About Me

It's not about what you can do, it's about who you are. This is me, warts and all, just a guy trying to plot a course through life.

Thursday, 20 December 2012

Desert Island Discs Part 1


 Tropical marine environments scenic landscape</a> by Margos Jim, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
 Hello Reader!  Do you remember that post of mine from 2011 – If Music be the Food of Life?  No?  Well, go look at it now, I’ll wait here for you.

Down towards the bottom you will see a reference to Desert Island Discs and I thought I would expand on that and give you the whole list.  However, to avoid boring you to sleep I’ve been kind and split it into three posts.

When you have listened to as much music as I have (and still do), it can be difficult to whittle it down to just 8 tracks you would be happy to be stranded with on a desert island.  What criteria do you use?  I suspect they are different for every single person who makes up such a list.  What I have rediscovered in putting together this list is that it is the rhythm of music which appeals to me.  I don’t pay too much attention to lyrics and guitar twiddling often leaves me cold.  It’s the drum and bass lines which really get under my skin.

That said, it’s sometimes difficult to articulate exactly why a certain piece of music moves you.  You just know it does!

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

All Aboard the Cluetrain!

I recently stumbled across the Cluetrain Manifesto, which I first encountered when it was published in 1999.

To put it in some sort of context, at the time the manifesto was written blogging had been around for about 5-7 years, MySpace was four years in the future, as was LinkedIn, Facebook was 5 years in the future and Twitter was 7 years in the future.

Even so, the authors were bold enough to say:

“Networked markets are beginning to self-organize faster than the companies that have traditionally served them.”

Just consider how much more networked markets are now, with all the new, whizzy, social media tools available to them!

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Are You Human or Are You Robot?


In ‘the good old days’ if you wanted to buy something B2B you relied on salespeople to keep you educated – where else could you get detailed product information (outside of trade magazines, exhibitions and the like)?  As part of your education, they also educated themselves regarding your likelihood to buy what they had to offer and when.  The really good ones then ensured that you received appropriate information at the right time and, all things being equal, you bought something from them.  Happiness all round.

In a recent blog post, Gerhard Gschwandtner of Selling Power, quoting the Corporate Executive Board, said that “57% of B2B buying steps are completed before buyers connect with a salesperson.”

Clearly, purchasers are now educating themselves by some other means.  Step forward and take a bow, content marketing.

Friday, 7 September 2012

Do you understand your buyers?

I had never really thought about the answer to this question until I came across the Buyersphere Project a few years ago.  That was a real eye-opener in so many ways, not least because it showed me what can be measured if you put your mind to it!

It also helped me start to understand and rationalise some of what I was seeing in my own sales and marketing efforts.  More truthfully, in the resistance I was seeing from potential customers.  “Why can’t I get those appointments?  Ah, that’s the reason why.”

I was reminded of it again recently when I came across When Did You Last Map the Buying Process of Your Customers? by Tony Zambito on the Sales Benchmark Index website.

As Tony admits in his response to one of the comments, a better question might be ‘Why Haven’t You Yet…?’

Friday, 20 July 2012

Sales Growth - Two Opinions

To steal the introduction from one of the blog posts I’ll point you to in a second, “There are 1,525,124 sales books for sale on Amazon.  On April 24th, McKinsey added “Sales Growth: Five Proven Strategies from the World’s Sales Leaders” to this crowded field.”

This quote came from Greg Alexander’s “Book Review: McKinsey’s Sales Book” on the Sales Benchmark Index blog.

By one of those strange quirks of Internet fate, on the same day I also read a post about one of the author’s of the same book on Bob Apollo’s Inflexion Point blog: “Exclusive McKinsey Interview: Finding the Mountaintops in Your Markets

What a fascinating difference in two responses to the same book!


Friday, 22 June 2012

Buying isn't Selling

I recently read a very thought-provoking article by Kristin Zhivago entitled “Are your customers using social media to warn others to stay away?”  Yes, go and read the article so you understand what this post is all about!  Sheesh, do you want me to do ALL the work for you? J

In brief, this is the scenario – Kristin wanted to buy a voice-recording piece of software or app.  She had clearly identified a number of must-haves and don’t-wants so started shopping around.  Here’s key quote No. 1:

The buying process was PAINFUL

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

What are you going to do with all that knowledge?


I turned 50 a few months ago (no sympathy, please!)  I guess I’m not the first person to get all reflective around this time and I’m sure I won’t be the last so bear with me.

I started my first blog in 2004 but that quickly sputtered to a halt due, I think, to the total lack of response.  I started this current blog in April 2011 so you can see I’m not exactly bursting with ideas on this one either.  However, I do want to stick with it because (he said modestly) I do think I have a world view that is worth something to somebody, somewhere.  (Hello, wherever and whoever you are.)

Testing that hypothesis is what got me started on LinkedIn.  I wanted to test the waters with my thoughts and ideas and see what happened – did they have value or was I just another arrogant so-and-so kidding himself?

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Going through the (selling) emotions


As is often the case in the blogosphere (at least it is in the part I frequent) I’ve seen contrasting posts on, nominally, the same subject over the last few days.

The first was from Jim Keenan, titled ‘Be Emotional’.  In it Jim makes a powerful argument that, to succeed in sales, you need to be emotional at least part of the time.

“When we truly feel what our customers feel, then and only then can we be the best sales person we can be.

Be emotional damn it!”

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Dumb as a post – How NOT to use Twitter


I was amused last week to gain another follower on Twitter.  What tickled my funnybone was the fact that this guy has followed (and very quickly unfollowed) me at least half a dozen times before.

Clearly, he loves Twitter as he follows about 62,000 people.  What astonishes me is that he has about 58,500 followers.

Friday, 20 April 2012

The Great Social Media Experiment

Partly inspired by Sean McPheat’s book ‘eselling® and partly by my ‘Diary of a Sales Manager’ column on Modernselling.com (all one article of it), I decided to put my money where my mouth is and start the Great Social Media Experiment at the very end of October 2011.

The idea was to use LinkedIn and Twitter to identify prospective customers and to engage them in a non-sales way so that, if and when, they are looking for something I can supply, they are already aware of me.


Friday, 13 April 2012

The Power of How and Why

Have you ever read something that made you say “oh, that’s so obvious now that it’s been stated.  Why couldn’t I see that for myself?”

I recently had just that experience reading Putting Challenger Selling to Work – One on Brian McIver’s blog.

To put Brian’s post in context, if you work in sales and you dabble in social media (you must do, or why else are you here?) you will know that there has been a huge amount of buzz about The Challenger Sale by Matt Dixon and Brent Adamson.  The book (not yet read) is based on surveys of over 6,000 sales reps across geographies and industries.