketing to come together to create superb 'buyer experience' mapped against the buyer's journey with fewer sales people and better uses of technology.

Watch or read the full interview below. This will be of value to the CEO, CFO, CSO, CMO, sales leaders and their teams in order to build and execute their sales and revenue strategy.

Interview Transcript

John: Tony, it’s early in the year of 2016 - you've talked a lot about challenges through 2015, and how the B2B sales world is changing and there’s more and more challenges. What do you see as the key challenges we’re going to face in the next 12 months?

Tony: Well, I think economically the economy, the Western world economy is going to be pretty tough for the next few years, maybe as long as five to seven years. I don’t think there’s going to be a big recession or anything, but I just think every purchasing decision inside an organisation is going to get scrutinised.

John: It’s just limping along, the economy, isn’t it?

Tony: It is. When you combine that with some other trends that are just remaining with us, buyers tend to be very risk-averse and sceptical of the claims made by sellers. Increasingly inside organisations they’re also looking for consensus, and the reality is there’s more than five people or five buying groups in big organisations involved in every decision.

John: Well, The Challenger Sale research indicates 5.4 is the average, right, in medium to large corporates.

Tony: Yes, it’s true. And it’s not 5.4 people, it’s 5.4 committees or bunches of people with competing agendas. And increasingly what happens is that the old model of selling, where you track down those individual buyer personas and craft and tailor your message to them, so that when they all sit around that boardroom table at a later date, they go “Yes, we know this supplier, we’re comfortable – let’s go ahead.” That’s not the case today. They may know us, but they can’t reach agreement internally, they can’t achieve consensus internally, they don’t want to cross-fund each other’s initiatives with who’s deriving the greatest benefits.

John: That’s the key message coming out of The Challenger Customer book that I’ve just read.

Tony: Exactly, which actually is a really brilliant book. Consensus based decision-making, distrust of ROI, all of those things are making it incredibly difficult to sell. The thing we need to do is we need to modernise our whole approach and get focused on leading with insight and value. People have known this for ages, but we need to make it a reality for salespeople so that they can help customers focus on outcomes and managing risk as the way of differentiating in how they sell.

John:  And from my understanding, we need to get very good at helping organisations make a decision by working with them in a collaborative way and understanding how those decisions are made inside organisations.

Tony:  Yes, it’s true.

John: Dealing with the right people that are going to make it happen internally.

Tony:  Correct. Well - in Corporate Executive Board Challenger speak - it’s look for the mobiliser, look for the change agent inside the buyer organisation, but help them build a compelling business case that can achieve consensus within the group internally. It’s not so much about being a warrior of persuasion in selling, we need to be engineers of value and do the engineering and partnership with the customer.

John: So, you see that as a key change in the way we approach the B2B business of selling in the next 12 months.

Tony: Yes. And in many, many instances we’re just going to have to get over the fact that average deal sizes are going to be smaller, and that we need to invest in longer-term relationships with our customers, that those revenues will come over the medium and long term; we’re not going to get huge revenue hits upfront with people anymore. That’s part of how the delivery of cloud software is changing things as well.

John: Yes, I understand that, and I think that’s going to apply not just in software but in lots of different industries.

Tony: Yes. And the last thing is we need to get good at creating customer experience that supports buyer journey, so sales and marketing need to finally, finally come together and start to think about that. I think there’ll be fewer field salespeople, but there’ll be lots of different sales roles inside organisations, as we make sure that we map how the buyer is evaluating and going to market and looking.

John: So, the alliance or collaboration or whatever you call it between sales and marketing is going to become more and more critical is what you’re saying, around that buyer journey.

Tony: Very much so, yes.

John:  Okay. Good advice. It’s going to be interesting for a lot of people out there, to work out how they change their strategy and adapt to be able to work in that environment. I look forward to learning more from you as we all go through that process.

Tony: Thanks, John!

John:  Thanks, Tony!

This article appears here within one of the planet's top 50 blogs on sales and marketing and the only top 50 blog within LinkedIn. Thanks John Smibert for the video interview and transcript which can also be found on on the Strategic Selling Group website where he interviews sales thought leaders from around the world. 

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Hans Splinter - Viking

CRM Truth – Insights From Jason Jordan

Last week I was speaking at a conference in London for Top Sales World along withJason Jordan who is the legendary co-author of Cracking The Sales Management Code. In his book he highlights the insanity of what many seek to measure and manage within their Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems. This is not a beat-up of CRM because...

Without a well implemented CRM, you have no chance of being truly customer centric. Nor can you create awesome customer experience and properly manage customer lifecycle without a good CRM

Both Jason and I therefore believe in the value of CRM but we are equally intrigued by the fact that so many implementations fail. Jason has been kind enough to share his thoughts here on why, and how to ensure success. The rest of this post (in italics) is from the keyboard of Jason Jordan. 

jason1.jpg

It has been 15 years since Gartner famously reported in 2001 that 50% of all CRM implementations were considered failures, and various studies since then affirm the fact that sales forces are still not satisfied with CRM. In fact, we work with some of the most successful sales forces in the world, and all of them are working intensely to improve CRM’s impact on their businesses. So why do we remain so vexed by this software? Why do the smartest and most motivated executives on the planet still rub their foreheads and wrinkle their brows when they consider their next steps with CRM?

When conducting the research for our book Cracking the Sales Management Code, we spent several years observing how company measure and manage their sales forces. This gave us unique insights into the intersection between the technology of CRM and the practices of sales management. We believe that sales will continue to battle with CRM until we fundamentally shift our thinking in four key ways.

It’s Not About Managing Customer Relationships

We continue to use the moniker ‘CRM’ for our sales force’s software, as though we’re using it to manage our customer relationships. If we’re honest with ourselves, we actually use these systems to manage our sales forces. Sure there are customers on the other side of our salespeople, but we really want the software to automate important selling tasks like aligning territories, managing pipelines, winning opportunities, and generating forecasts. For these purposes, we prefer the somewhat abandoned term Sales Force Automation (SFA) to CRM, because it describes what we’re really trying to do. It’s a subtle change, but if we started calling this software what it is, then we could begin to think more specifically about what we are building it to do.

It’s Not About ROI

One of the most cited measures of CRM failure is a low return on investment. In our opinion, ROI analyses should no longer be required to justify CRM’s place in the sales force. ROI analyses were developed to help evaluate competing alternatives for capital investment, but CRM is no longer an investment alternative. CRM is now corporate infrastructure that’s required to operate a sales force, just like e-mail, mobile phones, and laptops. Try searching the web for articles on the “ROI of e-mail.” You’ll find no results, because e-mail is not an investment – it’s an expense. So is CRM. We are at least a decade removed from the time when CRM was a strategic investment that required careful consideration and justification. Let’s disregard the ROI calculations for CRM and start looking for more meaningful ways to measure its business impact.

It’s Not About User Adoption

Most of our clients are obsessed with ‘user adoption’ of their CRM tool, and it is a common metric of a successful implementation. It shouldn’t be. User adoption is an outcome of good CRM, not a measure of it. Someone once told me that when you lead a horse to water, your goal shouldn’t be to make the horse drink – it should be to make the horse thirsty. Similarly, when you lead a salesperson to a CRM, your goal shouldn’t be to make them use it – it should be to make them want to use it. Reporting ‘low user adoption’ implies that the salespeople are somehow to blame, when the underlying cause is a tool that isn’t compelling to sellers. How about tracking a metric like ‘Percentage of Reps Who Love Using CRM.” That would be a better measure of a successful implementation, because it would shift the business challenge from getting users to log in to providing users with irresistible and unavoidable functionality.

It’s Not About Technology

Since CRM has technology at its core, we fall into the trap of thinking better technology will solve our problems. But can it? Today’s CRM technology is astonishingly better than it was 15 years ago, but research says it’s just as big a failure from a business perspective as it was in the beginning. What we need is not another iteration of CRM technology (call it CRM 15.0) – what we really need is to teach sales forces what to do with CRM. It’s like we’ve taught millions of people how to get in and out of their cars, but we haven’t taught them how to drive. We’ve taught sellers how to log in, but we haven’t taught them how to use the data to win more deals. We’ve taught their managers how to log in too, but we haven’t taught them how to use the data to coach more effectively. CRM technology has become amazing over the last 15 years, but our business practices haven’t. It’s time to stop focusing on what’s on the computer screen and start focusing on what’s in the user’s head.

CRM has been with us for a long time, but it remains underleveraged because we are viewing CRM all wrong. We need to concede that we don’t really use it to manage customer relationships – we use it to manage our sales forces. Our goal shouldn’t be to achieve an ROI or to boost user adoption – it should be to provide an invaluable service to our sellers. And the focus shouldn’t be on revolutionizing the technology – it should be on revolutionizing the sales force’s ability to use the data it provides. If we can’t put CRM into the context in which it belongs, we’ll be reading the same research findings for the next 15 years… and beyond.

Thanks Jason for sharing your wisdom and here also are other blog posts I've written about CRM, some with other thought leaders:

I highly recommend you buy Jason's book, Cracking The Sales Management Code, the best ever written on effective sales management.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: David Blackwell - Promotion

Sell More By Going Beyond The Sales Process

Dave Stein is legend in the sales training industry and he has teamed-up with Steve Andersen to publish an essential book for anyone in business-to-business selling. I just finished reading Beyond The Sales Process and its timeless wisdom is wrapped within a modernized approach achieving sales success by intelligently creating value for customers.

"The customer is the only one qualified to call something a solution. The customer is also the one who defines and measures value" Tony Hughes

Just as with the best sales leaders, Dave Stein has always advocated sales people define ‘value’ through the eyes of the customer, but this book explains exactly how to do it by researching thoroughly and then engaging on the basis of insight and value. Dave and Steve make the very important point that alignment is more important than persuasion and they highlight the core reasons for an existing supplier being replaced or a seller failing to win. Here is an excerpt form the book.

