Sell at Trade Shows
According to the Center for Exhibit Industry Research, the majority of
trade show attendees are decision makers or influencers that plan to
make a purchase within the next 12 months. Don't waste an opportunity
like that -- follow these guidelines to help make sure your staff is
ready to sell effectively.
How to Sell at Trade Shows
According to the Center for Exhibit Industry Research, the majority of
trade show attendees are decision makers or influencers that plan to
make a purchase within the next 12 months. Don't waste an opportunity
like that -- follow these guidelines to help make sure your staff is
ready to sell effectively.
Avoid soft sells
Trade shows require a hard-sell approach. When attendees show interest
in your booth, approach them immediately and invite them to learn more
about your products or services. Don't leave people waiting -- trade
show attention spans are short, and people will leave your booth if they
can't get help in 60 seconds or less.
Be engaging
The way you greet a visitor to your booth shows your professionalism and
willingness to help. Avoid innocuous greetings like "Can I help you",
"Hi, how are you?", or "How's the show going?". Instead, ask a direct
question that engages the visitor and helps you gauge their interest in
your company's products or services -- "What information can I tell you
about our new heating system?" or "Hello, what are you looking for in a
patio door?".
Watch your manners
Certain booth behavior looks sloppy and conveys that you're not
interested in your customers. Don't sit down. Don't eat, drink, or smoke
at the booth. Never leave your booth unattended. Don't spend time
chatting with colleagues instead of focusing on customers.
Qualify prospects quickly
The first thing you should do once you meet someone new is establish who
they are (buyer, decision maker, supplier, competitor, etc.) and where
they're located. This way you won't end up spending important time with
a person who isn't responsible for buying your product/service, or who
is located in a region your company doesn't serve. You can find this
information out by asking some key questions, looking at their badge, or
requesting a business card which will have the person's title and
address.
Ask lots of questions
Engage a prospect by asking open-ended questions -- ones that require
more than a yes/no answer. This will help you determine their needs and
interests. Focus your responses on how your product or service can meet
these needs. Be sure to observe the 80/20 rule -- listen 80% of the time
and talk 20% of the time. Try to avoid any kind of prepared sales pitch,
which can begin to sound robotic after you've said it for the 50th time.
Keep good records
Write down all the relevant information about a prospect on a "lead
card" which contains: the person's name, title, address, phone/fax
number, e-mail address (all these can come from a business card),
needs/interests, budget and timing. Use this card for your post-show
follow-up when you return to the office. |