The best sales book I’ve ever read is titled The Accidental Salesperson, written by sales expert Chris Lytle.
One of the key themes in the book is wrapped up in this Lytle quote: “Life is one big seminar and lifelong learners get more out of life.”
Treating life as a seminar means being observant. Here’s an example from Lytle’s own experience.
He came across a brochure one day advertising a $129 seminar that promised to teach how to write brochures that sell. Rather than spending the time and money attending the seminar, Lytle spent three hours analyzing the brochure and sucked the intellectual marrow out of its bones. He then incorporated all the ideas into his own brochure. Lesson learned and put in action.
Lytle did a similar analysis of infomercials, those annoying long-form commercials that go on and on about anti-aging moisturizers, body building equipment and get-rich-quick real estate schemes.
Lytle figured that infomercials must sell a ton of product because they cost a lot of money to produce and were being aired on national television in big numbers. So rather than changing the channel – as most of us do – he took notes on how the advertisers put together their sales presentations so he could emulate their time-tested wisdom.
What he found is that every infomercial uses the same basic three-step formula.
Each infomercial begins with a statement that speaks directly to the audience about their problems. Once audience members thoroughly identified themselves with the problem, whether real or imagined, the advertiser explains the solution.
But, Lytle explains, they don’t show you the product right away. Instead, they show everyday people who have already benefited from using the product. Those people supply testimonials that not only talk about the success of the product, they talk about the other products they tried in the past that didn’t work. That makes the advertised product even more of a dream come true because it really works.
“Ultimately the inventor of the product … comes on and tells the story of how he discovered an amazing secret and how thrilled he is that he can make the world a better place,” Lytle writes. “The storytelling adds credibility and makes the audience feel connected to the people behind the product.”
The advertiser then demonstrates how the product works.
Some other points Lytle makes.
These same persuasion techniques can be used in your own spoken or written sales proposals, Lytle says, even if you’re selling something with far less sensational performance claims.
Lytle gets into more detail in his book. But you get the big picture. Study what works and apply those techniques to your own efforts.
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