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Thinking About Sales:  On Entertaining Your Customers

Article Description:
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How much time should I spend entertaining my customers? Good
question. The practice of entertaining customers is one of those
issues that needs to be rethought.


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1178 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-04-13 11:24:00

Written By:     Dave Kahle
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Thinking About Sales:  On Entertaining Your Customers
Copyright (c) 2007 Dave Kahle
The DaCo Corporation




How much time should I spend entertaining my customers?

Good question. The world of the field salesperson is changing
rapidly these days, and everything is in question. The practice
of entertaining customers is one of those issues that needs to be
rethought.

First, let's consider whether or not you should entertain your
customers. In these days of e-commerce and Internet
communication, is there a place for this age-old practice?

Consider this experience of mine. I had a high-potential account
that did not respond to my efforts. Months went by, and I could
get nowhere in this huge account.

My company owned four season tickets to the University of
Michigan football games, and it was my turn to use them. I
invited the head of the purchasing department from that account
and her spouse to join my wife and I. We spent the afternoon
together, first enjoying a traditional tail-gate meal, then a
great college football game.

Immediately thereafter, however, I began to do business in that
account. Business grew continually until it eventually became my
largest account. The football game was the turning point in the
relationship.

It wasn't that I gained "inside" information. We didn't even
talk about business. But, my customer came to know me better,
and, in so doing, became more comfortable with me as a person.
And that made all the difference.

That was not the first, nor the last, time for that experience. I
regularly treated two of my customers with their spouses to join
my wife and I for a dinner at Greek town in Detroit, followed by
a Tiger's game. We never talked business, but afterward,
business always grew. Again, it wasn't that we exchanged
business information, cut deals, or anything of that nature. What
did happen, every time, was that my customers came to know me
better and differently. We became friends instead of just buyers
and sellers.

There is an important truth illustrated by these examples. People
like to do business with people they know. The better they know
you, the more likely it is that they'll do business with you.
When they spend time with you out side of the business setting,
they come to know you better. It really is that simple.

Now, this doesn't mean that you can charge 20% more than your
competitors, nor does it mean that you can sell an inferior
product, or that your company can get away with second-class
service. But, when many of these things are viewed by the
customer as about the same as what your competition offers, you
are more likely to get to the business if you are the one who has
the greater relationship with the customer. The relationship
doesn't stand in place of quality, price and service, but it can
provide a competitive edge.

In my seminars, I liken the role of the relationship in selling
to an oil can that is used to lubricate the gears of a
sophisticated machine. It is possible to sell without good
relationships with your customers; it is just much harder.
Building powerful personal relationships with your customers is
like oiling the gears. It just makes everything move that much
smoother and easier.

In this time of high-tech communication, powerful personal
relationships provide the high-touch that many people are
subconsciously hungering for. Robert Putnam, in his landmark
book, Bowling Alone, quoted a study by an MIT researcher that
concludes:

       "Though some unimportant business relationships and
casual social relationships will be established and maintained on a
purely virtual basis, physical proximity will be needed to
cement and reinforce the more important professional and social
encounters."

Later, more directly to our point, the research concludes:

       "widespread use of computer-mediated communication will
actually require more frequent face-to-face encounters,' and
extensive deep, robust, social infrastructure of relationships
must exist so that those using the electronic media will truly
understand what others are communicating to them."


In other words, even in this high-tech world characterized by
voice mail, e-commerce and instant messaging, face-to-face
relationships are necessary.

Is there, then, a place for entertaining your customers in this
high tech sales environment? Absolutely! The question becomes not
whether or not you ought to, but how to do it in such a way as to
gain the greatest benefit. Here are some thoughts on how to
entertain effectively.

Entertaining strategically

Having lunch every Tuesday with your buddy who happens to work
for one of your customers is not entertaining strategically.
That's a waste of time. Instead, do this. Make a list of all the
individuals who could be instrumental in buying your products and
services. Rank them in order of importance using criteria like
how important they are to the sale, and how much business they
control.

Then, start at the top and methodically work down through the
list. Try to spend social time - not business time - with each. I
have found evening or Saturday afternoon events work best. Sports
events, concerts, and plays are excellent because they are
attractive and appealing to a lot of people. To sit at the
40-yard line of a University of Michigan football game, for
example, is probably a once-in-a-lifetime experience for most
people.

Remember, the purpose is to get to know one another better as
people - not as buyer and seller. So, don't talk business unless
your customer brings it up. And no sales pitches, please. When
you do that, you harden the buyer/seller roles that each of you
play. That's exactly the opposite of what you want to have
happen. Instead, search for personal common ground - things that
you have in common with your customer. You are trying to get to
know each other as people, not as role-players.

I've found it to always be more effective to invite the customer
and his/her spouse or boyfriend /girlfriend to join my wife and
me. Having the other two people makes the customer feel more at
ease, and increases the likelihood that it will be a pleasant
social evening.

When you are entertaining, remember that you are host and that
you should attend to all the details. That means that you make
the dinner reservations, you see to the parking and
transportation. If you are at a sporting event, you have cash to
pay for beer and hot dogs, etc. Think the evening through in
detail, and prepare for all the contingencies.

While a beer or two is OK, be careful with your use, and
provision, of alcohol. Too much alcohol can leave a literal as
well as figurative bad taste in your customer's mouth. Finally,
don't allow the evening to go to extremes in any way. Don't be
the loudest fan, nor the last to leave. Don't order the most nor
the least expensive item on the menu. Be gracious and moderate in
everything you do. Strategic entertaining can be one of your most
powerful strategies. It is a way to build relationships which
provide you with a competitive edge, while, at the same time,
meets the customer's preference to do business with people
he/she knows.




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About Dave Kahle, The Growth Coach(r):
Dave Kahle is a consultant and trainer who helps his clients 
increase their sales and improve their sales productivity. His 
latest book for sales managers is Transforming Your Sales Force 
for the 21st Century (http://www.davekahle.com/entransforming.htm).  
You can also sign up for his sales ezine called "Thinking About Sales" 
at http://www.davekahle.com/enmailinglist.htm . You can reach Dave 
personally at 800-331-1287 or by emailing him at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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