In nearly every case where a provider was replaced, misalignment existed between the client’s performance challenges and the provider’s ability to drive changes that would address and overcome them. Sales performance initiatives fail for other reasons, as well:

  • The supplier/seller is unwilling or unable to understand how their customer buys;
  • The supplier/seller does not understand how the customer defines value;
  • The supplier/seller does not understand what is motivating and putting pressure on the customer, particularly when it comes to their external drivers, business objectives and internal challenges;
  • The supplier/seller cannot articulate business value to the customer;
  • People in sales, account management, and sales leader roles are unsuited for their jobs;
  • There is no overall methodology, with the relevant processes in place, to drive sales excellence, or the existing methodology is not widely complied with and adhered to;
  • The supplier/seller has little or no understanding of the political forces within a customer’s organization; or
  • The supplier/seller has little or no understanding of its own competitors.

If you’re a fan of Challenger Selling but have struggled with how to implement the concept of engaging on the basis of a provocative insights; then Beyond The Sales Process is the book for you. This is because the book leads with strategies for truly understanding a potential customer and then differentiation through the way you engage rather than with what you’re selling.

Dave and Steve know that the very best sales people today are engineers of value, not warriors of persuasion. These sellers research and prepare before engaging at the right level in the buyer’s organization as they create insightful conversations that lead to the collaborative creation of a business-case value.

Another brilliant aspect of the book is the concept of thinking beyond closing the sale to instead regard success as only occurring once the client is realizing the benefits of your product, service or solution… and with them being advocates for you in the market. 

If you only read one book in 2016 on business-to-business selling then this has to be it! Beyond The Sales Process is filled with actionable insights, illuminating case studies, and it is intelligently written from academic solid ground – logical, compelling and thought provoking. It enables any seller to create a winning sales process that goes beyond being customer centric to truly understand the world of the customers. The most successful companies have their customers as evangelists by creating alignment and value in partnership with the customer. The book answers these impotant questions:

  • Why should your customers engage with you before they discover your value?
    • How do you create buyer alignment and remove the tension from the sales process?
  • How do you create market advocates who extend your reach and influence to create greater success?

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: DVIDSHUB - Continuing Promise 2011

Should You Invest In LinkedIn Or CRM?

The world of business-to-business selling is changing and I recently had a conversation with John Smibert, one of the most influential people in professional selling globally, concerning the roles of LinkedIn and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software.

LinkedIn has the hearts and minds of salespeople because it helps them find the people they need to build pipeline and also the next employer to progress their career.

CRM, on the other hand, should be the engine for managing sales process but sadly is often a 'manage-up' reporting tool. Sales people are often reluctant to embrace CRM because they feel their contacts, relationships, prospects and pipeline belong to them personally more than they do for their employer.

But CRM can be transformational when it becomes the 'single source of truth' about prospects and clients to manage the entire customer lifecycle for marketing, sales, services, support and finance. The very best implement CRM as a coaching platform for sales managers with their people to review opportunity qualification and discovery, call plans, relationship mapping, sales stage progression with action tracking, close/win plans, and much more... all integrated within the CRM.

LinkedIn helps build opportunity pipeline. CRM manages sales opportunities. LinkedIn's Sales Navigator enables you to integrate the world's most powerful contact database and engagement platform to the leading CRM systems.

LinkedIn and CRM [should] solve different problems and both systems create value in their own right. Each organisation needs to understand how they can extract the best value. Watch this video interview and a full transcript is below. 

Interview

John: Hey, you've been a CEO of a CRM provider in recent years in Australia. And you would have seen lots of changes in the way CRM have been progressing. You’ve also see a lot of the problems with the implementations of CRM, and now you’re doing a lot of work with LinkedIn. I’m sensing LinkedIn is overlapping with CRM a lot. How do you see the relationship between LinkedIn and CRM, and how people are using LinkedIn now almost to do a CRM?

Tony: Yes, it’s very interesting, because there’s people asking the question “Will LinkedIn become the new CRM?”

John: I've heard that being asked.

Tony: Yes, and it’s an intriguing question. I know, for example, that Salesforce look at LinkedIn, and they’re a little bit worried about the way that LinkedIn is really moving into what they traditionally see is their space. There’s a few things that we know are true, and that is that LinkedIn has the heart, souls and minds of salespeople, and CRM does not. CRM is historically very much a reporting up managing tool for an organisation. And the way sales reps feel, the way they’re wired is their contacts and relationships and prospects and pipeline belong to them more than they do their employer.

John: Is that really true? I feel that a good sales guy represents his or her company.

Tony: Yes, he does. In inside sales maybe not so much, but certainly for field sales and business-to-business selling. Salespeople tend to feel the way they believe that they operate really is as a hired gun.

John: And it’s probably represented in the fact that a tenure in sales jobs tends to be only about, what, three years these days, on an average.

Tony: Yes, most.

John: And they therefore know they’re going to move on to another company.

Tony: Well, the statistics are really scary. It depends on whose numbers you believe, but anywhere from 40% to almost two-thirds of B2B salespeople don’t make the numbers every year, and a lot of it is not the fault of the salespeople. The way that organisations are doing territory planning and rolling out quotas, they have their blowtorch out on people, they expect them to get up to speed very quickly. So, you’re right; the way an employment contract is written is very much that those prospects are the property of the employer, not the employee.

John: Interesting to see whether it can be enforced though.

Tony: Well, you've got to honour the law of self-interest in any negotiation of putting together business models. So, my view is that what salespeople want to do is they want to build good quality pipeline. The biggest problem they face is, yes, they need to manage expectations of management internally, which they do through a CRM. But the biggest problem they’ve got is they need to build quality pipeline, and LinkedIn enables them to research, find and connect with people, monitor for trigger events, engage early at senior levels, stalk them, in essence, in social to find out what are their interests – I mean, at a business level, not at a Facebook, personal level – at the business level, find out what’s driving industry so they can go and connect with people.

John: LinkedIn is the best engagement tool I’ve ever seen – it’s brilliant for me.

Tony: It is incredible.

John: I can use LinkedIn to engage with anybody I want to target, and I can build a relationship well before I ever meet anybody.

Tony: Yes. And Sales Navigator, which is the highest level of subscription in LinkedIn at the moment, when you combine the power of LinkedIn Publisher for evidencing your credibility and building relevance for the markets that you target, with Sales Navigator for seeing social proximity, doing your research, see who’s connected to the people you’re targeting to get warm introductions – those things are incredibly powerful.

John: So, CRM providers, watch out? How should they be looking at this?

Tony: Well, I think CRM has a role in that CRM is ideal for sales process automation. People need to think about the sales methodology that they use inside their organisation, which is different to sales process. They need to enable their process within their CRM, and then use CRM as a coaching platform to create transparency and help people sell. The weak link in the revenue chain for organisations is sales management. They need to get out of their spreadsheets or the CRM systems, and coach their people.

John: Yes. And that’s the reason a lot of CRM implementation’s a fail, right? They’ve been put in for management, not for the sales guy.

Tony: Correct. The first rule of having a successful implementation of any technology, including LinkedIn or CRM, is serve the user, the user in this case being a field salesperson. And clearly LinkedIn serves the user really well – in their minds help them get their next job as well, so the law of self-interest is honoured – but it helps them build pipeline. They need to implement CRM in a way that helps them execute process.

John: I don’t think LinkedIn are looking to replace a Salesforce.com or a Sugar, right?

Tony: Correct, correct.

John: So, it’s really looking at how do we, as an organisation in sales management, use both tools, and make sure we leverage them both, and make sure they work well together.

Tony: To me there is a role for both. And LinkedIn is incredibly powerful for monitoring trigger events, building connections, creating pipeline for, in essence, salespeople to become micro-marketers, and take responsibility for building their own pipeline. Once they’ve identified an opportunity, it belongs in CRM so you can manage that process.

John: Exactly. So, I think that’s cleared it up very much in my mind. Thanks, Tony – I think there'll be a lot of value for the viewers.

Tony: Thanks, John!

****************

Thanks John Smibert for the video interview and transcript which can also be found on on the Strategic Selling Group website where he interviews sales thought leaders from around the world. More of John Smibert's interviews with Tony Hughes:

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Garrett Coakley - Decisions, decisions

How To Generate Your Own Free Press Coverage

LinkedIn is the most powerful platform in the world for creating a strong personal brand with a network that transforms your professional life and business results.

If you're a consultant or own your own business, or if you are responsible for media and press coverage then this information will reveal how to gain direct access to those who can give your brand a rocket-ship ride.

LinkedIn has far more value to offer than merely helping with recruiting and selling

This may surprise you but you're reading this article on the number 1 publishing platform in the world. LinkedIn has well over 420,000,000 members (with two new people joining every second) and their publishing platform, Publisher and the Pulse Channels, have unrivalled reach and engagement. LinkedIn is the most important software for anyone in business because it enables them to research, connect and engage potential employees, customers, partners, investors; and also journalists, media personalities, producers, publication editors, conference organizers... everyone who matters in building a business.

Access to the media was once the exclusive domain of Public Relations (PR) agencies who built relationships and knew how to pitch a client's value for press coverage. PR agencies can still play a role today but usually because their clients lack the ability to write good content or don't have expertise in how to create a multi-channel marketing plan. Even for those who can cover these two prerequisites, many then don't understand the power of social platforms such as LinkedIn.

According to a survey by Arketi media group, almost 95% of journalists and editors are on LinkedIn and 62% rate it as their preferred professional networking platform

I recently caught-up with Alex Pirouz, founder of Linkfluencer which is the best online training for becoming masterful at using LinkedIn.  I highly recommend his online courses for mastering LinkedIn for both selling and also PR and building your brand.

