Friday, April 9, 2010
So long Blogger....
Hope to see you over there!
Rusty and Mark
Thursday, April 1, 2010
A scientist's thoughts on lead generation - target identification
If you read part two, you now are armed with the power to observe and identify the KIs in a lab on cold call (cold walk-through). The next step is to identify your target by name, email, phone number, and interests both scientific and personal. Your job is to get to know that KI personally and, you will do that by helping them with their research.
Back to the Role Playing.......You get home (late because you walked through after 5pm when KIs are working). On your walk through one lab you saw the name "Rusty" and initials "JRB" on a lot of products and notebooks in particular bay.
To do that, you need to discover his publication record in pubmed.
Here's my publication record in Pubmed, maybe if I had more papers I wouldn't be writing this blog.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
New site is so close....
How to Sell to Scientists has outgrown Blogger and, it seems I have outgrown the lab too. Thank you for all the emails and tweets since I started. With your help the new site is going to be even better.
Yep, we're moving out and just now putting the finishing touches on our new website HowtoSelltoScientists.com.
Its my first attempt at coding with Wordpress and so far its amazingly versatile. I really wanted to have the ability to do some deep coding and design work, and I think its going to pay off in the near future.
Here's a screen shot of the homepage
Friday, March 26, 2010
Manuscript Accepted
I just read them today. Here's the manuscript online at the Journal of Biological Chemistry
Insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus in mice does not alter liver heparan sulfate
Yes!
Rusty
P.S. I just noticed there is an ad for the Shimadzu Nano-Spec on my article at JBC! Oh the irony......
A scientist's thoughts on lead generation - power of observation
- Personal Bench Areas and Open Freezers - Look for a bench with tons of reagents, pipets, and equipment labeled in the same hand writing. Key Influencers will have products stuck in every nook and cranny. If you can see an actual name or initials on these products – REMEMBER IT!
- Desk Area – Look for shelves or desktops with lots of hand-labeled binders. By lots, I mean 10-30 notebooks. If the writing looks old or the labels are peeling off, that’s not it. You want fresh labels and recent dates (past 3yrs). Again you are looking for a name.
- Scientists - Key Influencers are typically in the 30's to 40's age range. Practice identifying people of this age group. Again observe and file it away.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
A scientist's thoughts on lead generation
Please consider this is an open letter from a scientist to your company. Ask me anything you want about me for lead generation information gathering. Let's work together.
Im hoping this article will generate some dialogue between your world and mine. There are thousands of struggling scientists that need you to give us the best products for our research.
What do you want to know about a scientist?
I'm guessing the most important question is.....
"Do I have money to spend?"
Yes, I have an AHA grant that gives me $60K a year to spend on reagents and services.
Lets take it one step further though. As a long time researcher (17 years), what is my influence with other scientists? Consider the following...
1. In my immediate lab there are 12 scientists that ask me for help on experiments. Three of them have grants of their own. One is a career Research Scientist with "lots" of money (he just bought a new mass spectrometer and HPLC).
2. My PI (principle investigator) is a seasoned vet with multiple grants and is constantly invited to speak at meetings. He knows 100s of other PIs. However, I can definitively say he does not have time to talk to you about your products.
3. In my "area" there are two others labs totaling 3 PIs, 4 Research Scientists, 17 postdocs, 16 graduate students (weird), and 12 technicians. We are all friendly and regularly talk to one another about experiments.
4. I use and regularly interact with 3 large on-campus services that buy a ton of products (IHC, Microscopy, and Animal Facilities).
In my mind, that influence is a lot more important than my grant money. A scientist like myself can push your products to 100s of others. You just have to learn how to identify me.
Hint - Dont ask me if I have money to spend!
In my next article, I will write about some ways to train yourself or your sales staff to get this information from scientists and find Key Influencers = leads.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Lead Management (Part 2)– Sales and Marketing Playing Nice
In a previous post (Part 1 here), I suggested ways Sales and Marketing can work together on a more effective way to score and prioritize incoming leads. Its a great place to start building trust between the two groups and it pays off in converting more leads. Continuing on those thoughts...
