Presentation

Presenting Our Sales Materials

How hard can it be the present the sales materials to the buyer? Simple right! Well maybe not. What are the best practices to ensure the meeting is a success and we make a sale. So many salespeople are taught product knowledge, given catalogs of products, prepare slide decks to explain what they sell to the buyer, but have got very little clue about how to present it all. Today we pull back the velvet curtain and show the success secrets of how to present your materials to the buyer
 
Last year, the number of deaths in traffic accidents fell to the lowest on record since 1948. Sounds pretty good right. However, the number of fatal accidents caused by drivers seventy five and older hit a record four hundred and sixty, accounting for fifteen percent of all fatal accidents. The number of people seventy five and older who hold a drivers license increased to five point six million. By twenty twenty two the number is predicted to reach six point six million. Keep your wits about you folks when you are out and about. Japan is a pretty safe place but be careful out on the roads. In other news, Tokyo based Mynavi’s survey of new company recruits showed that one in three are considering leaving their jobs within five years and only one in five treat their employment as being a lifetime role. This is shocking in an economy used to people joining companies for life. Nearly half said they are considering changing their jobs within ten years. Only seven point six percent were planning to spend more than ten years with their employer. Twenty one point eight said they plan to stay with their firm until retirement. Finally, more than a million Japanese work in a different city to their family being away on job assignments. Usually the wife stays put with the kids and the husband lives alone in a different town. In a two thousand and seventeen survey by the Japan Institute for Labor policy and Training, nearly two thirds of Japanese firms transfer their staff and only nineteen point four percent say they take any account of the wishes of the employees as to where they are transferred. These assignments usually last longer than three years, with very limited company support for family reunions.
 
If we are presenting a brochure, flyer, price list, hard copy slide deck or any other typical collateral item, then we should adopt best practice for greatest success. Have two copies always, one for you to read and one for the client, unless you are a genius of reading upside down (which by the way seems to include all Japanese!).
 
At the start, put your copy to the side for later if you need it and turn the client’s copy around to face them. Then proceed to physically control the page changes of the document.
 
Don’t just hand it over, if you can avoid it. You want to walk them through the pages, under your strict supervision. There is usually a lot of information involved and we only want to draw attention to the key points. We don’t receive unlimited buyer time, so we have to plan well. You don’t want them flicking through the pages at the back and you are still explaining something up the front
 
By the way, don’t place any collateral pieces in view of the client at the start of the meeting. Keep them unseen on the chair next to you or in your bag. Why? We want to spend the first part of the meeting asking solid questions to uncover their needs. Don’t distract the buyer from answering your questions – this is vital to understanding their business and their needs.
 
As we hear their answers we set off a chain reaction. We mentally scan the solution library in our brain and start lining up products for them. The details will be in a brochure or a flyer etc., but by showing them at the start we will distract the client. It also implies I am here to sell you something. What is our mantra? Everyone loves to buy but nobody wants to be sold. Keep the sales materials out of sight, until you absolutely know what you will need.
 
Also, at the beginning, we don’t know which materials to show to them, because we don’t know which is the best solution for their needs. Are they after blue or pink? There is no point in going to great depths to describe your unmatchable, unbeatable, best blue in the universe, a prince amongst blues, if they only want to buy pink. After the questioning phase is completed, when we know what they need, then and only then, do we can grab our materials and guide them through the detail.
 
If we hand over the sales materials at the start, they will be reading something on page five and you will still be focused on page one. If you allow this to happen, control of the sales conversation has been lost. The salesperson’s key job is to keep control of the sale’s talk direction, from beginning to end. If you can’t do that, then selling is going to be a tough employ for you.
 
After placing the document in front of them, facing them, pick up your nice pen and use it to show them where to look. There are many distractions on any single page, so we need to keep the show on the road and them focused on the key items. Our pen is our navigator.
 
When we need to make a strong point, we should back it up by using eye contact. The problem is their eyes are glued to the page in front of them, so that they are not even looking at us anymore. To get their eyes off the page, to make eye contact with us, simply raise the pen to your own eye height and their gaze will soon join yours.
 
