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The Sales Pitch as Part of Your Communications Armoury Sale

Whether you are involved in a formal sales pitch or tender process – what those in professional services laughingly call 'beauty parades' – or less formal opportunities to 'sell' you wares when you meet prospects at a business lunch - the pitch must be simple and direct, and illustrate how your product or service can benefit the customer and meet their need.

Absolutely Positive Training
0161 374 9520
Church St
Manchester
Pennant Information Services Limited
0161 4931600
Styal Road
Manchester
City College Manchester
0800 0130123
Whitworth St
Manchester
Joddrell Accounts
0161 431 9604
16 Pendennis Road
Stockport
QA-IQ
0161 476 4944
Yew St
Stockport
Meridian-int Ltd
0161 606 0280
Stretford
Manchester
Aqua Rosa (Beauty & Holistic Training)
07970 027904
63 Battersea Rd
Stockport
OLIVE STRACHAN RESOURCES
01618 385 692
Exchange Square
Manchester
PROVECTUS LTD
0845 8383011
95 Wellington Rd North
Stockport
ECTA
0161 480 5656
Unit 2 Sheffield St
Stockport

The Sales Pitch as Part of Your Communications Armoury

Some business owners rely on their products or services to sell themselves and avoid sales pitches like the plague. Others may be lucky enough to benefit from cross sales to existing customers and recommendations from satisfied clients and trusty contacts. But at some stage or another most business owners and senior managers will be called upon to make a sales pitch of some kind or another – in fact at the most basic level – everyone needs to make a sales pitch to get themselves a job.

And taking this example you only have to think about the shifty teenager turning up for a Saturday job interview straight from school – with shirt hanging out, muddy trainers, dirty hair and no idea what to say as they introduce themselves with – ‘me mum says there’s a job going here’ to realise there are some simple do’s and don’ts in any sales pitch.

A well organized and thought through sales pitch should be in the communications armoury of every business. After all it is just another method of promoting your products and services to potential customers.

Whether you are involved in a formal sales pitch or tender process – what those in professional services laughingly call ‘beauty parades’ – or less formal opportunities to ‘sell’ you wares when you meet prospects at a business lunch - the pitch must be simple and direct, and illustrate how your product or service can benefit the customer and meet their need.

Start with the Product or Service You might think the greatest challenge is where to start – but that’s easy – with your product, service or offer. What is it that you are selling? Or maybe it’s not so easy – because if you’ve thought to yourself – oh well – I sell accountancy services or I’m a web developer – then that’s not quite what I mean.

You need to think about things from a buyers’ point of view, think about the advantages and benefits of what you offer to them – not just what it is that you do. For example a good accountancy service might save a client money on their tax bill, might provide advice on how the business can expand without over stretching itself financially – and a professional web developer could develop a website which facilitates on-line sales – which could save a client money in sales costs, open up global market places and allow things like test marketing at minimum cost. You really need to think about what’s in it for the potential client.

Do Your Research The big advantage of making a formal pitch is that you normally have time and opportunity to research your prospective client. That means finding out things like:

  • What business they are in, how they do business, what they sell, where they sell, who they sell to – all of these pieces of information start to build a picture of your client and help to identify the trigger points you can use in your sales pitch.
  • What their business priorities are – and how you can help meet them.
  • Which alternative suppliers they might be considering – and how you compare with them...

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