According to Alex: "For far too long the traditional methods of getting media coverage have either been too expensive, difficult or just too time consuming. But with LinkedIn you can now start connecting and building relationships with hundreds of journalists and editors from around the world." 

Alex knows what he is talking about and has himself secured significant press coverage and guest journalist spots with The Huffington Post and other publications. Alex recommends that you "write down the top three publications you would like coverage in, identify the journalists with those publications and then connect and build a relationship with them on LinkedIn."

This simple strategy enabled Alex himself to be featured in over 50 media publications and he now writes for Huffington Post, Hubspot and Entrepreneur. According to Alex; "The best thing about this approach it is that we've never sent out a press release or made a cold call."

Anyone in business who neglects LinkedIn is asleep at the wheel. I have many articles about how to use social media here in my LinkedIn blog. This post covers the basics ofbuilding a strong personal brand.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Niuton may - PR

Microsoft Acquires LinkedIn - What It Means

Microsoft has announced the acquisition of LinkedIn for a record US$26.2 billion which makes it the biggest deal Microsoft has ever done. In my view there is no product or 'solution' overlap which makes it look like a good fit but only if Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, allows LinkedIn to operate as a stand-alone business unit just as they've done with Skype.

Acquiring LinkedIn is Satya Nadella's first big play to reinvigorate Microsoft's growth but although LinkedIn's shares rose more than 45% on the news, Microsoft dropped almost 3% (Image courtesy of Bloomberg).

This is probably because Microsoft acquisitions have a mixed track record in recent times with both Nokia and Yammer (business instant messaging collaboration) failing to deliver the intended results. Skype, on the other hand, has been largely left alone to continue as the video conferencing giant... LinkedIn should be managed the same way.

Microsoft's heritage and core value offering is integrated office productivity tools and LinkedIn fits the bill while also being a mature and elegant suite of cloud applications. Approximately 420 million professionals (including recruiters, sales professionals, entrepreneurs and marketers) all use LinkedIn to manage their professional networks and careers. But where is the potential benefit for the huge number of joint LinkedIn and Microsoft customers?

Value Driver #1: Microsoft CRM (Dynamics) and LinkedIn Integration. The roles of LinkedIn versus Dynamics (Microsoft Customer Relationship Management) are fundamentally different and this is because one enables people to build both their network and opportunity pipeline, and the other manages qualified opportunities and provides the database for executing lead-nurturing and customer experience.

LinkedIn has the hearts and minds of salespeople because it helps them find the people they need to build pipeline and also the next employer to progress their career.

CRM should be the engine for managing sales process and with real-time LinkedIn data, Dynamics has the capability to do this as the 'single source of truth' about prospects and clients to manage the entire customer lifecycle for marketing, sales, services, support and finance. The very best implement CRM as a coaching platform for sales managers with their people to review opportunity qualification and discovery, call plans, relationship mapping, sales stage progression with action tracking, close/win plans, and much more... all integrated within the CRM.

LinkedIn helps build opportunity pipeline and CRM manages sales process. Integrating the two creates an accurate real-time platform to deliver game-changing customer experience for the entire interaction lifecycle.

LinkedIn and Microsoft CRM create value in their own right but together there are genuine synergies. Could LinkedIn replace CRM? This video discussed that very question and here is the transcript.

Value Driver #2: Integrated Cloud Office Productivity: Google will be watching very closely as this acquisition could enable LinkedIn's InMail adoption to skyrocket if Microsoft intelligently leverages Office365 against Gmail's cloud mail dominance. Salesforce and other CRM vendors will also be worried about this acquisition and what it means for them competitively. Real-time data within CRM is massively important. Microsoft have other cloud application capabilities that start to bring everything together. These include cloud collaboration, messaging and mail.

Image courtesy of LinkedIn.

Value Driver #3: Customer Experience Platform. Outstanding 'customer experience' (CX) is what CRM, marketing automation, business intelligence, process automation, mobile, social engagement and other technologies are meant to enable. Microsoft has assured its relevance in the CRM arena with this acquisition and also brings and new dimension to professional 'productivity', in the office and working mobile. If Microsoft 'does no harm' to LinkedIn while they carefully create a strategy to become the world's leading customer experience platform, then the result will be good for shareholders and customers alike.

The verdict. Although Microsoft is paying top price, this acquisition makes sense if they can deliver the world's leading suite of solutions for creating customer experience. CX is more important CRM... it's already the next big thing. The biggest negative for LinkedIn members is that the acquisition almost certainly means there will be more advertising on the platform as they seek to recoup their investment... let's hope that LinkedIn does not become as cluttered with ads as Facebook.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo Source: CNBC screenshot

How Secure Is Your LinkedIn Account... Really?

Last month LinkedIn announced to the world that username and password data from 167,370,910 accounts had been obtained illegally from their site. Fortunately the data breach did not include credit card details and was directly associated with an earlier incident in 2012.

Ironically, the timing meant that Microsoft would have been in the middle of acquisition negotiations following due diligence. It was an opportunity for LinkedIn to show their values and culture... they passed with flying colors... but not everyone agrees with me.

LinkedIn immediately got on the front foot to protect their members and the LinkedIn brand. Here is LinkedIn's official statement on May 18, 2016. They also e-mailed all members who were potentially affected and forced password changes before those users could log back in.

Never seek to hide what can be discovered. Transparency and honesty is always best.

If you're wondering if you are one of the LinkedIn users impacted by this breach? Well, stop trying to figure it out and just change your password immediately. Seriously, change it right now. You should change passwords regularly on all online accounts as a matter of course.

The biggest risk does not come from hackers or cyber-criminals... you personally are actually the weakest link in the security chain.

Watch this video and you'll understand that the way users create and manage their passwords is the biggest security risk... and many use a common password across many platforms.

I discussed all this with a IT security expert, Olsi Selfo, and here is his advice based on years of experience working with some of the biggest banks in the world and cyber-security specialists from defence and other rigorous security environments.

The following is from Olsi Selfo.

It’s always a good idea to change your passwords regularly and to never, ever use the same password for two different accounts. And no, you shouldn’t paste all those different usernames and passwords into a plain text file so you can remember them. Instead, use a secure password manager that can sync your passwords across all devices and keep them safe but easily accessible.

LeakedSource published a table showing the most commonly used passwords on LinkedIn and it’s just as bad as you think it might be. The most commonly used password is “123456” and it was found on 753,305 accounts. The second most common password was “linkedin” which was used on 172,523 different accounts, and then “password” on 144,458 accounts. Login credentials - especially to social media sites - are a valuable commodity for 'black hat' hackers. One of Olsi's sources claims that '123456' appears more than a million times (1,135,936 to be precise) in another dump, a long way ahead of 'LinkedIn' with 207,000. The most common "base word" used in the passwords is, unsurprisingly “LinkedIn”.

Regularly changing your password is always a good idea and be proactive.

Voluntarily changing passwords manually on a regular basis is a goof idea but do not create passwords based on very simple and very predictable patterns. This means it is very predictable to hackers. Two-step verification is the next level of security to be considered.

Linkedin introduced 2-step verification using SMS. Although not immune against a determined hacker in a targeted attack, it is much better than nothing. What Linkedin really should do is to promote the existence of security risks better, and go beyond mere password changes. That really isn't enough with today's threat landscape.

Personally I recommend two-step verification as a good tradeoff between security and usability for most applications. I'll even admit that a single password might not be enough in all cases. So go ahead and configure 2FA wherever you can.

Hackers use stolen e-mail information to lure users into giving away more information including birth dates, credit card numbers and bank account access. In 2014, cyber criminals stole $16 billion from nearly 13 million consumers.

All the more reason, say experts, to regularly change passwords — even monthly. ‘And more importantly, you should also be thinking about one site, one password,’ said Lucy Millington, head of corporate security for Sophos Cyber Security. ‘So don’t re-use a password, don’t use the same password for the bank, as you do for retail shopping, as you do your email.’

So what’s a good password? Well, for starters, don’t include the names of your children, pets or home addresses—all information that could easily be found online. Instead, use abstract combinations of letters, numbers and characters that a criminal’s computer program couldn’t easily guess. Mixing languages is another way to throw off hacking programs. Running together the lyrics of a song could also help strengthen passwords.

Experts advise paying for credit monitoring to watch for suspicious activity. And be very suspicious of all incoming emails that could be phishing for more sensitive information.

‘A breach is inevitable,’ Payton said. ‘That information that you’ve entrusted someone else with is eventually going to be hacked.’ Experts say a moment of distraction and a click on a bad link can invite cyber-crooks a world away.”

Thanks Olsi for sharing your experience and provide such valuable advice!

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Ken Yeung - President Obama at LinkedIn for Town Hall

What Is Cloud Software as a Service (SaaS)

What is software as a service (SaaS), and what do you need to know to decide whether it’s right for you? IT can be confusing and it’s full of acronyms; I just used one that most of us know.

I’m going to talk to you for a few minutes about software as a service, or SaaS, and The Cloud. The two go together, and it’s how you dramatically reduce your internal or contractor IT costs. Now, most of those people you’re paying now to support your IT systems don’t want you to know what I’m about to share. The best software today is delivered in The Cloud as a service. But what does software as a service really mean, and is The Cloud secure? These are questions I hear often. I’ve been in the enterprise software industry for decades, but I now work as a management consultant, providing trusted advice to those who run businesses.

Here’s what you need to know: it’s not as complicated as some would have you think. With software as a service someone else owns all of the headaches of running your software and hardware for a particular area of your business. It’s where the world is moving, and if you’re not already there then you’re behind. Modern software just needs a web browser installed on a local machine or tablet or mobile device, and the computing work is done on a server rather than locally on the individual’s computer that’s at a desk or in the field. This brings benefits that are huge: it reduces your cost for desktop and mobile device support, both hardware and software, and it keeps the data safe on server rather than on an individual’s machine, and that data is secure in a data centre.