Know where the items of most interest in your materials are located, based on what you heard earlier and skip pages that are not as relevant. Do not go through the whole thing, from beginning to end. You want them focused only on the most relevant and interesting elements of your presentation. Also you have to narrows things down, because you just don’t have that much time available to you.
 
Slide Decks
 
Regarding the preparation of slide decks, this is a very specific “visual” topic and so please go to our You Tube Channel. We have a comprehensive video tutorial of all the nitty gritty detail of what works best. To access the video, please go to our YouTube Channel, “Dale Carnegie Training Japan”.
 
In the playlists, there is a section called “How to Become Really Excellent At Presentations”. Scroll down to find the video titled “How to Use Powerpoint etc., (Properly) When Presenting”.
 
This takes you through colours, fonts, layout, graphs, tables, photos - everything you need to know in one place.
 
Many Japanese presenters are at world champion level at getting this type of thing wrong. Everything and the kitchen sink is thrown up on the one screen, with garish colours and disparate fonts. Usually it is a total mess.
 
Don’t make this your template to try and blend in. The country of zen has not managed to apply any such minimalist concepts to what goes up on a screen. The basic rule is “less is more” with presentations on screen.
 
It is extremely rare that we wrap up a deal at the first meeting in Japan. Usually, we come back with our solution and pricing. There are many favoured standard styles for presenting proposals for clients, so it is impossible to go through all of those.
 
However, in general because of their risk aversion, most Japanese buyers have a tremendous desire for detail. Let me share with you an insight about this preference for above average levels of information supply.
 
When I was student here in the late 1970s, I attended an international symposium on Sino-Japanese relations. One of the Japanese academics was relaying a story about the introduction of zen into Japan from China. One of the zen stories used a well and a bucket as a metaphor for a spiritual point of instruction. In the Chinese version, the key point was the allegory not the detail of the equipment being used.
 
In the Japanese version of this story, great attention was placed on the dimensions of the well, the bucket, the winding mechanism, the construction of the rope etc. I have never forgotten that insight and it has played out as a truism here in Japan. I have found it is almost impossible to give the Japanese buyer too much detail. I am not suggesting you should, but just be aware there is a hunger here for data.
 
As flagged, this is part of their risk aversion preference. By having more and more detail, they can reduce the possibility of a mistake or a failure. They will suck up as much detail as they can get out of you.
 
It doesn’t mean you should give them so much detail, because it diffuses their concentration on the key things we want them focused on. Remember, we should never sell past the sale. However, bear in mind that the demand for detail and data from the buyer is always going to be super strong. Probably way past what you may be used to.
 
The proposal should reflect the information captured during the sales interview. Outline what you believe is the issue facing the client based on what they told you. Warning! Before proceeding any further, it is critical to check that you have clearly understood their needs.
 
If this is incorrect, then the rest of the document is immediately headed for the trashcan. Assuming that is not the case and having laid that understanding out, now suggest your solution.
 
Depending on your preference, you can present the content in this way:
 
Expected Result-Problem-Solution
 
or
 
Problem-Solution-Expected Result.
 
At the solution point though, go into some substantial detail.
 
Where possible try not to just send the proposal document by email. Present it yourself, because what may be clear to you, may not be so clear to the buyer. We often assume knowledge that they don’t have and so key points can be missed. Sometimes buyers will say “just email me the proposal”. Resist this idea with every fibre in your body and get over there and present it instead. Mention you have something you must “show them” and explain that is why you can’t just send it.
 
Often they will be the internal advocate for what we are selling, so we want them to have the power of persuasion on our behalf. Always present the proposal in person for clarity and so you can answer any questions or correct any misunderstandings.
 
Action Steps

  1. Control the reading flow of the presentation document
  2. Use you pen as the navigator through written materials
  3. Only show the materials after you have had your questions answered and know what they want
  4. Before putting together your slide deck watch the video “How to Use Powerpoint etc., (Properly) When Presenting”.
  5. Always present your proposal in person
  6. Expect the Japanese will want a lot more detail than you may be used to putting in your proposal document
  7. Present your solution in this order: Expected Result-Problem-Solution or Problem-Solution-Expected Result.

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