Chapter 49. Having a "Great Meeting" Is Not the Objective

Chris Lytle

Sparque

Whenever a salesperson tells the boss that he or she had a great meeting, you can be sure that he or she did not make a sale. If the salesperson had made a sale, he or she would lead with that information: "I got the deal."

The following conversation actually took place. The names have been changed, but I'll let you know that I was the sales manager. A salesperson has just returned to the office from a sales call 102 miles away.

  • "How was your meeting, Alan?" asks the sales manager.

  • "It was a great meeting," says the rep.

  • "You got the order, then? Congratulations," says the manager.

  • "No, I didn't get the order."

  • "Oh. Then why did you tell me it was a great meeting?"

  • "Well, we talked for nearly two hours."

  • "So, he didn't throw you out."

  • "And he really likes our product. He says it is the best he's ever seen."

  • "So what is the next step?" asks the manager.

  • "He wants me to call him in the spring."

  • "Spring is six months from now and 91 days long, Alan. Is there a specific date in the spring when you are going to reconnect?"

  • "No, he just wants me to call him in the spring."

  • "Let me get this straight. You just drove 204 miles and got put off until spring and you call that a 'great meeting'?"

  • "Okay, it was a good meeting."

  • "I would call it a continuation and leave it at that, Alan. You had a meeting and have no next step planned."

  • Using precision language is seemingly a lost art.

Salespeople use terms like "hot prospect" and "great ...

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