But it’s not just that moving your software applications and storage to The Cloud reduces your costs, it also makes your business more agile. For 90% of you watching, your core business is not being a software development house; your core business is innovating products and services while creating best possible customer experience. The vast majority of in-house software projects are late, they deliver far less than they promise, and often the costs blow out to more than triple of what was originally estimated. Working with proven products that benefit from huge R&D and keep improving as the product is built out is the way to go.

But what about the risks? Is The Cloud secure? Some people find it comforting to see their own server in their own computer room, but any system can be hacked, and usually because of poor password practice or someone with a USB stick rather than poor software code or technical holes in the system. Whether your servers are on your own premises or being managed in a specialist data centre, it doesn’t really matter. What’s important is the level of security and in-built redundancy, and what I mean by that is what happens when the power goes out or a hard drive fails or there’s a communications network failure. Software as a service providers usually use the very best data centres to host their computers and applications, and they have serious security and in-built redundancy for uninterruptible power supply, and they work with telcos if networks have a problem. Most small business struggle to match these levels of secure reliability.

If you’re worried about having data in The Cloud, you don’t need to. All of your contacts are already in the cloud with LinkedIn, all of your financial transactions and personal wealth is managed in The Cloud with your bank. If you use Dropbox – which I do, I’ve used it for years for storage – it doesn’t matter if my laptop is stolen or a hard drive fails, I’ll never lose anything, I can recover all of those documents easily. Microsoft Office 365 is in The Cloud and it dramatically reduces support costs. Things like Skype are cloud applications, Google Docs, Oracle, SAP, NetSuite; there are hundreds of others that have moved their applications into the cloud, and customers want them to do it.

Click here for a post on keeping your data secure and why you are biggest security risk rather than external threats.

Don’t let your self-serving IT people convince you to stay on-premise with applications, unless they can convince you that there’s a compelling reason to do so. They’ll often talk about data residency and security concerns, but most software as a service providers can use a cloud hosting company who keeps the data local – just have a conversation with them.

If you’re frustrated with IT failing to deliver, endlessly asking for more time and more money, to only partially deliver what they originally promised, take the simple step of identifying which applications you can move into The Cloud most easily – it’s worth the effort. Email and Microsoft Office 365 is usually an easy place to start. You’ll free up working capital, you’ll reduce your real costs, and you’ll be a more agile business.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: JD Lasica - Software

Back To The Future Of Sales

I've been reading reams of predictions for selling and it seems that 99% are about social selling and predictive analytics. Peter Ostrow, from Aberdeen Sales Effectiveness Research, is however right on the money with this comment. “The traditional emotion-driven, gut-driven sales coaching that we so often see with reps and their bosses is going to be replaced – or at least augmented – by the use of pure analytics and data. We’re seeing a lot of movement in the marketplace where organizations are using data to drive a kind of coaching, training, sales effectiveness and career management that we’ve never seen before.”

But technology is not the message – it’s simply the medium because selling is about engagement and great sales management is about coaching in strategy and disciplined execution. The best sales managers will help their sales people become effective in building personal brand and leveraging big data analytics for better monitoring and targeting. Great leaders understand that a person’s personal brand is their most precious asset and that time is their most valuable resource.

2015 will be the year where big data analytics enables the intelligent application of sales effort and also when sellers will mature in using social media for brand building and effective early engagement to create valued conversations within communities. Here is where it all comes together most powerfully… social listening. That’s what matters most for B2B sellers – social analysis, social research and social listening for trigger events.

For brand-building in social, it’s not about the technology or broadcasting messages. Retweeting or reposting links to other people’s content is not enough. Yes there is value in being a content aggregator but only if the people who matter are following you. It’s all about connection through genuine insight. But resist the temptation to quickly seek to prospect or sell on the back of touch-points – this is a sure-fire way to cause people to disconnect.

Go back to the future... B2B is really H2H (human to human) selling so blend the old with the new. Study and embrace the time-honored traditions of solution selling, value selling and insight selling. Become a disciple of strategy gurus such Jim Holden and Art Jacobs. Embrace methodology leaders such as Keith Eades and Miller-Heiman. Then carefully think about how social and technology can be leveraged within your own process for creating pipeline and creating early engagement. If you’re a sales manager, go back to what matters most – helping your people have great conversations with senior people early in the buying/sales cycle.

But here is the most important ‘back to the future’ skill of all if you want to succeed in the world on business and commerce – learn how to write powerfully. The most effective method for doing this has always been reading... voraciously! Most people read one book a year but research shows the average Fortune 500 CXO reads somewhere on the order of 60. Read and write every day and discipline yourself to carve out 30 minute once or twice per day to read long form, especially. Turn off all the devices and digest an entire white paper, hard hitting news from The Economist, an inspirational biography on Churchill or book on military strategy. Reflect upon it. Apply its wisdom practically in your life and career. Remix it in your next LinkedIn Publisher posts drawing parallels. I love Stephen King's perspective and wholeheartedly stand by it as a permanent student of life, “Books are a uniquely portable magic.”

Being a good writer can be your key differentiator in the ever competitive markets of 2015 and beyond. Now imagine becoming a great one! Those who can write well, inoculate themselves against technology rendering their station obsolete. Cialdini would agree, that the art and science of influence must be accomplished on paper as well as with words. Hone your ability to logically create emotion, tell stories and convey insight online and on paper. We are all standing on the shoulder of giants so...

"Whoever tells the best story [still] wins!" - Annette Simmons

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: JD Hancock

CRM Must Evolve To 'Customer Experience' Or Become Mere Back-end Database

Last year I was engaged to lead some round table forums with over 100 organizations across multiple cities in Australia. In the sessions we actively discussed the role of CRM in creating Customer eXperience (CX) and the half-day workshops were created by The Eventful Group who hold an annual major CRM conference where I have been a keynote speaker each year.

One common theme in the workshops I led was that CRM is a dirty word. CRM failure rates are claimed to be anywhere from 33% to 70%. This infographic from Dun and Bradstreet says it all.

Almost unanimously, people said that they positioned a CRM initiative internally as a system for creating a 'single source of the truth' or a '360 degree view of the customer'. That's smart because CEOs don't want yet another software system in their business but they do want the outcome it can deliver.

Some people say that people don't want to buy a drill, they want a hole. I disagree; people actually want their picture hanging on the wall. CRM is no different. CXOs want what the system can do for them and that must be the focus. But the single biggest mistake that enterprises make in implementing CRM systems is that they neglect their internal and external customers.

Every CRM should be implemented to serve sales people and customers, whether they be channel partners or end-users and consumers. The big questions must be: How will the system serve the sales person – how will it help them sell more effectively? Strategy is important but designing Customer eXperience (CX) is where you create clarity in use-cases and functional requirements. The devil is very much in the detail. The goal of any CRM implementation must be to serve internal and external users, rather than be a uber big brother reporting tool.

The delegates at the round table forums provided lots of interesting feedback and here are the things they believe need to be addressed to ensure success and long-term ROI for CX initiatives:

  • Design and deliver a customer centric culture right across your business – produce a team culture that focuses on continuous learning and training, looking to continually evolve and improve
  • Provide a clear and articulated vision with attainable values for the future – “live by them and not just preach them”
  • Methods to change the engrained behaviors and habits of staff with years of experience who are “set in their ways” or who’ve said “we’ve tried that before and it didn’t work”
  • Making the appropriate decisions without adverse impact on the end customer experience
  • Remove the silos within your organization - organizations with siloed functions and departments work independently but have a significant impact on the overall customer experience
  • Overcoming fear and intimidation – what if my team don’t follow the process – it could be catastrophic!!
  • Committing everyone to customer centricity – how you get everyone moving in the same direction
  • Engaging different generations to embrace new processes and technology available to them
  • How providing clear up-stream - and down-stream communication of “why” the new processes are in place can influence usage and accuracy of data quality
  • Coping with evolving systems’ training needs – upgrades, new developments and design changes
  • Ensuring the customer focus from training and methodologies remain “top of mind” when staff are in their roles
  • “Everyone is a customer” – using personal experiences, positive or negative, to apply within your own work
  • Finding, attracting and retaining the right individuals for your business, when the skills aren’t always available

I certainly agree and here are my top 5 recommendations:

  1. CRM must be strategy, not a technology
  2. Design end-to-end customer [and channel partner] experience
  3. Embrace the concept of mash-ups for best of breed capabilities
  4. Design for sales process enablement and sales person efficiency
  5. Ensure you're measuring the right things (inputs)

CRM failure rates are high so don't allow technology to hijack your customer relationship management strategy! Technology is merely an enabler of processes and service levels.

Real leadership is needed and executive commitment to CX (Customer eXperience) is essential... message to CEO: You need to change your job descprition; obsessively focus on CX rather than CRM.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main image photo by Flickr: Dallas Krentzel

Customer Experience is The Future of Selling

I recently did a webinar for Citrix on how Customer Experience (CX) can drive revenue growth and amazing profitability by reducing both the cost of sale and customer churn. We all need our customers to be advocates for us in the market and this webinar provides strategies and examples from some of the world's best corporations including Tesla, Apple and Qantas.

The transcript follows and starts at 4 minutes into the recording and this is the basis of a keynote I will be delivering at the leading Customer Experience Conference in Asia-Pacific (August 8th and 9th). Advance to 4 minutes to skip the introductions.

Transcript [begins 4 minutes into recording]

I might just kick off with an interesting stat, and that is that according to Gartner this year almost 90% of the people in charge of marketing inside businesses have identified that customer experience is something that they’re going to be focusing on to really drive sales. Now, that really begs the question: if almost everybody else is focusing on this, how does focusing on customer experience really differentiate you in your marketplace?

