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Show don't tell ... or go to hell

More on how to stand out in sales without talking about a USP. The first USP brief offered an approach for sales dialogue, without pushing a USP. It seemed to strike a chord. One owner asked me if a USP is a useful way to think about the advantages you

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I'm kind and work hard ... you should marry me

Consultants grab the unique sales proposition (USP) concept hoping to differentiate their offer. It might work in marketing but is a poor tool for sales. The USP grates with me. It presupposes clients want an answer to the question "why us?" It guesses buyers value "different"

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The practice before the outcome

Just before 2020 year end I lost my (man's) best friend. Chile the beautiful working sheepdog in the photo. We had sixteen amazing years together. Half spent competing in Working Trials, which is the most challenging dog sport in the UK. It's like training a Police,

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Planning for 2021 ... but not as we know it Jim

We're into another year and you'll no doubt have had several nudges toward setting goals for the year. And after 2020 you may be resistant any kind of planning. Why bother with all the uncertainty? Better to see what comes up next. Well, here's

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Were the sleeves of his coat rolled back?

It's been a strange week. The UK Government announced the move into Lockdown 2.0 (November 2020). Then had to revamp the key charts used to justify it. And the 2020 American election vote counting is almost over .  There are claims of widespread fraud, without evidence. As we

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Getting paid what you're worth

I've noticed how often consultants underplay their expert contribution to client results. This manifests in different ways, including: * Pricing engagements using day-rates. * Specifying activity-based deliverables. * Accepting client directives without challenge. * Emphasising doing, not insights and advice. These behaviours come from a 'hired hand' and time-and-effort mindset.

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Thought Leadership - in less than two minutes

Years ago, at a futurists' workshop for a telecommunications business, the workshop participants were briefed on technological, industry, social, and political trends. They were then split into groups and assigned roles representing their own business, or those of a potential competitor. The gist of the workshop was for these

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The best sales letter ever written

Recently I've had trouble breathing. It's not Coronavirus. It's been a bit random. I'm allergic to cats and this has the same wheezy symptoms. It's the way I imagine asthma feels. Not pleasant. I've been trying to figure

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An unusual perspective on knowledge-work

In the 1930s my great grandparents won contracts to transport goods by canal from London to the Midlands, using horse-drawn narrowboats. The canal out of Brentford (where the river Thames meets the Grand Union Canal) was a bottleneck and queues formed there, slowing things down. Lost time was lost money.

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Rapport factors you shouldn't ignore

Rapport factors you shouldn't ignore Last week's brief was based on a single question, "Do I consistently focus my attention on what I don't want, versus what I do want?" This week I finished reading Susan Cain's book Quiet: The