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Your sales pipeline is not a one-stop journey. You can’t talk to all of your sales prospects the same way. Depending on where your prospects are in that pipeline, you need to tailor your sales story to that stage.
We’ve seen too many opportunities missed by sales teams throwing everything but the kitchen sink into their presentations right off the bat. This is usually a symptom of an underdeveloped pipeline. The sales team doesn’t understand what information will resonate with a given prospect at a specific point in their journey.
Take a look at our strategy for developing the right type of presentation for where your prospects are in the engagement process. Keep their journey in mind, be ready to make some adjustments on the fly, and give your prospects the refined sales approach they cannot resist.
If your answer is “the only deck I have,” you’re stumbling out of the gate. You absolutely should not reach for a 30-slide PowerPoint the first time your prospect asks for more information. You need to be thinking about who you’re sending that deck to, when you’re sending it to them, and why you’re sending it to them.
A critical piece of this is developing different sales decks for different stages of the sales pipeline — and even for different verticals — depending on the prospects you’re going after..
But that capability isn’t going to solve your problems if your sales team isn’t thinking about their messaging strategically.
We asked one of our own clients what we could do to make Nuvue even better. Their answer wasn’t so much about adjusting the platform itself, but about helping their team to use the platform more effectively. We realize that a lot of companies probably struggle with similar issues — what to send their prospects, and when. So let’s take a look at what we’ve seen work firsthand.
You can’t just set your sales prospects on a set course and tell them you’ll meet them at the other end. Getting them started on the journey is just the first step — you also need to meet them at every additional step along the way. To do that, you (and your sales team) need to completely understand your sales presentation UX, and you need to align that UX with your sales pipeline and verticals.
Building off of step one, dive into what each touchpoint along the sales journey will entail. This may vary from client to client — both in terms of how many touchpoints there actually are, and in terms of what type of sales content makes the most sense at any given step in the process.
Let’s take a look at an example of this strategy and what sales collateral you should include at each step:
You can put in all the thought and effort possible to ensure you’re giving your prospects just what they need, when they need it, but still come up short. Even if you enlist a team of sales presentation experts to help you develop your presentations for different touchpoints, it’s ultimately the delivery of those presentations that can make or break the deal. Don’t overlook how vital the strategic delivery of materials and the way in which you track results is to the process as a whole.
Learn how you can use benchmarks to evaluate the performance of your sales decks here.
We understand why sales teams feel like more information is good information. It’s the way things worked in sales for a long time. But it’s just not the case anymore. The idea of the most robust sales presentation being the best sales presentation in every single scenario is outdated.
Your prospects’ time is fragmented. You need to break your story up into bite-sized chunks, and you need to feed those pieces to your prospects at the right time in their sales journey.
If you’re struggling to figure out how to break your sales book up into digestible chapters, and how to ensure your prospects are left looking for the next installment, let’s talk. Nuvue gives you the tools you need to tell your sales story in a compelling manner to keep those prospects turning the page.