The thing I would say to that is that it’s really the way that we sell rather than what we sell that has a huge impact on our success. Certainly individual salespeople have understood that for a very long time, but what I’m seeing in the marketplace is really a move away from focusing on who we are, what we do and how we do it, also a move away from our product features and functions, really to instead focus on the way that we go and engage clients. In business-to-business selling there’s certainly a very big focus on leading with insights, acting as a trusted partner – I know it’s sort of a cliché term – providing insights for your clients, and in a business-to-consumer world to really be able to provide exceptional customer experience. For all of us that hire millennials in our business, this is really a generation of people that don’t just turn up and hang around for about two weeks and say, “When are you promoting me?” but they’re people that turn up that are very tech-savvy, they expect there to be an app for each kind of process that you’re wanting them to run inside their business, and as we talk about customer experience today I’d really encourage you also to think about the fact that it’s not just about creating a great experience for customers but also for staff and any ~staff~ in your business. 

The other thing with customer experience is that it’s something that we just have to do. Believe it or not, there was a time in businesses not that long ago where people realised that neon lights had been invented and everyone needed a good neon light in front of their business. Then they realised, “Do I or do I not invest in the yellow pages?” and after a while it was just, “Well, of course I do – I have no choice!” People realised that they had to have a website, that they needed the customer relationship management system. More recently people are realising that they’ve got to embrace social media and have a social media plan, and now really the next big thing – it’s already got lots of momentum – is “I need to get good at creating customer experience.”

So let’s begin by really defining what customer experience is. There’s lots of cliché terms out there, but this is really my definition: customer experience is really just the result of the interactions between a customer and the supplier during the lifetime of their relationship. When we think about customer experience, you could maybe use another term which is customer life cycle management. So it’s really how do we engage with a customer throughout their entire life cycle? It’s a big mistake in business to just think about how we work with clients at the moment that they become a contracted customer or a paying customer, and then how we make sure they’re happy and do additional business with us; today we need to think about how do we act strategically by engaging as early as possible. 

So the reason that customer experience is important is obviously creating great customer experience is a way to differentiate ourselves and drive new revenue, but it’s also how we can retain and grow clients. If we think about it strategically, there’s really two key elements to that in my mind: one is the hallmark of operating strategically in this area is we engage early, and the other hallmark is that we’ve managed to take our customers to make them advocates for us in the marketplace, so that’s really a piece of evidence. In that previous slide I was really showing you the customer buyer journey, this is a simplified version, but let’s just talk about the customer journey for a moment, because this is the first thing we need to do when we think about customer experience.

Every single new client that we acquire became a new client because something happened in their world that caused them to realise that they needed what we offered, or that they were unhappy with our competitor and that they decided to switch, and usually their journey starts online. There’s well over 3,000 million Google searches every single day, and the first thing I’d really encourage you to think about is what happens in your customer’s world. What do they go and look for before they ever know to actually look for you? What comparisons do they actually make online? ~I’ll~ tell you a short story.That’s actually a picture of a car I’ve just purchased – I pick it up in a couple of weeks, I ordered it a few months ago – but my journey in looking for cars started online as well. I found a website here in Australia that helps consumers buy cars in essence at wholesale and not have to go into a dealership, so I’ve decided that I wanted to see if I could get a great experience in buying a motor vehicle without going to a dealer – I didn’t want to be put through a car dealer sales process and moved into the sales manager’s office and pressured to buy – but when I found this website they had a great strategy but they executed incredibly poorly. Their website wasn’t clear, they required a lot of information online, they were then meant to contact me and they didn’t, I filled in the form a second time, I still didn’t get contacted. I phoned them, I got voicemail, I phoned them again and got on to a person, and when I explained my tortured story he got very defensive with me, and I said, “Look, the reason I’m saying all this is I don’t want to repeat everything I’ve already put online twice,” he assured me that I wouldn’t have to and then proceeded to ask me all the questions again. 

So, a lot of companies will have customer experience strategies or online strategies or disruptive strategies in how they want to grow market, but it’s really all about great execution. So one of the things I’m going to be focusing on today is not just technology; technology should be an enabler of our strategy, it should be an enabler of a big chunk of the customer experience that we want to go and create, but it’s certainly not the whole thing on its own. Let me tell you why customer experience is so important based on the evidenced research. Corporate Executive Board surveyed 5,000 purchasing organisations, and they actually asked them, “What causes you to select one supplier over the others when you make a comparative decision?” The interesting thing here is that 9% of that decision was price, almost 20% equally was brand and then the features and functions or capability of the product or service being offered, but more than half of their decision is based on the experience that the buyer receives when they engaged with the seller. There’s another stat there you can see on the screen from Corporate Visions. Their research found that almost three-quarters of buyers will choose the supplier that was the first one to provide them with some value or insight. So this mantra of mine that the way we sell is more important than what we sell is truly evidenced here in the slide.

So let me jump into a few things. I want to talk about design generally. My father that you can see pictured on this screen actually passed away 18 months ago. He was a legendary engineer and designer, has quite a number of patents to his name, and he took me into business about 35 years ago believe it or not, quite a while ago. As an engineer he would often say to me when he was seeking to solve a complex problem, he would ask himself, “How would the Germans do it?” because he regarded the Germans as the best engineers in the world – That piece of construction equipment you can see, he designed and built everything you can see in that machine – but he would often ask, “How would the Germans do it?” What I want to do today is really ask ourselves, “How would the leaders in creating customer experience really approach this problem?” So, in line with the fact that it’s not really about technology… It’s really about fundamentally more human factors.

If you haven’t seen this video previously, I’d really encourage you after the webinar is over to jump on to YouTube and just search “Simon Sinek: Lead with Why.” It’s a short video, it’s not great audio quality but it was a video that went viral, it’s had many millions of views. Simon Sinek makes a really important point for anybody wanting to create great customer experience, and that is we need to be passionate about the difference that we’re seeking to make in the lives of our customers, and not just our customers but our employees and all of the stakeholders that actually work with us. If we can be passionate about the difference that we’re seeking to make, then we know what we want to build customer experience around, and I just want to give you an example of this.

I don’t know who was on this webinar that was online, watching the launch of the Tesla Model 3 but they launched this vehicle online, and in just 72 hours on launch they took deposits for over $12,000 million worth of car sales. It was the biggest ever car launch in the history of the world, and the thing that amazed me is they took about 320,000 orders, where people paid 1,000 US dollars online. So they basically bought the car – and you can see it here, on the left there – basically on an online shopping cart, without tight specifications, without firm delivery dates. So all Elon Musk really committed to was that the vehicle would be in shipping by the end of 2017, it would be $35,000, these were the core features they’d be offering, and they had well over 300,000 people buy online. Now, they weren’t people walking into showrooms to buy the car, they weren’t talking to salespeople; they did it online, which I think is incredible, and the reason they did is they bought into Elon Musk’s strategy and vision for really wanting to change the world. And he wants to change the world around sustainability, and he’s very clever with technology in creating something that is just really, really cool for people to own. So, really think about what’s your why, what are you passionate about and how are you seeking to change the lives of customers and employees, and that’s what you’re going to start to build customer experience around.

I’ll just get into some other basic design things. It’s so easy for marketers to fall in love with their product; we’re all like narcissists staring into the pool of water, sending ourselves crazy with how beautiful we think the thing is that we’re selling. If you look at Heinz, they’re the oldest manufacturer of ketchup or tomato sauce, they’ve got a high-quality product, they put it in a beautiful glass bottle, they have nice packaging, and they’re thinking it’s job done. But the first thing is we need to design not for us the seller but we need to design for our consumer, and the reality is that the customer doesn’t care about the nice-looking glass bottle. They get frustrated by the fact that they can never get the last of the product out of the bottle; if they put it in the fridge, they certainly can’t get it out at all, they’ve got to bang the bottom of it. What they wanted was a plastic, flexible container, leave it upside down all the time so that they can always get it out.

That’s an example of taking an “inside out” approach to designing for the customer in mind and it’s really transformational. Even simple things like doors, just putting [~5, 15:24] basic and it shows that you’re really thinking about the client – that’s kind of a funny sign on the right-hand side of that screen; someone had put a sign on the door but clearly doesn’t care what people think, that’s just a piece of humour – but really small things make a huge difference. I don’t know about you, but when I go to a restaurant or a café, whether I have a great customer experience or not has got more to do with the little things than other things that maybe that café or restaurant think is important. If I’m sat down at a table that rocks every time I try and cut a lean on the table, that drives me crazy; if there’s salt on the table but it’s clogged up and doesn’t work, if the pepper grinder is broken… These are really basic, small things that don’t require technology, they don’t require hardly any money; they just need us to be thinking about and obsessing about what’s the experience that the client is getting when they come into my premises or engage with my business. So we need to think about what clients really want; we need to stop trying to project what we think is value but understand how they define it.

Now, this is a typical kind of advertisement, something you’d seen on a website for a drill manufacturer. Maybe many of you on this webinar have heard this example before, but I had this told to me in sales training many years ago that people don’t really want a drill, what they want is a hole in the wall and they need to have a drill to buy the hole in the wall. But my view is that that’s not actually really true. Most people don’t want the hole in the wall either, what they really want is they want their pictures hanging on the wall and they want the feeling they get from standing back, looking at those memories or those beautiful pieces of art that’s actually hanging on the wall. So as a drill manufacturer, imagine if rather than this kind of specification sheet or advertisement, instead of that imagine if you were able to put up a website where you explained to people how they could hang multiple pictures perfectly straight on a wall, or how they can drill into really difficult surfaces. If you provided the insights and the information on how to use a drill well if you weren’t an expert, ~people would get~ educated and they would associate that with your drill, and what you would do is you would become the emotional favourite.

