Executing Core Story Sales Model
Executing Core Story Sales Model
Page
Page 2
Page 3
THE CORE STORY HISTORY (EMPIRE RESEARCH GROUP: AS TOLD BY CHET HOLMES)
Empire's research and Core Story building services began many years ago when I was building these core stories for my billion dollar clients. Clients would pay me $80,000 to build these and I would commission out all the research to an elite team of top researchers. I would then sit around on the floor (too much data to put on a desk) with piles of the raw data all around me and begin to see where I could piece together all these disconnected pieces of raw data to create the wow's or find the bad news that would motivate -- at the same time as position my clients. This process alone is critical and difficult. In one case we were building a presentation for a client who wanted to target day-spa's. The researchers got me the numbers and I saw that there were 16,000 day spa's in the U.S. But to my utter shock, another piece of disconnected data showed that there were maybe 200 of them only 15 years ago. Bad news if you're a day spa. Your market is gruelingly competitive. Two pieces of data over a 15 year period, put together on a single panel to equal bad news! After I finished building the raw data into final product, I would then pass back my finished product to the researchers to show them how I had utilized their data. After years and years of doing this, this very bright research team began to get the hang of this process and they began to go a lot further with the assignments I gave them. Before I knew it, they were getting these things pretty far along and that's when I realized that this service could now be expanded outside of the billion dollar clients I was accustomed to working with. So what Chet once charged $80,000 to produce, businesses can now get for a fraction of that cost, affordable by almost any company or sole individual looking to slaughter the competition.
Page 4
THE CORE STORY HISTORY WHAT IS THE STADIUM PITCH? (FROM HOW TO TRIPLE YOUR CLOSING RATIO BY CHET HOLMES) Imagine I could put you in a giant stadium right now as the presenter, and the entire audience is completely comprised of your most perfect prospects. Are you ready right now? Could you walk out on that stage and present to every one of them and do it perfectly? Now before you say yes, let me make the stakes higher. Before you walk out there, the audience is told: You had to come, but you don't have to stay. If this person (you) fails to keep your interest, you can simply get up and leave. Now let me even further complicate the situation by telling you the good news and the bad news. The good news: At any given time 3% of your prospects are currently in the market to buy your product or service and looking right now to get it. Another 6-7% are open to it, but not currently looking. The other 90% are divided into three nearly equal categories: A) Not really thinking about right now. B) Think they're not interested (but might be, if you did a good job at presenting to them. C) They KNOW they're not interested. So let's say you sell brooms. And let's say it's a fantastic broom. But remember 90% of the audience isn't in the market for your broom at this time. At least they think they're not interested. That means if you walk out there and start right off saying how great your brooms are, 90% of your audience is going to get up and leave. So you need to open your stadium pitch (as I call it), with what I call wow's. This means that all great presentations start off with information that makes your prospects say: wow, I didn't know that. The focus must be on THEM and things of interest to THEM, not you. So rule number one of a great presentation is that it must be focused on the prospect and not on you (at least not initially). Continued on the next page...
Page 5
Let me give you a case in point. I have a client who sells employee benefits and insurance to companies. His sales team would call up a client and say: We want to come and talk to you about your health care benefits. Since 97% of prospects THINK they are happy with their current broker, that's a really hard call to make. However, when they created a presentation that pointed out: (paraphrased) The Five Dangers Facing All Employers and How Knowing What Those DANGERS Are, Can Dramatically Reduce Costs and Increases Profits, it made not just the sale go better, but also getting appointments go much better. Meaning that information that is of value to THEM, like Five Dangers Facing You In Your Business, creates what I call a superior access vehicle. Another client of mine sells telephone systems. Prior to the learning curve in this article, they'd call prospects and ask the prospect: We want to come and talk to you about getting a new telephone system. Needless to say, the appointment setting process was slow going. However, when they built THE ULTIMATE PRESENTATION, one that offered (something like): How You're Wasting Money In Nine Major Areas of Your Voice and Data Spending, -- Suddenly, they went from getting three appointments per week (with four salespeople trying all day) to getting 30 appointments per week. This effort is already tripling their pipeline in a single year. So rule number one, again, for building a killer presentation, is to have information that is OF VALUE to your prospects -- even if they have never heard about your products or services. Information that is above and beyond the product or service you are offering will be considered extremely valuable to them. I had another client that was trying to sell law books to lawyers. Over the years, they had been reduced to talking to just the librarians in these law firms. And since the lawyers are the ones using the law books, their ability to get new product into the market became severely hamstrung. We helped them build a presentation that laid out: The Five Most Dangerous Trends Facing All Major Law Firms Today , which resulted in meetings with entire committees of lawyers. The data was excellent, legitimate and packed with bad news. Oh, did I mention the part about bad news? A great presentation is loaded with bad news to your prospects. Why? Because bad news motivates. We'd get in front of a group of lawyers and show them that lawyers keep growing, but the annual billings are flat (less money per lawyer): That their firms will be sued (something like 44% of large law firms will be sued by unhappy or dissatisfied clients): That the case law from which they must find their information is out of control now, with more than THREE MILLION cases to chose from when trying to find a single precedent. This presentation was packed with bad news. Much of this news had nothing to do with law books. Keep in mind, it didn't matter. Bad news motivates, even if it's unrelated. Continued on the next page...
