FEATURE ARTICLE
October 2003
Marketing the Real You
By CJ Hayden, MCC
I often wonder how the practice
began of pretending to be someone else in order
to market your business. You know what I'm talking
about its
the marketing face, the selling voice, that you often put on in
order to attend a networking event or make a sales call. Who taught
you to do that?
I have a suspicion where we learn this behavior. Most of us spend a
lifetime observing showroom salespeople, product spokespersons in the
media, and hucksters on street corners. What we see demonstrated there
is artificial enthusiasm, manipulative use of language, feigned interest,
and in some cases outright deception.
Sounds awful, doesnt it? So why copy any part of this distasteful
way of selling?
Psychologist Abraham Maslow said, "If all you have is a hammer,
everything looks like a nail." Perhaps we believe this is the
only way we can sell because its the only way we know. I'm not
accusing anyone of consciously deceiving prospective clients. What
Im suggesting is that what we do unconsciously and automatically
is to behave un-authentically around them.
Intuitively, many of us feel as if something is wrong with this way
of operating. When we have to sell ourselves, we find it unpleasant,
disagreeable, even repulsive. But what if all those negative feelings
were simply because we hate the artificiality and manipulation we think
must be a part of selling?
Imagine what it would be like to go to a business networking event
as yourself. No facade, no pretension, just plain you. When someone
asks your reason for coming, you tell them the truth. You dont
have to claim you wanted to hear the speaker (if you didnt).
You can come right out and say, "Im hoping to make some
contacts that will lead to business for me."
You wouldn't have to invent reasons to start a conversation. You can
walk up to someone who looks interesting and say, "Hi, I havent
met you yet." If youre shy around strangers, you can tell
the first person you meet, "Im sort of a wallflower and
feel awkward at events like this. Could you introduce me to some folks?"
Now imagine placing a follow-up call to a prospect where you are completely
honest. You could say, "I have some days open on my calendar soon
and Im wondering if this would be a good time for that project
weve been discussing." Or, "We havent talked
in a while and Id like to find out if youre still planning
to start the new training program this year."
I see so many professionals and consultants struggle with trying to
find an "excuse" to call a prospect. You dont need
some manufactured excuse. You know the reason youre calling.
Most of the time THEY know the reason youre calling. Just say
what it is.
Lets extend this same principle to making a cold call. Instead
of stumbling around awkwardly trying to make a polished - but unnatural sales
approach, imagine yourself saying, "Im not much of a salesperson,
but Im really good at what I do. Can we have a conversation about
what you need and see if Im the right person for the job?"
If youve been working from a cold-calling script that makes you
flush and get a tight throat every time you read it, throw it out.
Come up with one really good opening line that feels authentic and
gets directly to the point. Then decide how you will answer honestly some
of the typical questions prospects ask you. My bet is that your calls
will immediately get easier.
In fact, the more you become honest, direct, and authentic in all of
your marketing, the more appealing selling will be to you, the more
effortless it will become, and the more success you will ultimately
achieve. Because most business results from building relationships,
and how can you develop a relationship with someone when you never
reveal who you really are?