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March 17, 2008

Are You Predictable?

LemmingsWOULDN’T YOU AGREE: “Predictable” = “Boring”? And to extend this: “Predictable” = “Invisible”. We certainly know it when we see it, and we tend to tune out quickly when encounter things that are predictable-boring-irrelevant-et al.
        Case in point: When you get a telemarketing call, how often do you listen to the whole message? And if you do listen to the whole thing, are you ever surprised? Probably not.
        Same thing happens with the majority of presentations, B2B cold calls, prospecting emails, PR releases, and so on. Most are so formulaic as to be invisible. And if you are following a formula, you’re definitely weakening your chances.
        Imagine this: A vendor comes to meet with you and they open up a laptop. What’s going to happen next? They’re probably going to open up a presentation. And then do. So what’s coming next? Right — a Title slide? And next? Yep, an Agenda slide. And at this point, you probably want to run out screaming, “Noooooo!” (because you know how deadly boring this is likely to be).
        Same thing happens with prospecting calls, voice mails, and emails, except that the receiver now has a delete key to quickly lessen their pain.

So . . .
Why do people persist in being Predictable? Because it’s easier. Because they’ve never tried a different approach. Or because someone above them has insisted that “This is the way we do it here.”
        The problem is that your rationale is irrelevant to those you want to influence.
        To break out of the trench of Predictability, you need to think about what really matters to the people you want to influence, then think about how to most effectively show them that you have an answer for their needs.
        Chances are you don’t need PowerPoint to do this. You can probably create an incredibly potent picture just with words. Same goes for cold calls and emails.
        And if you really do need slideware, you certainly don’t need a title slide. Instead, start off with an image that captures what you really want to express, and you’ll definitely break out of the mold of “Predictable”.

For another view on this same idea, check out Seth Godin’s latest post: “Why bother having a resume?” He makes a really good case for not following the norm.

Related posts:
  · Typecasting
  · Are You Easy to Ignore?

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Comments

Well I guess, if it works this way, is a reason probably that...it works !
I'm OK with you, we don't really search sometimes for innovation ; I must add that, often sellers do their job in presenting "all-in-one-made" presentation which talk to them, but not to you ! And that's the main problem in business approach : uniform, unpersonal, no ability to check, guess or listen to the real needs of customers. We're in a deaf times, where nobody cares about nothing.
But it's the customer which have the key : the money.
L.

Great points, Laurent. Indeed, a lot of people are satisfied with "good enough" (whatever that might be). A lot of sellers and marketers think that what they have is good enough, and a lot of buyers accept "good enough" because they've rarely seen anything better. And the drudge of business churns on . . .

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