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Index Page –› Business & Companies –› Sales
 

Selling - Trade Shows Vs. Regular Sales Calls

 

Remember those school exercises that started Compare and contrast....yada yada yada. Well, heres an exercise to get your sales brains moving.

There are major differences between how you sell in a Regular Sales Call versus at a Trade Show. In other words, just because you can sell well, doesnt mean you can sell well in the trade show environment.

Ive identified five major areas which cause concern for professional sales staff who have booth duty. This has nothing to do with the ability of the sales person, only that they often have to do a 180 to accommodate their concerns.

Above all this - note that many trade shows are not hard sell arenas but are marketing venues. If you make a sale, its probably because of hard work before the show. The purpose of a show is to advance the sales process, so plan where the show fits into your sales cycle, and pass these tips along to your sales staff.

Face-to-Face Time

Regular Sales Call -
You set the schedule. You and the prospect determine the time necessary for you to explain and/or sell. It may be 30 minutes, an hour, a half-day or more, but you have control of the presentation.

Trade Show -
Unless youve made appointments prior to the show, or the prospect puts you on its short list of exhibits to visit, youre lucky to get three minutes on the show floor. Why? Time is short, and youre either an unknown or well-known.

Location

Regular Sales Call -
You may be lucky and have the prospect in your office or factory. Or, youre on his turf. Or in a favorite restaurant. In any case, its a familiar surrounding and you feel comfortable.

Trade Show -
Now youre on neutral turf. You have your companys image around you - name badges, signs, brochures, handouts, give-aways, etc. Should be good news - youre in control. Until the visitor leaves your booth and walks over to your competitor. (Remember, thats the essence of a trade show - competitors coming together to build an industry.)

Who Initiates Contact?

Regular Sales Call -
Generally, you make the first contact, so you know the prospects major details - name, address, how you can solve his problem, time frame for the sale - maybe youve even toted up your commission. And if the prospects calls you first? Great, the sales cycle is moved along even faster.

Trade Show -
Oops, here comes a stranger. With a name you dont know, a company youve probably never heard of - or if you have, probably not that department. Now your people skills come into play. Its faster and more professional than a cocktail party, more demanding than an interview and more tiring because you repeat it all day.

Prospect Information

Regular Sales Call -
In todays fast changing sales environment, you have good intelligence about your prospect. You can use the buzzwords - enterprise, cybercorp, partnering - and you can probably adapt your sales competencies to the prospects requirements.

Trade Show -
Remember, unless youve set up appointments with prospects or clients, youve probably got a stranger standing in front of you. Now, not only your sales competencies come into play but your knowledge and understanding of your industry and marketplace are challenged.

Time and Money

Regular Sales Call -
The internet has allowed companies to reduce drastically the initial intelligence gathering costs and time frame. Make sales proactive, not reactive. It still costs money. It still takes time. And its still face-to-face.

Trade Show -
The key is follow-up. You cant swipe a card, shake a hand and wait for the prospect to call. People attend shows because theyre in the same industry as you, and stopped at your exhibit because theyre interested in your product. Trade shows advance the sales cycle. This is a great opportunity - dont blow it!

When you understand that you make a 180 from your regular job and comfort zone. then you will be more effective at trade shows.

Author: Julia O'Connor
 
Author Bio:

Julia O'Connor

In one way or another, Julia has always been in sales. From the time her mortified mother found out that, as an enterprising 5-year-old, she was peddling homemade pot holders to the neighbors, to her current expertise in trade show marketing, she has been interested in results. And in order to get the results she wants, she will guide, train and teach.

Her careers range from public and professional education design, to freelance advertising-public relations, to real estate investment portfolio management.

Since 1982, Julia has been working with clients in trade show marketing. And, when she asked clients, "why are you going to that show?", she found most did not know. Time to teach.

After years of informal instruction, Trade Show Training was incorporated to provide structured training ranging from trade show basics to the ergonomics of exhibit design. She designed Camp Sho-M-Sel-M to improve sales staff performance in the trade show environment.

She holds degrees from The University of Georgia in Advertising, an MA in Mass Communications from The University of Iowa, and an Indiana University MBA in Marketing. She is a frequent speaker on marketing, networking, entrepreneurship and trade shows.

 
 
 

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