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SE Basics

Now and then, it never hurts to ask ourselves if we are doing the basics, and doing them well. Here are a few reminders of basic SE behaviors.

Be Early. Plan to arrive 10-15 minutes early for customer calls. Give yourself time to walk to the meeting room, get a drink, arrange the room to your liking, etc. And finish early. Don’t eat up all your time with the formal meeting. Finish 10-15 minutes early so there is time for an “after meeting”. The best selling happens during the informal discussions afterwards.

Be Prepared. Know who you are presenting to. Adapt your presentation to the participants, their personality and level of tolerance for risk. Know their business. Adapt your presentation to their business challenges suitable for their job title. Presentations and demos are not “one size fits all”.

Be Pro-active. Don’t sit around waiting for things to happen. Take the initiative to make deals move forward. Contact the customer to get a status. Chase your sales rep. Do what it takes to make technical decisions happen.

Be Salesy. As much as some of us hate it, our job is to sell something. We like to say, “Sell while you teach”. Leverage your technical credibility to explain the quantified value of your solution. Explain how it maximizes the customer’s value and minimizes their risk better than the other alternatives they are considering.

Be Strategic. Get pre-sales strategic skills training. Sharpen your pre-sales skills at least once a year. Use strategic skills to manage your time, get technical decisions faster, grow deals, and improve customer satisfaction. Pre-sales strategic training programs are hard to find, but they are out there.

Be Happy. Are you happy being an SE? Is your time at the whim of your customers and/or sales reps? How is your quality of life? Are you a road warrior, or putting in 80 hour weeks? If your professional life is spiraling out of control, do something about it. It is important to set boundaries (based on strategic training). Don’t be afraid to set priorities for your time. Don’t be afraid to say “No” based on those priorities. People will take advantage of your time and push you until you do say “No”.

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