Do You Get Attention With Your 30-Second Introduction?
I went to a networking event the other day where the meeting
leader said, “We’re going to skip doing the 30-second
introductions today because mine’s so bad and it doesn’t work
that it nauseates me.” I thought to myself, WOW! I’d skip the
next networking meeting until I’d worked out a new
introduction.
Do you get attention with your introduction? Are you prepared
to introduce yourself at your next networking event or for when
someone ask, “What do you do?” Consider these tips for
developing an attention getting introduction.
1. Start With The First 10 Seconds. What if 10 seconds is all
you get? Does your first sentence tell your listener enough so
they understand what you do and inspire them to want to know
more? Here’s the simple, but effective approach. “I work with
[type of clients] who have [these types of problems, issues or
challenges].” That’s it. Don’t try to sugar it up or make it
real catchy.
2. Avoid the What You Are Approach. “I’m an accountant” or “I’m
a marketing consultant” or “I’m a financial planner” or “I’m a
growth coach”. You’ve heard them time and again. You’ve
probably even done it yourself. The problem is your listener(s)
may not understand what the title means or even worse they may
fill in an incorrect definition.
3. Avoid the What You Do Approach. “I do small business
accounting including sales tax and payroll” or “I provide
business owners with mentoring and training in comprehensive
strategies to improve bottom line results…” Tends to be boring
and doesn’t help the listener(s) understand what they get as a
result.
4. Say How You Solved a Problem or Served a Client. Reinforce
your first 10 second sentence with a second sentence that shows
how you solved a problem or overcame a particular issue or
challenge. “I help mid-sized accounting firms plan big
conferences on a small budget. I just recently lined up free
live entertainment for a firm that hosted 500 people in town
last week.”
5. Tell Them Why You Are Unique. What makes you stand out from
the crowd? Maybe it’s a unique model or approach for better
results, focus on a specific niche, a guarantee, or extras that
others don’t provide. There are many ways to define your
uniqueness that will help gain attention and make you
memorable.
Make your introduction an attention getter. Start with the
first 10 seconds. You can always build from there once it
starts getting attention. Actually write it down and practice
out loud several times until you can just say it naturally.
(c) - Kevin Dervin, KPD Marketing
About The Author: Kevin is focused on helping businesses that
are ready to grow, but struggle with how to consistently
attract more clients. Visit
www.proven-small-business-marketing-solutions.com for
more information you can use to grow your business. Find
Kevin's Kansas City based KPD Marketing practice at
www.ABCDgrowth.com and subscribe to his free ezine.
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