Imagine if you were targeting tradespeople, and the real issue for them is know how to use a drill, they’re already expert at that, but for them the thing that they care about is batteries running out of power halfway through the day or during a job, so imagine if you had a website that talked about how can you do a great job in managing battery life and getting the best out of your equipment. When you start to answer that question “What do my buyers or my clients look for online before they even know to come and look for me?” as they go through that Google search they’ll start to find your content, they’ll start to be educated, and you’ll become the emotional favourite – again, with that research that three-quarters of people have a bias toward the person that’s helped educate them – and I’ve certainly found that that’s the case in all of the purchases that I’ve made in my life.

Let me now talk about some examples of companies that I think do an incredible job of creating customer experience. I know that Uber has been done to death, everybody talks about Uber, but the reason I put this up as an example is that I chose to go and become an Uber driver about a year ago. The reason I did it isn’t because I wanted to go and make additional money on the side, I just wanted to understand how do they approach both ends of the customer experience equation, how do they recruit drivers, what sort of experience do they give them – it was pretty easy to see the experience that they give clients – and I was incredibly impressed. What they do is they had this beautiful balance of dealing with people and technology, as well as understanding the processes and working out how they can automate everything incredibly easy. 

There were a few things that you needed to do in becoming an Uber driver where they needed to see you face to face. They needed to look at some documents to validate that they were originals, and you as the person wanting to become a driver had to sign a form that enabled them to do a police check, but almost everything else could be done online and they made that incredibly easy, not just in front of a traditional computer but also online. The thing that Uber recognises is not that they’re a disruptive taxi company, what Uber really is is a customer experience company; they create exceptional customer experience, with elegant design, and they obsess about simplification of every single process to make it easier for people. In one of the markets that Uber was operating in, the local regulators deemed that they were an illegal taxi service and closed them down; I know that’s quite controversial, it has been here in the Australian market. So the UberBLACK drivers are proper, registered limousine drivers, they’re all okay, but UberX drivers often do not have the correct levels of insurance and there’s risk to passengers for that reason alone, there were issues around collecting goods and services tax. They haven’t been closed down in Australia, but in one market they were, and they quickly pivoted to become UberEATS; they thought, “Well, we’ve got people with vehicles, so let’s get them delivering high-quality restaurant food,” so they were able to pivot flexibly. Again, if your specialty is in creating incredible customer experience, you can then pivot easily in business, which is really important today. The other thing that they did is they’d then gone to a third line of business which is in essence being a metropolitan courier and they’ve taken that same approach to customer experience into those markets as well. So this is just an example that if you focus on creating great customer experience and knowing those markets incredibly well, and creating hybrid models of both physical, real-world service and online engagements with technology, you can create a great business.

Apple is often held up as an example. Three years ago I converted my entire life, for me and my family, over to Apple and it was a really enlightening experience. I’ve had sort of a love-hate relationship with technology my whole life, I’ve worked for technology companies for most of it, but we all know how frustrating technology is when it doesn’t work. The thing that’s blown me away about Apple is not just the elegant design of their products but the elegant way in which they go and engage with clients. On the very few times that I’ve had a technical issue with Apple, getting on their website was incredibly easy, to make an appointment to go to a Genius Bar at an Apple Store near me. And on occasion I’ve decided to click a button to ask someone from Apple to call me, and within 60 to 90 seconds… I know this sounds incredible, but within 60 to 90 seconds someone’s on the phone and they’re helping me resolve my issue. So they understand that it’s not just about pushing people online to reduce their costs, it’s about engaging with people the way that they want to be engaged with and delivering a really, really good customer experience. What I believe we can learn from Apple is this concept of elegance, of simplification, of being as minimalist as possible in our design.

The other thing that I’d just encourage us to think about too is take these big industries that historically have delivered poor service. My first ever job when I’d left school many years ago was working in the bank, and I remember that model where all of us working in the bank were behind counters with bars to stop people jumping the counter and stealing the cash. So there was a massive barrier between staff and clients and customers were forced to line up endlessly, and the opening hours weren’t particularly friendly. Now, the banking system has gone through a massive transformation, and not just in providing online banking but changing the experience they deliver for clients when they go in. One of the things they’ve done is this concept of a concierge. To my great surprise, in the last year when I’ve had to go and engage in my state, in New South Wales, to renew my driver’s license, the experience in a government service office was very much like what banks used to be, but I was shocked when I walked in and got greeted by a beautiful, smiling face of a person asking me what is it that I wanted to do. She said that I would need to see someone behind a counter, she got the ticket for me and told me what my number was; she said was there anything else I needed to do, and there was, and she said, “Well, you can actually do that online. Why don’t you come with me and I’ll help you do it online.”

You can see in this screenshot here that they’ve got kiosks where you can go and do self-service but with someone standing beside you to help you. So it’s not just that they seek to push people off to the Web, they show them how to do it and actually make it incredibly easy for them, so these are really good. I know it sounds crazy to transform like government, but I’m seeing government departments increasingly think about how do we do citizen engagement better, how do we treat citizens as clients, how do we deliver great customer experience? If the public service is able to do it, then certainly any of us in business should absolutely be able to do it.

The next thing I’d encourage us to think about – and as I get through these examples, I’m going to give you some actionable takeaways at the end here, things I think we need to do to actually execute on this – I think we need to think like airlines. Airlines have gone through massive, massive transformation, and it’s really been driven by their horrible business model. I’d never want to own an airline; it requires huge amounts of working capital that’s tied up, you incur massive fixed overheads, huge costs before you get one paying passenger on a flight, so they’ve been forced to think, “How do we cut costs and be more flexible?”

The thing that’s always impressed me about Richard Branson and Virgin is in the airline business he very cleverly redefined quality of service as being the quality of the attitude of the people that are serving. So Virgin basically dialled things back, as far as the amount of leg room that you’ve got, the quality of good or drink on a flight, so they were a budget airline, but where they invested was making sure the staff had wonderful attitudes and gave people a great, fun experience on the flight. So the culture of the people is a massive piece of creating great customer experience. And yes, they’ve also done a really good job with technology. I think all of us that have flown in the last few years have seen this massive transformation that’s occurred, from the moment you book your ticket online to when you board the flight, so that when we turn up now to those big [~2, 26:16] at the airports, it’s basically self-service. When they first rolled out those self-service kiosks for checking your own bags in, for weighing them, for printing your own boarding pass and bag tickets, I was very sceptical, thinking, “I’d rather just deal with the person. I’m paying them all this money. Why are they now asking me to do their job?” but I quickly realised this was a much better customer experience. And now the ability to actually check into the flight, to get my boarding pass, just download it into my mobile phone, to get the seat that I want, to be able to turn up to the airport and walk on really easily without even printing the boarding pass is a great example of using technology well. So the airlines have driven costs down but improved the level of the service that they’re delivering through technology.

But I just want to hark back to an example around the fact that it’s really the people that deliver great customer experience, not technology alone. I don’t know whether many of you are familiar with the story, but a number of years ago an Airbus A380 out of Singapore, Qantas QF32, was on climb-out and one of the engines on the aircraft exploded. It shot shrapnel at a greater speed than the speed of sound, it went through the fuselage of the aircraft and the wing, it partially severed the main fibre-optic trunk lines through the aircraft – it’s all fly-by-wire that control it – the plane was incredibly degraded. The command pilot, Captain Richard de Crespigny, and his flight crew did an incredible job of getting that plane back on the ground safely, they just did an absolutely phenomenal job.

But here’s the really interesting thing: when Captain de Crespigny got that plane back on the ground safely, he actually went into the airport terminal and he said to the passengers, “When you fly Qantas, you’re flying with a premium airline, and you have every right to expect a superior level of service than flying with a budget airline, and you’re going to get that today. There’s 1,000 Qantas staff that have mobilised, finding you hotel rooms. We’re organising buses to get you to those hotels, we’ll provide you with money so you can buy toiletries and clothing. We’ll be getting you back to Sydney as soon as we can.” But then he did something amazing. After saving the aircraft, he then said to the passengers, “Can you please get out your phone, or if you’ve got a pen and a piece of paper… I’m going to give you my mobile phone, and I want any of you to phone me if you don’t feel you’re getting the right level of service from Qantas that you’re entitled to,” and interestingly he did not receive one phone call from an unhappy passenger. 

This is an example of there being a great culture inside Qantas of not just safety but a great culture of customer service. On every flight that he commands he makes a point of walking the entire aircraft, and the reason he does it – obviously when the co-pilot is in control and they’re just in cruise – to make sure that all of the flight crew on board know that the captain’s going to be walking around the aeroplane, and it causes the flight crew, the staff on the flight to really lift their game and make sure they do a great job.

So let me just morph this into the importance of technology, and we’re going to talk about social and mobile computing as key aspects in delivering a great customer experience. When that engine exploded, that Rolls Royce engine exploded on QF32, parts of the engine rained down on parts of Indonesia, and if you can see in the left-hand side of that screenshot, that’s actually a share trading screenshot. You can see that at 2 PM when it happened Qantas’ share price plummeted dramatically, and Alan Joyce the CEO was with one of his other executives in a car going to a meeting, and the question was asked, “Why is our share price falling through the floor?” So before the CEO and key managers even knew about this incident, people had taken to social media, predominantly Twitter in Indonesia, and the word was out there about what had happened. This is an example of how unhappy customers can spread the word very, very quickly, and we need to be monitoring social as part of our strategy.

When you think about how mobile and social platforms, the first thing that I normally hear from people is there’s so many different social platforms and social tools, so I’m really not sure where I would even start. I’m going to talk about what the big, important social platforms are in a moment, but let me just talk about mobile. I don’t know whether you’re aware of this, but last year was the first time in history that the number of computer users on mobile actually crossed over and became greater than the number of traditional laptop or PC computer users. There’s more computing done, there’s more interaction on mobile now than there is in traditional computing, and we all know that there’s lots of apps that are being created to deliver really good customer experience. A good friend of mine Randall Cameron works in the mobility space, this is a slide that he provided to me: this is an example of a government and corporation that’s creating apps to make it very easy for employees and contractors to go and execute their role, and they can even do it on their own devices.

