Nov. 20, 2024

When Sales Slow Down…What To Do To Get More Sales with Helen Tebay: Part 2 | 056

When Sales Slow Down…What To Do To Get More Sales with Helen Tebay: Part 2 | 056

Jon continues his chat from the previous episode with sales expert Helen Tebay. They discuss practical tips to convert cold leads into hot sales. Helen shares advice on dealing with unresponsive clients and the importance of booking follow-up steps during initial calls. They also cover strategies for getting video testimonials and staying focused during slow periods. Jon shares why proactive outreach and customer-focused communication are so important.

Today's Guest...

Helen Tebay helps service-based business owners like coaches, consultants, and experts to sell and market their businesses. Win more 4 and 5-figure clients faster. Feel better about selling and learn how to sell better.

Episode Highlights...

00:00 Introduction

01:20 Dealing with Ghosted Leads

02:18 Booking Follow-Up Calls

04:39 Direct Communication Strategies

09:36 Staying Focused During Slow Months

12:42 Understanding Client Value

14:52 Gathering Client Testimonials

16:17 Leveraging Video Testimonials

24:18 Real and Relatable Marketing

25:48 Final Thoughts and Key Takeaways

27:17 Favorite Travel Destinations

28:34 Where to Find Helen Online

29:10 Closing Remarks and Next Episode Teaser

Key Takeaways...

Importance of Following Up and Being Clear

You should always schedule a follow-up call straight after your first meeting or sending a proposal. This keeps things moving and stops leads from disappearing. Be clear and direct when reaching out again, whether it’s through an email or a phone call. It helps you get answers and restart any stalled conversations.

Staying Active When Business is Slow

During quiet times, stay focused by taking small but effective steps. Have meaningful chats with potential clients, share helpful advice, or highlight past client wins. Doing things like hosting a live session or posting success stories keeps your name out there and shows you’re still open for business.

Keeping Your Marketing Real

People connect with what’s real. Instead of polished ads or perfect videos, try sharing behind-the-scenes clips or genuine client stories. This shows the true side of your work and helps build trust with new clients who can see what it’s like to work with you.

Links Mentioned In The Episode...

Connect with Helen on LinkedIn

Visit Helen’s Website

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https://architecturebusinessclub.com/blueprint

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Interested in working with Jon?

👉 Book a chat with Jon to explore working with him 📞

Resources…

👉 Grab the Architecture Business Blueprint 🎁

It’s the step-by-step formula to freedom for architects, architectural technologists, and architectural designers. Get it today (without any charge).

👉 Join our (free) WhatsApp Discussion Group 🎁

👉 Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝

👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…

Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.

In The Next Episode...

Next time we'll be celebrating Architecture Business Club’s one-year anniversary.

00:00 - Introduction

01:20 - Dealing with Ghosted Leads

02:18 - Booking Follow-Up Calls

04:39 - Direct Communication Strategies

09:36 - Staying Focused During Slow Months

12:42 - Understanding Client Value

14:52 - Gathering Client Testimonials

16:17 - Leveraging Video Testimonials

24:18 - Real and Relatable Marketing

25:48 - Final Thoughts and Key Takeaways

27:17 - Favorite Travel Destinations

28:34 - Where to Find Helen Online

29:10 - Closing Remarks and Next Episode Teaser

Jon Clayton:

Have you ever been go states after a promising sales conversation

Jon Clayton:

or after quoting for a project?

Jon Clayton:

Then join us for part two of my conversation with sales expert, Helen TB.

Jon Clayton:

Helen Chaz, actionable strategies on turning those cold leads into hot sales.

Jon Clayton:

Catch it all on this episode of architecture business club,

Jon Clayton:

the weekly podcast for solo and small firm architecture

Jon Clayton:

practice owners, just like you.

Jon Clayton:

He wants to build a profitable future proof architecture business

Jon Clayton:

that fits around their life.

Jon Clayton:

I'm John Clayton, your host.

Jon Clayton:

If you're a small practice leader or so practitioner in architecture,

Jon Clayton:

struggling to find clarity or reach your goals, consider working with me.

Jon Clayton:

I have a personalized one-to-one support for coaching consulting or mentoring.

Jon Clayton:

This tailored approach helps you navigate your unique path to success.

Jon Clayton:

Whether it's growing your practice, working fewer hours or building your team.

Jon Clayton:

I've got you covered.

Jon Clayton:

Just click the link in the show notes to book a call with me to discuss

Jon Clayton:

your options or email Jon that's J O n@architecturebusinessclub.com.

Jon Clayton:

For more information.

Jon Clayton:

Now let's continue the conversation with Helen about sales.

Jon Clayton:

Do you have any thoughts on when we do that outreach to people that we

Jon Clayton:

have engaged with already, or perhaps we've sent a fee proposal to, and

Jon Clayton:

maybe it's crickets that if we, maybe we feel like we're being ghosted.

Jon Clayton:

Do you have any thoughts on how to, to deal with that?