Who Qualifies Leads?
Make sure everyone know what they are expected to do and when. Having a highly scored lead fall through the cracks is like losing money. If the online lead needs to be further qualified, who does it? Will inside sales qualify the leads further and set up appointments for Field Sales or is the Field Representative expected to? In the life science marketplace, it is not as common to separate these activities. Researchers in the lab don’t respond well to phone interruptions. In other industries, its standard practice. Qualification is a different mindset than closing, and you will be more effective if separating the two, if your customers will accept it.
Is There any Value to Low Priority Leads?
Where do the low priority leads end up? First, are these really low priority leads or are they not being qualified effectively? If your lead form doesn’t ask the right qualification questions, it is probably harder to figure this out. If they truly are prospects that are not ready to purchase, start a conversation with them. Let them know how you can help them, not by focusing on products you can sell (they told you they aren’t ready) but by telling them about information resources you either have on your site or can link to. Start by becoming a trusted and valuable source of information and there is a better chance they will want to do business with you.
I’m a fan of letting field sales access all leads, including low priority, especially when you are still testing your process. However, make it clear what you want them to do with them. Some may want to contact these leads to avoid dealing with more tense selling situations. Many will want to follow up on any potential lead, especially if your qualification process is not trusted by the field or not effective. Let your sales team see the entire lead management process, where they fit, and why they will be more effective focusing on higher scored leads.
Feedback Loop
Set a timeline to review results with an eye toward revisions and sharing best practices. While it’s great to share stories about the sale won in a specific case, it’s critical to measure each step of the lead process and review what’s working and what is not. Facts are friendly and numbers should drive lead management decisions.
CRM systems are critical components to this process. There are many choices currently (way beyond the scope of this post) so that even small companies can use these tools. If your systems do not enable your organization to track leads and conversion easily and report results, you need to do some more work. If you have it but sales and marketing are not using it, well, you know you have some work to do.
Customer Expectations
I called my bank last week and gave my account number to the nice, automated voice prompt and endured a couple more menu options to talk to someone. Frustratingly, when I got to that live person, I had to repeat it the account information. Sure, maybe it’s an extra precaution, but if so, tell me that. I expected them to have my information at their fingertips, so we could immediately resolve the issue.
Few customers, especially in the B2B space, have time to chit-chat or even repeat themselves. They expect your company and its representatives to know about their account and interests when you contact them, especially when they have volunteered the information.
A successful lead management process will reinforce both sales and marketing buy-in to working together and will have an impact on sales. Even more importantly, it will help you shine in your customer’s eyes.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Scientists want to see what they are buying
Science products have complicated names often with made-up words in them. For example, on one page of the Bio-rad website I found iProof High Fidelity DNA Polymerase and iTaq DNA Polymerase. What the heck is iProof? I've used Taq, but iTaq? Luckily for me, I knew I used the kit with one red and one green tube that came in the green box with a yellow sticker on it.
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Lead Management – Sales and Marketing Playing Nice
Over the next week, I’ll cover some high payoff areas to help manage incoming online leads and get sales and marketing talking the same language.
Scoreboard, baby
Use a simple, reproducible rating system (A,B,C,D) that takes into account key criteria (some ideas listed below). Agreement between sales and marketing is critical because it dictates what resources and efforts will be employed in the next steps.
Develop Rating System Content
- Target customer – You may be surprised that marketing and sales have different ideas about what the target customer looks like. Flush out the areas of disagreement and come to a consensus. There is a right answer to this.
- Lead Source – This relates to where your key customers are online and how compelling your call to action is.
- Product (s) – Short sales cycle or long sales cycle will impact the selling time frame. Understand what customers need for each to move the decision process toward a conclusion.
- Buying influence – Is the requestor responsible for purchase or just collecting information? Researchers may not have final purchase authority but they can be the key influencer in the purchase decision.
