BY: Director
of Marketing, Pam Sowder
Your job with It
Works! Global is to wrap people. Let’s also define what our “job” is not with the short list below:
1.Convince people to join our opportunity.
2.Harass our friends and family into buying our products.
3.Give the wrap away.
4.Work on creating new marketing materials.
5.Look in our eSuite hourly to see if anyone joined from Facebook.
6.Sit around and wish this would work. This is “networking" not “netwishing".
1.Convince people to join our opportunity.
2.Harass our friends and family into buying our products.
3.Give the wrap away.
4.Work on creating new marketing materials.
5.Look in our eSuite hourly to see if anyone joined from Facebook.
6.Sit around and wish this would work. This is “networking" not “netwishing".
The list above
will only cause us to eventually quit and others to run from us. Are you
ready to keep it fun and simple?
I learned very
early on that the more I talked about the wrap, the less success I had. I
knew that I needed to find a way to keep it simple and just get the product on
as many people as I could because that is what was working the most. I
would love to share a story with you that I believe will help you get the picture.
A distributor
asked me to make a call with her to a doctor’s office because she felt that she
couldn’t talk to a doctor. I assured her that we talked to doctors the
same way we would talk to one of our friends, but she was still apprehensive,
so I agreed to go with her. We arrived at the office and proceeded to one
of their patient’s rooms with “Bob” and “Sally,” the doctor and his wife, who also
was his office manager. After a few brief introductions, I shared
information about the wrap with them by telling them my story and what it did
for me, along with before and after pictures. This conversation took
about two minutes. Bob started to ask questions and I said, “Bob, you
will never believe that this product will work unless you try it, so the best thing
for us to do right now is to wrap you, which we can do in two minutes and then
you can go out and continue to work with your patients.” Bob looked
skeptical, but Sally said, “Bob, take your shirt off.” We all laughed,
but Bob took his shirt off. We wrapped him and then he left the room.
While we waited for results, we spoke to Sally about the wrap, the Facial, and Defining
Gel by showing more before and after pictures along with asking her questions
on how she thought the product could work in their practice. We didn’t
know their practice and what they were thinking so I was not going to make
assumptions. She just kept asking her questions and then I responded with
short answers on how it could potentially fit into their practice. This
took approximately 45 minutes. Bob then came back into the room and he had
some awesome results. He looked at Sally and said, “We should give this a
try.” They came on board as a distributor and ordered several thousand
dollars worth of product. We were in that office 90 minutes. We
also scheduled a wrap party, which took place several weeks later and was a
huge success.
Your job is to
get the wrap on people. That is it. Once you do that, then you have
45 minutes to talk about the products and the opportunity while the wrap is
doing its magic. The wrap feels so good and the results speak for
themselves that they will either come on board as a distributor or Loyal Customer
or they may choose to not do anything at that time. No matter what they
decide, your job is done. You got it on them, gave them a little more
information, and then they decided. You are not in the convincing
business. You are in the wrapping business.
We have the most
innovative product that we will see in our lifetime. It is new to the
market and with that comes skepticism. Embrace that. Prospects have
every right to be skeptical, and if we try to convince them by talking too much
we may lose them. I believe that everybody is a good prospect; we ruin
them by trying to sell them on something that they won’t understand until they
try it. That is what I love about the wrap. I just get it on them
and relax; the wrap and its magic will
do the rest!
Should we be
calling it the Applicator? I know people
call it a wrap all the time, but if this is coming from corporate, it should
match whatever we are calling it. I know
there is talk of switching to calling it the wrap, but I don’t think that has
happened yet.
4 comments:
As I am still searching for my first DT this gives me hope. Thank you.
I will take this approach from now on. By day I am a geriatric Social Worker and with my clients I usally have to convince them to try accepting help and services. It would be refreshing to not convince anyone of anything and just have them try it. Thanks you, I feel inspired and renewed!
Thanks so much, Pam! This is amazing. I too have found that this approach works better!
Colbye
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