Raise Your Elevator Speech to the Top Floor With Powerful Emotions
by Michael
Clark
If your elevator speech sparks a buyer's curiosity, it's only doing
half the job. Your elevator speech should not only spark curiosity but
also awaken powerful emotions. Small business owners can learn success
from the Madison Avenue and branding experts about how to design
advertisements and messages that drive consumers to feel and act upon
their emotions.
While networking with other business leaders, I'm often surprised at how
few utilize these techniques to their advantage. Below are a few
examples of how to spark curiosity, make customers feel great and grow
your business.
Here's a tagline, "We develop lasers that will cut your waste 20%."
Sounds good; everyone loves saving. That should work, right? Not
necessarily. Savings alone isn't enough. What if your competitor is
telling prospects, "Our lasers cut your waste by 20% and that's the
difference between staying in business or leading your industry." By
adding the emotionally packed difference, the impact is doubled and
takes the job away from you. Your competitor's "industry leading"
emotional pitch demonstrates to prospects how the savings benefit will
make them feel. Utilizing emotions constructively can be a real key to
increasing sales.
One executive organizer I know claims in her elevator speech that she
gives executives an extra hour each day. That's great, but think how
much more effective her pitch would be if she added an emotional
component to it. Let's say she's talking to an executive who obviously
works out regularly and she says to him, "With that extra hour, you can
work out, stay fit, and not feel guilty about the time you are taking
away from your family." She just tied together an ego boost for working
out and family pride. Surely that will earn her additional sales.
You've probably heard a lot about selling by benefits instead of
features. Combining inspiring and thought-provoking emotions with
exceptional benefits moves your message from the bottom floor up to the
Trump Tower level. Here's an example of combining an emotion that goes
along with a benefit. If you're selling a man on a dozen red roses,
which is the more powerful selling statement? "Women love roses. You
can't go wrong with them." Or, "Send a dozen of these to your wife at
her office and all the other women will be envious. Your wife will love
you for boosting her water cooler esteem."
The second message ties in two very strong emotions, pride and love,
and makes the buyer eager to receive the benefits.
In order to find the emotions to power your elevator speech, analyze
your products' benefits and find at least three strong emotions that you
can bond to each one. Practice different ways to utilize these emotions
in your pitch. And keep it positive! Fear is old school.
If you follow the steps outlined above, I guarantee you'll profit by
setting more meetings and receiving additional sales. Won't it feel good
to be the one relaxing on a tropical beach enjoying the benefits?
Business consultant and professional speaker Michael
Clark has been helping businesses including Fortune 500 companies such
as IBM and Cellular One succeed for over 20 years. Michael is a serial
entrepreneur having opened multiple successful businesses over the last
12 years. For more information, visit his web site at
http://biznbeyond.com.
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