One of the things that millennials and Gen Ys expect today is to be able to come into the workplace and use platforms and technologies that they’re familiar with, and even use their own devices if they can. Now, these applications, there’s a bunch of icons there on that screen, that shows you the kind of technology that’s being used to deliver a great experience for those forestry workers. So they’re not having to use big tablet computers and a truck, they can simply use their own handheld devices and go and execute their roles incredibly easily. The other thing that’s going on with mobile is the concept of geo-fencing and beacons. Even for someone like a coffee shop, they really now have the ability – if they wanted to today, and not at high cost – to be able to make it possible for a regular client as they walk into their shop or get near their shop that it automatically gets displayed in the system to make them their favourite coffee or their favourite breakfast, so they don’t even have to stand in line and ask to be served. These were works of fiction five or ten years ago, but now it’s very easy to do without a whole lot of cost. So wireless beacons inside premises and things like geo-fencing enable us to be aware of the proximity of clients as they come in and out of premises or a building or a work site, and be able to deliver an experience for them really, really easily.

Let me talk about old world customer experience and then what I think new world customer experience needs to look like, and I’ll talk a little bit about those platforms we can use as some takeaway. I showed you this buyer’s journey previously, where they go through a trigger event and consider change, do some research and it will generate a bias towards someone in particular; they’ll then go through a formal selection and negotiation process, they’ll take ownership and implement what it is they’re doing, and then obviously we want them to stay as a client and renew or upgrade with us later. On the leftthere you can see the traditional approach of push marketing, basically interrupt and push a message to people. We’ve all have a website typically at the heart of our strategy, and then once someone is a client we’d like them to give us referrals, we focus on delivering good customer service through some form of account management, that’s the way we’ve traditionally tried to deliver customer experience. But the really important thing here is that if we want to be strategic, we want to think about trigger events and what causes them to consider change and where are they online, learning, where do they go to be educated. That’s how we can go away from that model and instead attract people, inform them, provide insights, align with them what’s important with them. We can them collaborate with them in how they evaluate and select and even implement, and what we end up with is a customer that’s a strong advocate. 

These are some of the leading tools. Obviously people are searching Google; hopefully they’ll find your website, but increasingly today they’ll find a Facebook page. With a lot of the things I research, I have a bias away from the vendor’s website because I know that’s going to give me their positive view of the world, I want to find the truth, so we tend to find that on other places, places like YouTube and Facebook; if I’m looking at engaging with an individual, I’d research them on LinkedIn. The other thing we can do is we can use things like GoToWebinar that we’re using today to start to engage with people and provide insights. You can use Citrix GoToMeeting to engage with people face to face to share information, to run projects, to collaborate without having to jump on aeroplanes and trying to get very, very busy people together at the same time in the same room. So there’s ways for us to deliver experience using the technology really well, and obviously the Net Promoter Score index is a really good way to measure how we’re tracking in that regard.

I just want to give you a quick example of the power of using social media well. I told you that story of QF32, it’s a great example of delivering great customer experience and having a customer-centric culture, with Qantas as the example. I wrote a white paper and published it, and in about a 15-month period I had less than 100 downloads. Now, I thought to myself… It was a good piece of content, and I thought, “You know what? My market for me – because I’m in the business-to-business arenas, as in LinkedIn – I decided to repost that content in LinkedIn as an article, and that’s had towards quarter of a million reads versus less than 100, with 2,500 likes and I think over 400 comments that people have made and lots of shares. So what’s happened is by going to where my market is and providing good content there, what I created was a whole level of engagement, which is what we’re wanting to do in creating customer experience. So if you’re thinking, “How important is social really? We’ve got a website,” I think that’s an example of why it matters.

So let me just talk about these big platforms. If we’re in business-to-business, if you’ve got a small business and you’re wanting to contact journalists or the producers of radio shows and get interviewed and build your brand, we don’t need to go to a PR agency these days, all of those people are in LinkedIn and you can run a strategy to get to them and find them. There’s 420 million-odd members, two people join a second, it’s a great place to start to build personal brand. And at the beginning of today I talked about this thing of being very intentional about our why, why do we do what we do, why does a conversation with a potential client matter, and that’s where we can make sure that that message shines through loud and clear in LinkedIn. It’s Facebook for business, it’s where people will go and check us out before they meet.

If we’re in the business-to-consumer world, obviously Facebook is incredibly important; they’ve embedded autoplay for video content now which is skyrocketing engagement as well. The average Australian spends seven hours a week inside this platform, so it’s a great place to do social listening, to create social advocacy, user groups, people do a lot of research in Facebook so we need to make sure we’ve got a good, strong presence there; and YouTube is really powerful if we’re wanting to drive cost out, of engaging and supporting clients and improve the experience that they’ve got. For almost anything that we’re selling to people there’ll be an instruction manual or they’ll need support or they’ll have questions; it’s a very good investment to create videos that you can put up online. They don’t need to have high production value, so long as everything’s in focus and the audio and lighting is good; the more human and real they are, the owner of the business doing them is great. This is an incredible way that you can broadcast yourself over the entire planet, access to billions of people, and you don’t have to pay anything for it. It’s amazing how powerful these platforms are and they’re free.

And then Twitter to me is a great social listening tool. One of the things I haven’t focused on heavily today but it’s very important is part of creating great customer experience is listening. We should listen for the hashtag of our business or of our products, and whenever anybody is unhappy or has a question we should jump in and engage with them, we should enable clients to log a support ticket or a case with us in Twitter or in any of these social platforms as well. It’s a case of going and understanding, “How do my clients engage out there in social and on mobile devices themselves and how can I make the whole engagement process with them as easy as possible?” Then the other thing is when you’re wanting to support people – again, not just YouTube videos but recording webinars – being able to collaborate with people effectively is really important. There’s research there on the bottom of this slide that just shows that if you respond in one hour, you’ve got 60 times greater probability of engagement than if you wait 24 hours, and if you can respond within five minutes with somebody it’s 100 times. The ability today to go and create engagement with people and see them face to face with a webcam by using things like GoToMeeting is incredibly powerful. 

Let me just give you what I think the key takeaways are for today and then we’ll throw it open to questions. The first thing is as we think about the buyer’s journey and then mapping customer experience ~to~ buyer’s journey, the first thing is we want to be very clear about leading with why. We want to create evangelists and advocates for us who share our vision and mission. This is very much what Elon Musk has managed to do with Tesla; it’s very, very much what Steve Jobs has always been about, he was very passionate about design and elegance in what he was doing. Both of these people created almost religious zeal within their customer base, people that would try and convert others. There’s a couple of key questions here: the first is what is it that you believe about how you change the lives of your customers? Not an easy question to answer for people, but we don’t have any chance of creating the right customer experience unless we do that. And then the second piece is how can we differentiate by the experience that we provide? So rather than trying to differentiate in the product itself, how can we differentiate in the way that we go and support our market? Really important questions.

The next key takeaway… Here’s, again, part of the definition of being strategic is to engage early, so the next thing is how do we attract with great content. So what we’re wanting to do is to attract and engage, we want to understand where do they research, and then we want to be able to put that content up in multiple channels, not just on our website but out on those forums and groups where they go and to their research. So this question of what do my clients look for before they ever know to come and look for me, where do they learn online and what kind of content can educate and provide valuable insights, that’s what really starts to create good, qualified leads and clients engaging with us that have a bias toward us because we were the ones that started to educate them and help them, not just around our product but around all available options that they’ve got available to them. 

And the third thing is, the third key takeaway is we need to elegantly engage with people. And it’s the really small things, I think you’d agree, the really small things that really make a difference. I didn’t put it up in the slide, but I think a great example of this is the hotel industry. They’re in a ferociously competitive industry, massive fixed overheads as well – every time a room goes empty, if they don’t get to sell it again later that building window is gone forever – but the thing I’ve seen now is often when I go and stay at hotels overseas or interstate is it’s very easy for them to go online and have a look at my picture, I’ve got a strong presence in social, I’ll turn up and they’ll recognise me, and it’s happened at hotels I’ve never stayed at before. So clearly what’s happened is they’ve got a list of people that are coming in and they’ve just gone and had a look on social and seeing what they can find out about them. On one occasion I’ve checked into a hotel here in Australia, and they knew that I was speaking at a conference in Melbourne and they said, “Welcome to the hotel, Mr Hughes – I hope you have a good time speaking at the conference!” which really blew me away. It was a very simple thing for them to do, it didn’t cost them any money, it surprised me and delighted me –because people love the sound of their own voice I guess and like themselves being made to feel important – but it didn’t cost them money, it’s just inside the culture of the organisation.

So, how can we elegantly engage and really delight people? How do they want to engage and how can we simplify? I think a lot of us have processes that we haven’t revisited for a long time that we force our clients and staff through, and if we just kept saying, “Do we really need to do it that way? Is there a simpler, better way? Is there a simple app that we could create for that?” we’d go a long way to really transforming customer experience. So with that, I’d really like to throw it open to Q&A and I’m more than happy to take your questions, so I’ll just pass it back to Teneille.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main Image Photo by Flickr: Get Everwise - Elon Musk

 

Frequency – What Sex And LinkedIn Have In Common

I'm almost through my first 90 days of Blogging exclusively within LinkedIn. It's been exhilarating and exhausting – the honeymoon phase of my affair with LinkedIn Publisher is very much still alive. I'm besotted by LinkedIn as the most powerful publishing platform on Earth:

  • There are 430 million members
  • 40% of LinkedIn members use it daily
  • 60% of business-to-business (B2B) buyers research before engaging
  • CEO members have an average of 930 connections.
  • 90% of business decision-makers in Australia are there which is highest penetration in the world
  • Two people join LinkedIn every second
  • There are 200 million unique views of page content every day
  • There are 28 billion page views in an average quarter

You are 500% more likely to secure a meeting using a LinkedIn 'warm introduction' than from a cold call or cold e-mail. But not with clumsy 'spam' InMail. Salespeople who use LinkedIn intelligently are also 50% more likely to achieve their sales revenue targets.

