(This Friday Meeting to Win begins a 3-week series called Maximize Customer Meetings – Before, During and After. To join us, subscribe here.)
As sales professionals we spend a lot of time talking about, reporting on and pursuing … customer meetings. It makes sense to spend considerable time preparing for these somewhat rare opportunities. One bad meeting with a client and it may be the last time you ever see them – or at the very least you may get delegated to someone without as much authority. A good meeting and it could be the beginning of a great relationship. So, life or death? Close!
Now, you’ve got the meeting – Congratulations. What next?
Today, we will focus on one aspect of meeting preparation to maximize your customer meeting - involve your customer in meeting preparation. Too often sales professionals don’t include their customers in building the agenda or working toward the meeting goal. What happens instead is that the salesperson shows up with the same slides or brochure they use on every first meeting and the customer sits back waiting for the show. Years and years of sales meetings have taught sales reps to perform and customers to spectate. As a customer, I have actually enjoyed some of these shows. Salespeople can really dazzle. The problem is that I am allowed to be lazy, watch the show and see if anything intrigues me enough to move forward. I am not prepared to act or prompted to action. Before I learned how to be a better buyer I saw some amazing shows, with many performers. One of those performances was from a company who wanted to build our sales team’s intranet. They never got a dime of business, but I got a lot of great shows. If I had been asked to get involved in the process at any point, they would have wasted a lot less of everyone’s time. That experience taught me to be a better customer and get involved even when I wasn’t asked. As a salesperson, it taught me to get the buyer in on the work.
Here is something I began to do with great success. Not only did I have productive meetings, I also consolidated sales cycle steps, met more decision makers and built trust and rapport. You can try it and see if you get the same results.
At your next customer meeting, ask the customer to share the responsibility for a productive meeting. Send them an agenda is advance with the goal for the meeting along with an agenda to follow. Ask them for their input on the goal and agenda for the meeting. Once you both agree upon how you will spend your time together it is both parties responsibility to bring the data, people or anything else that will help get the meeting goal accomplished.
Now, you are sharing responsibility for a great meeting that uses everyone’s time wisely and gets everyone working toward the same goal – helping that company. You are a partner instead of a vendor.
Sales Team Meeting Agenda Idea:
- Ask each rep to bring information about all upcoming customer meetings.
- For each meeting, ask each rep to share the desired outcome or goal of that meeting.
- Ask each rep to share how they plan to accomplish this outcome (this will be the agenda).
- Determine what responsibility the customer has in meeting the goal of the meeting.
- Ask each rep to choose one meeting and write an e-mail script for sharing the meeting goal and agenda and asking for the customer’s agreement and/or input on the goal and agenda.
- Share the script with the team for feedback.
- Revise the scripts based on feedback and try this before the customer meeting.
- Plan to report back on the outcome of using the e-mail scripts before customer meetings
- (To get more in-depth sales team meeting exercises along with full agendas, sample scripts, field work assignments and sales tips, visit Meeting to Win and subscribe for weekly sales team meeting agendas and exercises.)