- Anticipated purchase timing – Match your effort with the customers anticipated needs. If they want to buy in the next 30 days, they will need time to review information and evaluate competitors, so plan ahead.
- Current customer or new prospect – You are already ahead of the game with a current customer. They have purchased from you already and have a relationship with the company. However, their expectations for service and discounting may be higher.
Are all the questions you ask on your lead form necessary? If not, get rid of them, quickly. Unnecessary questions take time and reduce the chances for a completed lead. What questions would be helpful to sales? Ask the sales team and add it. Are the questions consistent across all sources so you can compare effectively? If you have differences, at least have a valid, measurable reason for it.
Monday, March 15, 2010
ABCO - Always Be Closing Online
Your website is your store front. The individual product pages are your sales staff. I'm not suggesting you place a big ol' BUY NOW button on every product page, but it should be really damn obvious how to buy the product when a scientist is ready to buy. Nothing is more frustrating than having to search for the button.
Friday, March 12, 2010
How to find scientists discussing specific products
Today, I will show you how to find those scientists online and how to target them for low cost/high ROI with laser-like focus.
Let's say you are the product manager for Shimadzu's new Biospec Nano that directly competes with the wildly popular Nanodrop, now owned by Mega-Corporation ThermoFisher. You are tasked with the job of taking market share from the Nanodrop.
Of course, you should do all the obvious things like advertise in Science, list it on Biocompare, and haul the machine around to ASCB and AACR with a team of trained sales professionals to talk to scientists. Thats great, but Nanodrop is right there with you with the full marketing might of a $10 billion dollar company behind them. In my opinion, you will lose that battle. Nanodrop was first to market and scientists love it making the BiospecNano a vitamin (nice to have) and not a pain pill (required).
How do I know scientists love the NanoDrop? I did a sentiment search (for more on this click here).
In this case, I searched for the Nanodrop on ScientistSolutions.com, an online discussion forum. Discussion forums are a very different Social Media Animal than quick conversation websites like Facebook or Twitter or opinion sites like ScienceBlogs and Nature Networks. You'll have take my word on it today, but look for a comparison article soon.
Here's what I found - The word Nanodrop is mentioned in 40 different discussion threads. One thread went on for 3 pages with at least 100 scientists from all over the world raving about the Nanodrop.
Actual Quotes -
"The Nanodrop works great, it saves a lot of time and reagents. " - Shareef, United States
"...At its price point (~$8,000) and ease of use (no consumables), there is nothing out there that compares." - Ivan, United States
If you think outside the box, this is a perfect place to begin a low cost/high ROI assault on Nanodrop if you are Shimadzu.
Your game plan is simple - Steal all this free press for the Biospec Nano.
How?
ScientistSolutions.com sells "keywords" (its in their media packet, which for some reason you have to call to get, thats dumb). So, every time the word Nanodrop appears on this site it could be a link to the Shimadzu version of the product and not the "real Nanodrop" owned by ThermoFisher.
Yesterday, I called them up and asked to "buy" the word Nanodrop. $100 a month. That's laughably cheap! They even agreed to tag the word for a month to show me how many clicks it gets. Even if I only get 10 clicks that result in one sale, that's still cheap. $100 to cockblock ThermoFisher AND make a sale of a $8000 instrument per month, that is low cost/high ROI!
Next, repeat the process described above on the other major life science discussion forums.
Here's a short list. There are thousands of scientists discussing untold numbers of products on these three sites alone.
MolecularStation.com
BioTechniques.com
Protocol-online.org
Of course if you work for Nanodrop, you may want to play defense by securing the word and advertising space for yourself.
Full Disclosure - The author of this blog is a former employee of ScientistSolutions.com and has financial interest in the company. He doesn't think this changes a single thing in the blog above since he gives three other scientific discussion boards to call as well. Yes, he had a blast calling his former company and acting like he wanted to buy something. No they didn't catch on!
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Invitrogen Head of Sales on How to Sell to Scientists
Mark will be bringing you a lifetime of experience in selling to scientists in every facet of the business from academia to biotech to forensics specialists.