Page 6
Your prospect, when viewing a great deal of bad news, will suddenly feel the need to take some action. Any action they take will make them feel better. In the case of the law book company, every lawyer in the room wanted more information or wanted to purchase the law books outright, after they saw the presentation. Now don't take this too far. The more the data in the presentation sets up a need for your product or service, the higher your closing ratio. So in the case of the law firm, the massive case law to be studied, created a need for law books that already studied this for you. Plus, we tied the litigation against lawyers directly to the massive case law, so that seemingly unrelated pieces of data, pieced together with other data made the bad news more excruciating. So rule number two to building a killer presentation is that the data should set up a buying criteria in which your product or service becomes the most logical choice. When my telephone client laid out all the ways most companies were wasting money on their voice and data spending, it made the prospects open their arms and invite my client to look at how they might help them. This almost always ended up being a new system that would help them save money in many different ways. What's your client's current buying criteria? Is it price? Easy to overcome with the right presentation. Is it that they want to buy only from the biggest provider? Easy to overcome with the right presentation. Is it that they don't think they even need what it is that you sell? Easy to overcome with the right presentation. Data can motivate your prospects in all and any of the situations mentioned. Chet calls this Your Core Story, or your stadium pitch because the story serves as the core for all of your other marketing efforts from telemarketing scripts to video and face to face presentations. The Core Story even serves another extremely valuable purpose. Chet goes on to say, I had one client who used to take four months to train a new person on all the subtleties of why a prospect should buy their product. The Core Story used data as the motivator and suddenly, this core story could train an outsider how to REALLY sell this product and in a single pass through the information.
Page 7
Page 8
Page 9
Page 10
pects. If your close ratio is 10% then you would close 10 sales. However, assuming that you did not get any more prospects (which you should) then you would start with the same 1,000 prospects. But now you will get access to a much larger portion of that 90% that you could not touch before. So now instead of access to 100, the chances are that you will have quality access to 500 or 600 prospects. If your close ration did not improve you should close 50 to 60 sales now, but if your close ratio doubles (which it easily can) you will get 100 to 120 sales versus the original 10. Quite a difference, huh?
Page 11
The Core Story Itself IS NOT A SALES MODEL! But There is a killer Core Story Sales Model
2009 Empire Research GroupAll rights Reserved-Confidential Page 12
Page 13
Page 14
So it costs much more for much less Savvy marketers are trying a new approach... The Core Story Sales Model
Page 15
- 2010
Page 16
Gives value that may be unrelated to the clients product, services or company
Business to business (B2B) or business to consumer (B2C) or even business to government (B2G) makes no difference. We all want to learn about those things which threaten our business or quality of life and well being.
2009 Empire Research GroupAll rights Reserved-Confidential Page 17
So could you keep your audience in their seats? Could you move the 90% that are not interested in your company, products or services to a position of intense interest? And could you position yourself and your company as the only real solution? If not then you may want to investigate the Core Story Sales Model more thoroughly.
Go to the Empire research Group website and request a Free Core Story training and consultation. You will be glad you did. www.empireresearchgroup.com Your Empire senior management consultant will be happy to give you all of the details and potential results of executing the Core Story Sales Model www.empireresearchgroup.com/ request-a-consultation.php
Page 18