So, LinkedIn is the world's most powerful social platform for business-to-business (B2B) and one key to achieving cut-through is 'insight publishing'. But how frequently should you be 'doing it' – what's the right amount of posting? Being a newlywed to LinkedIn Publisher, I'm propagating content several times a day when I can – certainly once a day is my minimum. My wife, in the real world, has given me permission to spend evenings with my publishing mistress and I've been going at it like a rabbit.

Some people have asked how in the world I'm punching out such a high volume of quality content. I've been asked: 'Surely you're paying someone else to write all this?' But let me share a secret – It’s 100% all my IP and I’m writing 4 hours a night; no TV at all and my wife has been wonderful in allowing me to disappear after dinner to plunge into social media to launch myself globally. I’m not paying anyone to ghost write and I’ve re-purposed a lot of my previous website, book and whitepaper content. My biggest post has had almost 200,000 reads in LinkedIn compared with just 76 reads on my website previously as a whitepaper. I'm a writer and have already published a best selling book, The Joshua Principle, Leadership Secrets of Selling.

Writing is like a muscle; it becomes stronger the more you use it but I am under no illusion; if I post low value 'white noise' rubbish, I will be unfollowed faster than you can say #StrategicSocialSelling. Nor can I get away with disrespecting readers by posting 'let me tell you what you already know' dross – I would be dumped like a jilted lover. But I'm giving my best and the response has staggered me. I write for you assuming that you know the fundamentals of social media, professional selling, leadership, and sales enabling technologies. I write for an adult audience, not at a tabloid or high school reader level. I never publish click-bait to lure you away from LinkedIn.

But I'll admit that my LinkedIn publishing is new ground... a bold experiment. To my knowledge, I'm the first person in the world to dump their website blog completely and go all-in on LinkedIn. I do this even though there's no RSS capabilities for me to be able to use tools such as Tribber to easily amplify content within my trusted network (John Smibert at Strategic Selling and Anthony Iannarino from The Sales Blog are top of my list).

In a few weeks I'll publish a 90 day case study and transparently reveal the results of my LinkedIn mania and it will surprise you. As an example of what's happening for me (without any push marketing or interrupt selling), ten days ago LinkedIn themselves invited me to write for them and you'll begin to see my content published by them from March onward. Yesterday Kelly Riggs from#BizLockerRadio invited me to be interviewed on his hugely successful program.

There have been many genuine people who've reached-out to me offering advice and few suggested I reduce the frequency of my posting. Almost all of them have subsequently written to me with a change of opinion and encouraged me to continue. This InMail from David is an example and he kindly allowed me to provide this screenshot as an example.

I've been told that there's actually such a thing as 'bad sex'... wow. And now backwards... WOW! It's hard to imagine such a thing. Yet bad writing abounds and we see it everywhere in social. Volume kills quality and we're all so incredibly busy. But commitment can overcome the most insurmountable of difficulties.

Almost all of us would love to experience exhilaration at least once a day. Think back to when you were hormonally in love... fifty shades of beige but without the weirdness. It's not about how often you indulge and the best sex occurs when you give yourself fully to the other person. I've always believed that great sex is had with genuine love, skillful enthusiasm and a little humor.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main image photo by Flickr: Mark Taylor Cunningham

Transform Your Use of Slides – Amazing from Anthony Iannarino

Transform Your Use of Slides.jpg

I'm a huge fan of Anthony Iannarino and this is from his latest newsletter. It will transform the way you use slides so that your presentation deck is interactive. You'll be able to adapt on the fly to cover exactly what your audience wants to talk about. Thanks Anthony for allowing me to share your wisdom with my network!

Earlier this week I [Anthony Iannarino] made a sales call on a prospective client. When he greeted me at the door, he was being led by his seeing eye dog. My prospective client is blind.  The slides that I usually use to support a conversation were worthless. The custom graphics that I have paid to have professionally designed were of no use to either of us. While the data I had was perfect for this conversation, the charts and graphs were not. The fact that I had no deck worked out perfectly for both of us, but it made me think I should share this big idea with you. 

I am happiest on a sales call when I have nothing in front of me but a legal pad and a pen. But, sometimes you need the support of slides.  Here are the three changes I want you to make to your slide deck and how you present now.
 
First, put every slide you may ever need into a main deck. I mean every single slide. If you get questions about your locations, include a slide with you locations. If you are occasionally asked who you work with, include the slide with the big, well-known logos of those brands. I like slides that show the members of the team that are going to be serving their client that outlines their roles. Put in whatever you may need. 

If you’ve ever been told to delete slides from your deck, ignore that suggestion and include every single slide that might help you answer a prospective client’s questions successfully.  My main slide deck has about 200 slides. I normally use about 16 slides on a sales call.
 
Second, create a blank slide. Go up to the little menu icon that allows you to create a square box. Make a little square somewhere on your new slide. Then, right-click on that slide and choose “Hyperlink to,” and then choose “Slide.” By connecting that box to the slide you choose, you will have created your first menu item.
 
Now create a button for every single section of your slide deck. Instead of presenting your slides in a linear format, starting at 1 and working your way to 200, you can now engage in a dialogue and only pull up the slides that support the conversation. You can also pull the menu up and allow your prospective client to choose what they want to talk about.
 
There is one final step to making this work. Drop your logo in the bottom right corner of your first slide. Then, right click on it and make it a button that hyperlinks back to your main menu. Then copy and paste it at the end of every section of your slide deck. This logo allows you to click back to the main menu whenever you finish discussing one topic.
 
The tools you use to present should support your conversation, not replace it. One of my clients recently had a prospect tell him, “If you open that laptop, I’ll throw the goddamn lot of you right out of this conference room.” Apparently, he didn’t come to see a salesperson talk through their slide deck.

Let Anthony know how this new technique works for you. Book him for your next sales team event and here is his show-reel. Also subscribe to his weekly newsletter for other brilliant content. Now for your comic relief... this video is very funny and shows all of things NOT to do in PowerPoint.

If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main image photo by Flickr: Mad Men television Show

Why Customer Experience Trumps Customer Service

Andrew Vorster is a brilliant futurist and technologist from the UK and we were both speaking at a recent Customer eXperience (CX) conference. He made the important distinction between customer service and customer experience while explaining how technology is disrupting traditional business models. I asked him how he sees the customer experience of the future. Here is his response.

"I have to start out by saying that many people I come into contact with immediately start talking about 'customer service' as soon as I say 'customer experience'. I point out that while customer service is an important facet of the customer experience, most people will only experience your customer service once they are a customer."

"But the customer experience begins way before that point in time and it's a large component of how your brand is perceived"

"Marketing departments are therefore been the early adopters of technology, constantly seeking new ways to augment and amplify engagement by using technology. Take for example this stunt pulled by Pepsi in London which is an example of people experiencing the brand, augmented by technology. The goal of a customer experience is to evoke positively memorable emotion and I think Pepsi certainly hit the mark on this occasion."

But it’s not just about a new advertising format. I constantly ask clients about how they can you use the 'Internet Of [their Company’s] Things' to enhance customer experience. There is a fantastic example of how Samsung proposes to use its own technology to save lives on the road in Argentina by rendering its trucks 'see through'. This is a incredible example of using technology to improve lives and deliver innovative customer experience."

Andrew believes this technology should be rolled-out globally and that those who lead with practical innovation that improves lives create powerful following. I asked him how he thinks it converts to revenue.

"Can you imagine the first time you experienced one of these trucks on the road? I think that the enhanced customer experience would make you think very positively about Samsung as a technology company and would quite possibly influence your next purchase decision."

"When you enhance customer experience you increase loyalty. Rather than pushing marketing messages and offers, think about how to create exceptional customer experience. Meat Pack is a trendy footwear store in Guatemala and they used a clever combination of technology including indoor location sensors and real time marketing to generate the kind of customer experience that its target market would love.  Hang in there watching this video explaining how 'Hijack' works... it has customers sprinting at break-neck speed to do business with them."

Meat Pack's “Hijack” campaign successfully created a buzz around the brand on social media through customer advocacy – who wouldn’t want to share that kind of experience with their friends? I came across a great advertising campaign in Australia the day before my opening keynote – it’s for Hahn Superdry beer and the slogan goes “if you’re not collecting experiences, you’re not living” (https://experiencecollectors.com.au/). The campaign is full of aspirational dreams and activities that many of us stuck in suburbia might yearn for but deem to be way out of reach. But that’s not the point. The point is that deep down, we are all “experience collectors”. How will you leverage technology in the future to give your customers an experience worth collecting?"

Andrew makes excellent points and is not saying that great customer service isn't important. He highlights that service should fit within the overall customer experience that you create well before someone becomes a client. How do people feel about you and your brand before becoming a customer. Sales and marketing must work together to innovate and create best end-to-end customer experience.

Contact Andrew here in LinkedIn and also follow his Publisher page. If you valued this article, please hit the ‘like' and ‘share’ buttons below. This article was originally published in LinkedIn here where you can comment. Also follow the award winning LinkedIn blog here or visit Tony’s leadership blog at his keynote speaker website: www.TonyHughes.com.au.

Main image photo by Flickr: Craig Sunter - Some people are just never happy!