He has supervised large sales teams in the life science sales and helped Invitrogen along their meteoric rise. With G&S Discovery, Mark has incredible knowledge of marketing and selling to researchers and large research organizations. Most recently, he created and developed an online data service (NaviGRANT) that aggregated and presented life science grant information to help companies understand what their research customers are working on and employ more appropriate messaging.
For a first glimpse at what Mark brings to the table please read his recent article about training your sales force on your website.
Welcome to the team Mark!
Monday, March 8, 2010
How to find scientists discussing your company online
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Does Your Sales Team Know How to Use Your Website?
Let’s see a show of hands for how many companies have trained their sales representatives how to use their own companies’ website recently. C’mon, keep them up. Ok, there are a few but not many. Marketers are focused on developing, testing and tweaking their online presence and performance to satisfy their customers and attract prospective customers. There is no argument there but there might be a missed opportunity.
Your sales force is dealing with customer issues every day in the field and on the phone, answering questions about purchased products and potential product solutions. If your site is your digital face to customers, then the sales force is your eyes and ears and mouths. They need to work together or you run the risk of reproducing a badly dubbed Godzilla movie where the mouth doesn’t match the words.
Sales representatives are valuable and expensive interpreters of customer needs and translators of company offerings. You want them utilizing any tool at their disposal to help make your customers successful and close sales. So why don’t they know how to easily find a product on your website? Do they know how to download a product manual? Can they get a customer to an ordering page?
In sales management, I witnessed the sales force struggling with each of these issues, while in front of the customer. As you can imagine, it does not enhance their competence or your company’s reputation in the customer’s eyes. Stumbling through page clicks with the customer watching over their shoulder can be frustrating and produce comments like, "Why did they change this. Now its confusing?", "I don’t know why they have it this way," or "It's so hard to find things on this site." Ouch.
Instead imagine responses being something like, "Here, let me show you how to find that product on our site, its super easy" or "You will love this new tool we just added that lets you do xxxx." When you solve one researcher’s issue, there is a good chance you have gained an advocate for your site in that lab.
More time for training usually means less field time so its critical to make sure it’s worth it. Can you speed up the sales cycle by helping researchers find your products faster, easily understand how they can solve their problem and how to order them? When your sales team knows how to appropriately utilize the web presence to help them build relationships and close sales, that is a payoff.
Here are some basic tasks your sales team should know.
How To:
- Search for a product via partial product name, full name, and catalog number
- Search for a list of products related to an area of research (PCR polymerase, RNAi)
- Find and download a specific product manual.
- Find a product and order it. Set up a test account and have them go through the process.
- Use the site’s scientific resources and tools and they can help research customers.
- Contact a live resource if they cant answer a customer question.
There are many ways to educate your sales force, whether face-to-face or digitally. The key is to create a way for them to practice these tasks and to monitor their performance. They not only will be more comfortable but you might be able to identify some site navigation issues, without paying for an expensive consultant.
Ideally, your site would be so intuitive that customers and sales force both would be able to find what they needed fast and easy. In the meantime, help your sales force figure out how to leverage your website. Your customers will thank you.
Mark Walker
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Putting My Money Where My Mouth Is - Custom Site Search
Today I'm putting my money where my mouth is. The company I called out was Roche, a company who's products I use and respect. So this morning I built them a Custom Search Engine (CSE) to find products on their website. The link is here - Roche Product Engine.
Here's the process
- Log In to Google Account
- Find and open CSE Creator
- Fill out form
- Find the product domain URL for Roche products in separate window
- Paste URL into CSE window, read format tips, re-format URL to search entire domain roche-applied-science.com/*
- Accept Terms and Decide on Standard vs Business Terms (we pay you vs you pay us)
- Test Search Engine with product Im looking for this morning -
I get 35 or so hits only on Roche's site. Most of the results are in pdfs? That's frustrating! I want to order a product. Maybe that's why I can't find anything on Roche's website!
