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How to Organize a PowerPoint Sales Presentation - 7 Easy Steps
for a Perfect Pitch
Like any
good performance, a presentation must have a beginning, a middle
and an end. Plus, it must be easy to hear, so your audience
"gets it" and responds positively. Let's be clear; you present
to sell.
To
deliver a winning sales presentation you must:
*
differentiate yourself from your competitors
* convince your audience you are worth listening to--by being
easy to hear
* deliver information so that it is understood and appreciated
* keep your audience listening and engaged from the very first
word.
Too many
presenters waste their most important opening minutes with the
standard "Thank you for inviting us" quickly followed by the "My
name is..." and sailing right into the "I'd like to introduce
you to our team." If that's what you do, you are achieving the
exact opposite of what you intend. First, you sound like
everybody else. Secondly, your beginning is instantly
forgettable. And finally, you have given your audience good
reason to disengage right from the get-go. Indeed, you are
seriously out of tune with the needs of a listening audience.
When you
want to win, you need a perfect pitch. Here's the how and why in
7 easy steps.
Step 1
Begin
with your Big Message--the one you have polished until it sings.
Benefits
Research
tells us that most people confronted with a stream of
information forget almost all of it. In fact, you'd be lucky if
your audience remembers two or three specifics from your
presentation. In reality, the details you present are not the
essential factor in making the sale. Your Big Message is. Open
with your message and your audience will remember it.
Your Big
Message is the main thing you want your audience to know about
you. It is the strong statement of fact that sets you apart from
your competitors and resonates with your audience so they listen
up and respond positively.
Your Big
Message is the big reason--in sentence form--that convinces your
audience they need you. Polish it, refine it and open with it
before you get to a word of content--even before you introduce
yourself. Once you state your message--if it's a good one--your
audience is engaged. Now you may introduce yourself.
Step 2
Organize
and deliver your content around three--maximum four--main
topics. These are the topics or subjects that support or prove
your message.
Benefits
People
understand information only when they can organize it into a
coherent structure so it makes sense. Make remembering easy by
organizing information into three distinct topics.
Imagine
your message is something like: Our equipment is better built,
more reliable and easier to use than any other on the planet.
The topics you then choose must support or prove that message.
So let's say for this message your three topics are technology,
design and return on investment. That's it. The rest of your
content must go under those three headings.
Now,
whether you are asked to present at warp speed, or are expected
to speak for twenty minutes or considerably longer, you can bet
your audience will forget the detail, the minutia, the facts and
the figures. Short or long, a well planned presentation follows
a three-topic structure. The difference between them is in the
amount of detail you put under each heading.
So--and
this is the kicker--no matter how long your presentation is,
when it is structured in three sections--or maximum four--your
audience remembers your message because you opened with it.
What's more, even if they forget all the details, they will
remember you talked about three big concepts that prove your
message: technology, design and return on investment. And after
all, that's what is really important.
Step 3
Reinforce your big message with a visual metaphor.
Benefits
Pictures
are more memorable than words. Pictures can instantly engage
your audience and subliminally reinforce the message you want to
convey.
Words
matter. Visuals make a difference. The more careful you are in
tieing everything together with an underlying theme, the more
memorable your pitch becomes. If, for example, your big point is
that you are the best at putting all the pieces together, you
might use a carpentry image as a background throughout and
reinforce your message with titles that tie in to the
image--titles that begin with words like Building or Crafting or
Cementing. Or if you want your audience to know you have a
specialized team to work on their behalf, you might use a sports
metaphor with a team picture as the background on your slides.
Your topic titles should then fit with the sports theme.
Picking
appropriate titles to match your theme adds a touch of
creativity while highlighting your underlying message.
Step 4
Use your
slides as a visual aid, not a reading exercise; eliminate as
much text as you can.
Benefits
Good eye
contact is the key to connecting with your audience. You cannot
connect when everyone is reading from the screen. If you must,
use bullet points to keep yourself on track or to point out key
features or benefits. Eliminate sentences or anything else that
requires reading.
Do not
give your audience text to read while you speak. Research
explains that people process visual material and verbal material
in different areas of the brain--on separate channels. Listeners
can digest information on only one channel at a time--which
means that if they are reading, they cannot listen to you.
Research
also reports that the more senses you can stimulate, the more
you improve information retention. If you can stimulate the
visual cortex with a striking picture while you orally deliver
information to stimulate the hearing sense, you have doubled the
chances of your audience remembering anything you say.
Don't
worry about forgetting something. This is your stuff and you
could talk for hours about it. What's more, if you do leave
something out, your audience will never know.
Step 5
Do not
print your PowerPoint slides to use as handouts. Create
separate, reader-friendly documents.
Benefits
A well
written handout is proof that the presentation you delivered is
valid and true. PowerPoint slides are designed to be
visuals--the exact opposite of reading documents. Slides are
horizontal; documents are vertical. Slides are on dark
backgrounds; documents are on white paper. Slides use huge
fonts; documents use reading fonts no bigger than 10-12 point
because bigger than that is actually harder to read on paper.
There's lots more, but you get the idea.
And
while Microsoft suggests you use your slides as a handout, it's
a big mistake to do so. Handouts that look and read like real
documents provide a huge advantage because they are readable and
people actually read them. Imagine that! Feel free to include
all the facts, data, detail and minutia you want, and distribute
them before the Q and A.
Step 6
End your
presentation by returning to your opening Big Message.
Benefits
Your Big
Message is the hook on which everything else hangs. Once you
finish delivering content, repeat the Big Message you began
with--to remind your audience what sets you apart. What's more,
when you end where you began, your presentation has the seamless
and satisfying quality of a good performance.
When
that's done, it's time for Q&A.
Step 7
Practice
with a coach to be sure you present with warmth, energy and real
language. It's all about your "likability factor."
Benefits
A good
coach can make the difference between an amateur performance and
a professional one. Remember, your goal is not to be slick, it
is to be likable--which requires a careful blend of confidence,
energy and enthusiasm.
It's
hard to assess your own performance. It's nearly impossible to
gauge how likable you are to an audience. A coach will check to
be sure you make good eye contact and speak conversationally,
that your body language is open and welcoming, that you appear
warm and friendly. A coach will make sure your voice is
pleasant, that your passion shows, and that your delivery hits
all the right notes.
When
making the sale is important, you want a professional's
insightful feedback to help polish your delivery.
Follow
these 7 steps and become the likable, memorable, easy-to-hear
presenter you know you can be. That's a perfect pitch!
When
companies need a dynamite coach to help them reinvent or polish
their presentation, they call Fern Lebo--because it pays off big
time. Author, consultant, trainer and coach, Lebo is President
of FrontRunner Communications, adjunct faculty at Auburn
University and a frequent keynote speaker at conferences,
retreats and meetings.
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When companies need a dynamite coach to help them reinvent
or polish their presentation, they call Fern Lebo--because
it pays off big time. Author, consultant, trainer and coach,
Lebo is President of FrontRunner Communications, adjunct
faculty at Auburn University and a frequent keynote speaker
at conferences, retreats and meetings.
For
nearly 20 years, Lebo has helped Fortune 500 companies
create and deploy star performers. In seminars, workshops
and individual or team coaching sessions, participants
master the skills they need to compete and win more often.
Whether it's a presentation renovation, strategic business
writing, or improving presentation delivery, Lebo's clients
learn the secrets that set them apart; they master the
professional techniques they need to achieve outstanding
success. Find out more at
http://FRcommunications.com |
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