3 Step Trade Show Selling
3 Step Trade Show Selling
This sounds simple but in practice there is more to it – follow 3 simple steps to maintain your trade show focus: Plan, Qualify and Follow Up.
Do these three things and you will maximize your trade show impact, and best of all, your competitors are probably only doing one of these (at best).
Failing to Plan is Planning to Fail
You can never start planning your trade show soon enough. This is where you paint the ‘big picture’ and set goals and responsibilities. Blue Sky Thinking is fine, but you also want to know just what you are really doing exhibiting in the first place. Once that is set, you then move on to be very specific about setting targets; how many sales, how many qualified prospects, how many sales demonstrations, how many sales appointments or presentations will be achieved.
Planning is continuous – it never stops. But if you know where you are going, you have a far better chance of getting there.
Qualify Attendees, Do Not Try to Sell to Everyone
Be clear – not everyone attending the trade show is going to be someone you want as a customer. Resist the urge to try to sell to everyone you meet, and remember basic sales principles. The first step when you meet an attendee is to qualify them: do they have a need or problem your business can help them with; do they have the authority to make the buying decision or can they put you in touch with who that person is; and finally, do they have the budget or the means to pay for whatever you’re selling.
If you have “yes” to all these questions, you have yourself a hot prospect you want to spend time with.
The End of the Trade Show Day is Not the End of the Work – Follow Up
This is where many exhibitors fail – they relax after the show and do not follow up in a prompt and professional manner. All the information you have collected on potential prospects and customers should now be put to good use. Phone calls and mailings need to be performed so the people you spoke to see you are professional and looking to do business. Don’t forget that these same people will also be dealing with your competitors from the show – stay ahead of them by doing the follow up and keep the promises you made at the show.