(Note: that in its exuberance Google will index anything on your site including handwritten Post-it notes on your desktop - kidding)
Ok how to fix that.... easy exclude pdf from the search by telling google to stop. You do this by adding a minus sign (-) infront of any term you want to exclude.
so... Search... LightCycler FastStart DNA MasterPLUS SYBR Green I -pdf
Bam! the first link is exactly the page for the product I want to buy
I encourage you to try it yourself. Click here to try my Roche Product Engine
I will try and make a video of this process later today. There are tons of options for customization, removing the ads, etc. That is another blog....
Bonus Cooking Tip of the Day - Wrap celery in aluminum foil in the fridge and it will keep for months! Who knew!
Monday, March 1, 2010
Your website is your face
This is an exact quote that I overheard at vendor show at the University of California-San Diego last week (I immediately wrote it down.) The lady was visibly upset, but genuinely trying to help. The rep was apologetic and sympathetic and back peddling. He too thought their website sucked and even said he had complained about it repeatedly. Clearly it wasn't the first time he had heard this complaint.
Never forget - Your website is your face! People are more concerned about their face than any part of their body. Its the first thing you see of someone else. You can tell their mood, their hygienic habits, whether they are lying or not. We spend billions on products to make our faces better.
Your website is your company's face. Its the first thing scientists see.
The culprit in the above transction - Roche. I spent a few minutes navigating their site this weekend, and she is right, its a nightmare. Its hard for me to believe that a company as large as Roche can't figure out how to produce a decent website.
In all seriousness, $50-100K likely buys them the best website money can buy.
$25k and its functional.
Google Site Search is free (plus a $100 for a programmer to install it on their website).
Yes that was FREE! Never try to out google Google, why bother you have more important things to do like sell kits and antibodies and $500,000 Mass Spectrometers.
Sales staff - Its time to take action. Complaining will not get you heard in a company as large as Roche, but action will. If your company's website is getting complaints, take action yourself today. Remember money will always get the attention of the bean counters. If you aren't making your numbers point out that online sales and your crappy website are the cause.
Do one of these today -
1. Find a great programmer, find an AB tester, find a user interface expert, find an SEO expert. Solicit their ideas and send a memo to your superiors (with four bullet points). Email me or comment if you need some direction on this. Rehearse these bullet points and have them ready for the chance encounter with someone in your company that can make the change.
2. Solicit letters from your best customers (not PIs, they dont buy your product remember). Send them to your boss or post them by the water cooler late at night if you are scared to be seen. If your company won't read them, send them to me and I will post them here anonymously for you. The internet gets the word out faster than you can imagine.
Take action and become indispensable! Your job depends on it.
(yes, I know I took indispensable from Seth Godin)
Friday, February 26, 2010
My new motivator
Am I inventing things to do to avoid the important?
Can't believe how much it helps. Print one for yourself!
All credit to 'The 4 hour Work Week' by Tim Ferris for the above quote and the important concept behind it.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Scientists are immune to advertising
Scientists by nature are the most skeptical people on the planet. Its our job to be that way!
How does this affect you? Check this out.
I recently asked a group of academic scientists on simple question.
"What information do you rely on to make a purchasing decision on reagents, equipment, consumables, etc?"
Here is a summary of the results (I distilled the responses to these simple methods)
94% - Word of mouth (labmates, PIs, collaborators, blogs, forums, etc)
76% - Materials and Methods or publication data
53% - Free sample or in lab trial for equipment
29% - Information on company websites
05% - Advertising in magazines, email, online, and at conferences
These numbers pretty much mirror the results of a recent study for all advertising shown pictorially in Marta Kagan's brilliant two-part slideshow called What the F**K is Social Media? You can watch both slideshows by following this link. Summary - 78% trust peers 14% trust advertising
Of the top two results, the first one (Word of Mouth) you can do some thing about; the second takes good products (i.e., not marketing or selling)
So what can you do to spread your product information by word of mouth positively?
Pick a cause that Scientists Champion and loudly publicly support it.
