“What’s your favorite beer?” can do wonders in selling beer from your cooler. More so than riffing from your latest product sell sheet.
“When did you last have a really solid sleep?” is an emotionally evocative question that makes it easier to connect with someone you’re working to sell a mattress to.
Basic questions get you basic answers.
Better questions pull on memories and associates to evoke emotion.
That’s the mark of a true salesperson, one who cares enough.
When we search for fit, we often get sidetracked by the present.
Does the peg fit into the square hole?
That might work for manufacturing components, but not when it comes to people.
“Can this person do this job?” isn’t a worthy question to ask when looking for fit.
A better question: “What experiences has this person had in getting to this point?”
The experiences shape the dreams a person has and the culture they’ve developed.
If you get a person with the right dreams and cultural background that fit the dreams and culture of your business, then you have the real fit you’ve been looking for.
Blaming lack of traction on a lack of awareness certainly works for new brands or launches, but much of the time the real problem is getting people who know about you or what you offer to act.
For politicians, it’s not how many people know about them, it’s about how many show up to vote for them.
For your new app, it’s not about how many people have downloaded it, it’s about how many use it after downloading it.
You can certainly drive awareness and see an uptick in the bottom of the funnel – no doubt – but it’s a temporary increase.
At some point, all those for whom your product or service is relevant to might see it.
What then?
It’s my favorite question to ask clients who come asking to have awareness increased.
“Imagine we do it – everyone who matters knows about you. Then what will make them use what you offer and keep using it and tell their friends to use it?”
Oftentimes it’s that side of the spectrum that needs support.
Stay Positive & Knowledge Isn’t Power Until It Gets Used
Of course, small talk is more than just small talk.
It’s connection sampling.
Depending on your POV, it’s a moment to decipher if there’s something in it for you or something there you can give. It’s prodding to see if there is any overlap in eachothers’ narratives.
It feels uncomfortable for anyone, but the moment a connection made, the talk doesn’t feel small any longer.