How To Sell An Idea
How To Sell An Idea
How To Sell An Idea
Got an idea that could kick your career into overdrive? You'll need support to make it happen-from
your own boss, a financial backer, or even a decision-maker at another company. Here's how to sell
your idea to the people who can turn it into reality.
Step 1. Confirm That You and Your Idea Are a Credible Match
GOAL: Make sure an appropriate messenger will deliver your message.
Selling ideas is not like selling products. With a product, customers can see what they're buying. With
an idea, there's nothing to see except you, so unless you're a plausible source, nobody's going to buy. A
CEO won't take corporate strategy tips from mailroom clerks, no matter how brilliant their ideas might
be. On the other hand, a top-performing district manager will likely get a fair hearing, even if he's not
part of the upper-management team.
You have three basic choices if your idea requires higher-level buy-in to get traction. You can:
1) Entrust your idea to somebody farther up the food chain. The danger, of course, is that once it
leaves your hands, it's no longer your idea. Don't be too surprised if you boss neglects to mention that
the inspiration came from an underling.
2) Come up with an idea that better matches your credibility level. For example, if you're a mailroom
clerk, devise a better way to sort the mail. Leave corporate strategy to the bigwigs, and make plans to
climb the career ladder one step at a time.
3) Shut up and get back to work.
Hot Tip
Three Questions Idea-Buyers Ask Themselves
1. Is this person competent, based upon past performance?
2. Is this person speaking with candor or handing me some BS?
3. Does this person care more about the idea than about me and my issues?
Source: Neil Rackham, author of "Spin Selling"
Case Study
The Sell for the Speak and Spell
When Texas Instruments researcher Gene Frantz and his team invented a computer chip that could
synthesize speech in the mid-1970s, computing was still all about big mainframes and number
crunching. The idea of a talking computer was seen as science fiction, but talking toys (that used tape
loops) were already common. There were also numerous media reports circulating about how
television was negatively impacting the reading ability of children.
To sell the idea to TI's management, Frantz positioned the technology as the brains of an educational
toy called Speak and Spell. "It looked like a big handheld calculator, which was a big product category
for TI at the time," Frantz explains. Positioning his idea as congruent with both the corporate culture
and the general concerns of society not only resulted in a high successful product, it supercharged
Frantz's career; he's now a highly respected senior fellow.
Hot Tip
Hot Button Questions for C-Level Execs
Nitty Gritty
Three Strategies to Manage Risk
1. Have a "can't lose" contingency plan.
Example: "Even if this fails, we'll understand the market better."
2. Define a low barrier to entry.
Example: "We can run a small pilot to see whether it will work."
3. Turn weakness into strength.
Example: "There's no research available so our competition knows no more than we do."
Voice of Experience
"Ask for feedback frequently throughout the dialog. The best part about this is if you continue to check
for agreement, the buyer will often preemptively close the sale by saying something like, 'When do we
start?' But if the buyer doesn't do this, you'll have to ask for the next step. Remember: it's your idea, so
it's up to you to move the process forward."
- Linda Richardson, chairman of Richardson, a leading sales training firm