Example - Lobby Congress to spend more on Research
Another possibility - Open Source Publication
Scientists will begin to associate your company with positive action in their best interest not some evil creature bent on bending them over for a buck.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Generating leads at a scientific conference
So why the lack of leads?
Do scientists at the meeting not need her products?
Was her rival giving away more ipods? Better gift bags?
In short her answer was no, as far as she knew their house was in order.
So, I asked what she did at the conference. The displays were setup along side the scientific poster presentations as usual and she talked with scientists that walked by or into the booth just like all the other sales staff for hundreds of other companies. RED FLAG!
Scientists for the most part are extremely shy and guarded. Sure there are outgoing ones that stand out in your mind, who ask questions and engage salespeople. Those are the ones that know what they want! Its the shy ones, the scientists at their first conference, nervous about presenting their work, speaking in English, speaking intelligently, worried about finding a postdoc position, or THEIR BROKEN EXPERIMENTS that you want to engage.
The question is how? They are not the type to waltz into your booth or come to your cocktail hour (if so they are the one in corner sipping a coke).
My answer as always is HELP THEM! Seek them out, leave the friendly confines of your booth and you will start to see them all over the conference. Many of them came to the conference alone from all over the globe. They need you and you need them.
I'll save my actual suggestions for my friend for another day, she's trying them out at her next big conference.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Life Science Spam is Out of Control- Please Stop!
Here's the breakdown
3 "real" emails - the relevant stuff that drives my science
24 - University or Department emails (minor spam)
17 - ScientistSolutions.com posts/replies to answer
39 - random spam (Dear Sir. Im from insert African country...)
145 - Scientific Product Spam emails
That is absolutely out of control. There were six from one company all advertising different products. I felt like Tom Cruise in Minority Report when he's running through the mall, "Do you need a new Western blot apparatus John Anderton?"
Regardless, this cannot be the best way to reach scientists to tell them about your products. In fact it was infuriating!
I'm considering making a list of the rampant spammers and posting a daily count. You are wasting my time and taxpayers dollars as I spend time deleting them. I can only imagine every scientist at every university is getting the same spam.
Some of these companies make billions and have enormous marketing budgets, I know you smart enough to do better than random spam. The whole world of Social Media is out there for Science Companies to take advantage to spread the word about your products. If you are looking for a Life Science Social Media Primer, read Mary Canady's blog on BioMarketing at Comprendia.com.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Myth #2 - The PI buys your product
Earlier I wrote about the myth of the lab manager, today I will attempt to dispel the myth of the PI.
Let me give a you a real life example from my lab that happened recently. We have an extremely talented post-doc Ding Xu that realized we desperately needed a new HPLC to add some critical newly published techniques in our field. HPLCs are not cheap and would probably qualify as a capital purchase for most labs. At the very least they would garner their own line item in a RO1 grant. Ding talked about HPLCs incessantly at lab meeting and cornered our PI often to discuss. He researched HPLCs, contacted companies to bring in demos, and showed the lab and our PI how powerful these new techniques could be.
We ultimately purchased a new HPLC from Biorad, which our PI signed off on, but it was Ding that made the sale for the rep. The post-doc that actually used the product.
Thus the myth of the PI buying products. In very few incidences will the PI be the linchpin that gets you the sale even for capital products. Convince the postdocs, grad students, and technicians and you win.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Gaining the trust of scientists - Your Job Description is an Entry Point
A constant theme of this blog is that you the salesperson needs to lend a helping hand to your customers the scientists. By doing so, you will become a trusted advisor and are much more likely to get sales.
Laboratory scientists are struggling with larger questions than why their PCR reaction isn't working such as "what am I doing this for?", "is research worth it?", and importantly "what am I going to do when I leave the hallowed halls of academia?"
For the person in life science sales this is an entry point to gain the trust of a scientist. On several occasions I have asked sales people passing through the lab how they got their jobs. I'm especially interested in those that were former bench scientists. On occasion I hear great stories from individuals that clearly love their job in sales. Most of the time though my question put them on the defensive and, they begin to back peddle and try to find the lab manager. (I believe this stems from the massive peer pressure that PIs put on their underlings to follow in their footsteps, which causes those that do leave academia to feel of less worth.)
