I got a chiding comment
about Civility.
“You write about longer conversations opening more options. You
should be selling what your company is offering.”
Fair enough.
Through a quirk of career,
I was a product manager designing offerings before I ever got into
the field. As a matter of fact, I fought going into the field because
headquarters was where careers were made. I hated to leave the bridge
because things could change while I was out of the loop.
As a product manager, I
would try to ask the technical staff what they were building, but
mostly I was told what to emphasize by my superiors. Which I
emphasized, since my game was getting promoted. I had a good thing
going as a product manager.
In the run-up to Y2K, I
was wooed by an IBMer sales professional. He had come out of the
Marines, started at the bottom shuffling punch cards, and worked his
way up to Corporate VP of an IT Firm.
When I look back, it was
silly what he had to do to overcome my ignorance and fears, but I was
his project, he gaffed me on board. Once I started working with
customers, I found that even my most successful marketing had been by
accident. Customers had all the power and all the knowledge of what
they wanted.
As a recovering product
manager, it was easy for me to replace management advice with
customer advice. The customers and I would work hard to flesh out
what they wanted enough to pay for.
Then I would take it back
to headquarters and try to get the order filled. There were some
amazing repercussions.
We were told to increase
service revenue as much as we could. The goal was to have service
revenue equal product revenue. We got my projects up to services at
four times product, which resulted in the head of service delivery
telling me I had used up my service quota for the year...in April. I
was done.
Turned out it was easier
to get service providers than product, so our team recruited an
outside installation team, and we lurched forward.
In a six month period, we
created a new template for doing business, which resulted in the four
largest transactions in the company’s history, all from taking
extraordinary time to define what the customers really wanted. Like a
junkman, I’ll take whatever is offered and work with it until we
get something we can use.
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