What they didn't realize was that I was crying out for help! I am leaving academia. I don't know what I want to do. I want to know if selling antibodies to scientists is a good job.
Now you're asking, "Rusty, how in the world does describing my job to a scientist get me more sales?"
My answer is become the trusted advisor. That is your opportunity to get to know your potential client in an extremely intimate way. If you can do that, they will lead you to the decision makers, they will suggest your company's products to their peers when a need arises, and they will say good things about your brand to other scientists. All those things equal more sales.
Here's today's challenge - Come up with a 30 second elevator pitch to get a scientist talking to you about your job. Practice it in the mirror, run it by some scientists in your company, and then try it out on some random scientists. I bet it works like a charm.
Im going back to my Western blot for the third time this week. Wish I had some quality antibodies!
Monday, February 1, 2010
Why Life Technologies is Sponsoring the Olympics on San Diego Television
Turns out that the Vancouver Winter Olympics will be aired while the AAAS Annual Meeting is held this year in San Diego! Wow that is some kinda marketing forethought! Thousands of scientists converging on this city from all over the world anxious to flip on the tele to catch the Olympics seeing Life Technologies Ads! Now that is branding to the max. Take that Thermo-Fisher.
And you thought you knew how to sell to scientists!
I wonder if they will roll out the models again.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Life Technologies commericals on television!
My guestimate is there are 3-8000 life scientists living here in San Diego. How in the world can television ads targeted to that few people in a city of 3 million, on one channel no less, be effective? I guess it could be a ploy to attract investment dollars since it is a publically traded company, but I cant see how this campaign is going to sell cDNA kits.
Love to hear what you think about science ads on t.v. Let me know if you see more in your town too please.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Competition in Life Science Sales
At the moment my lab buys Taq from Qiagen. It is by far not the most economical (we could make our own for pennies), so why do we buy it. I asked around the lab last week as well as emailed a few old lab members. Turns out we have been buying Qiagen Taq for over 12 years in a row, because 12 years ago a post-doc tested against "several" other companies enzymes. Qiagen Taq worked the best in our genotyping assay, so we have used it unquestioningly for the last 12 years. Amazing, we call our selves scientists!
So I suspect that's what you are up against, when you are trying to make and sell a better taq or anything else that has been in use for decades. Faster Western blot? Wonder why that thing is so hard to sell?
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Leads are walking by your booth by the hundreds - grab them!
For the most part the sales staff of these vendors were friendly and responsive to my queries. Most were more than happy to give me the details of their newest product lines. I was surprised at how much prodding it took to get answers from some and, I got the feeling that others were more interested in getting my contact info for later. I was right there obviously engaged, the perfect time to get to know me and my story. And to be truthful some tried, but most seemed taken aback that I was interested in them and their story.
Admittedly, many of the "scientists" at these events are there looking for a meal and an ipod, but the decision makers are usually right back in the labs they are going back to later. Here's how you can plant a seed with the 'lower downs'.
Engage them with a joke or quick funny story. Then ask them, "Is anyone in your lab struggling with (techniques, kits, finding the right antibody)?". If they say yes, give them a card and WRITE your number on it, even if its already on there. Tell them to pass your contact info on to the right person, or better yet get the scientist's name, or better yet ask if they will introduce you later that day. That is a hot lead. That is a struggling scientist that will buy your product, because they need your help.
You see all labs have lab meetings every week, where scientists get up, present their experiments, and discuss all the problems they are having. Every scientists from technician to PI that walked by your booth knows 10 scientists that are struggling with an experiment, because of these lab meetings.
Use this knowledge to your advantage! Write down and practice 10 questions to ask scientists that will lead to you to the decision maker that is struggling with an experiment. Feel free to post your potential questions as comments below.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Learn More About a Scientist Today.
Go take a bench scientist out for coffee. Don't say one word about your product. Just get to know how he or she operates in the lab.
Do it!