Jon Clayton:

Is it something where, are there any actions you would suggest

Jon Clayton:

that we could do if we feel like we're being ghosted by somebody?

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, sure.

Helen Tebay:

So first of all, it's not personal.

Helen Tebay:

And second, it's usually what happens before.

Helen Tebay:

So sometimes people get very like, Oh, well, that must be because of my price.

Helen Tebay:

That's must be because they didn't like me.

Helen Tebay:

That was something this we simply don't know.

Helen Tebay:

And so we've got this gap and our brain's just doing its best job at filling

Helen Tebay:

in what it thinks the reasons why you might, it, it might be that, but like,

Helen Tebay:

you know, we really need to have that conversation to find out what's going on.

Helen Tebay:

So for me, um, the, this happens, Because there's a step missing prior.

Helen Tebay:

So if we go back a step, when you're in your discussions, whether it's in

Helen Tebay:

someone's house, or they're in your practice, or you're on the phone, or

Helen Tebay:

you're on a Teams call, you always, always get the next steps booked in on that call.

Helen Tebay:

So it might go like, OK, so you're going to need a fee proposal from us.

Helen Tebay:

It's going to take us a couple of days to figure that out, or a week.

Helen Tebay:

Just again, give your best guess.

Helen Tebay:

So we're gonna be quick.

Helen Tebay:

So we're gonna be more complex.

Helen Tebay:

Just give your best guess of how long this is gonna take Um, so that would take us to

Helen Tebay:

this date I would open my calendar up and I would ask them to do the same thing So,

Helen Tebay:

okay, so that would take us to this kind of time Um, when are you free that week?

Helen Tebay:

And what we can do is we can go through the proposal together Once

Helen Tebay:

you do that, I had I actually coached some architects on this and once they

Helen Tebay:

started doing that Um, Because they were so confident in their offer and

Helen Tebay:

so certain and they made the process so slick and so easy, people were like, oh

Helen Tebay:

I don't need the call, I just want to book, I just want to go ahead with you.

Helen Tebay:

So they started having these calls, they started getting better at

Helen Tebay:

troubleshooting, they started answering those questions in that initial call.

Helen Tebay:

So that's the ultimate thing where you get like a, we'd call it like a

Helen Tebay:

one call close, where everything is happening in one meeting or one call.

Helen Tebay:

The more you offer the second call, and you get that firmed up, and those

Helen Tebay:

firm next steps, and you get better at answering that, You'll probably plug

Helen Tebay:

that into that call and eventually you'll just do it all in one go, but

Helen Tebay:

you always get that second call booked in and it's not like oh in a couple of

Helen Tebay:

weeks, it's not vague, it's specific dates and times and you send them an invite.

Helen Tebay:

Even if I was going to someone's house or I was ringing someone, I would

Helen Tebay:

invite and say Helen ringing John on John's mobile 10 o'clock on Friday.

Helen Tebay:

You know, it's very specific next steps.

Helen Tebay:

Once you've got that booked in, they're going to show up to it.

Helen Tebay:

If they don't, then it's either an unqualified lead or there was something

Helen Tebay:

missing in the process of the conversation that made them not want to tell you

Helen Tebay:

that it was always going to be a no.

Helen Tebay:

So there's usually something that's just gone a little bit awry there

Helen Tebay:

with the connection with you guys.

Helen Tebay:

But that would be how I would solve for that is that go the step before

Helen Tebay:

and get the follow up booked in.

Helen Tebay:

If you've got a lot of people that are just hanging.

Helen Tebay:

I would go back and ask them a direct question.

Helen Tebay:

Don't fluff it up.

Helen Tebay:

Don't try and make this softer.

Helen Tebay:

Literally just ask them, is this something you're still considering

Helen Tebay:

or have you moved away from this now?

Helen Tebay:

Just let me know either way.

Helen Tebay:

And it makes it really okay for them to tell you a no because a lot of people

Helen Tebay:

ignore because they just don't want to say to someone's face it's a no.

Helen Tebay:

They don't know the reasons why it's a no.

Helen Tebay:

They don't know they're undecided and they need some help.

Helen Tebay:

They don't really want to say that they don't get it.

Helen Tebay:

So we've got to make it really okay for all of those scenarios

Helen Tebay:

to come out and up and flow up.

Jon Clayton:

There's a couple of great suggestions there.

Jon Clayton:

I have done that actually, that, that the thing of following up and booking

Jon Clayton:

in the next call, that is something that I've done over the last few

Jon Clayton:

years, and that does really work.

Jon Clayton:

And the way that I've kind of framed it is that, look, this is

Jon Clayton:

roughly how it's going to work.

Jon Clayton:

Following this, this call today, I'm going to firm all this

Jon Clayton:

up, put the proposal together.

Jon Clayton:

Uh, And I guarantee that after I send it, I'm sure that you, you're going to

Jon Clayton:

have some more questions that arise.

Jon Clayton:

So to make it easier for you to save you time, grab your diary.

Jon Clayton:

Let's book in a follow up call now so that you can make a decision whether

Jon Clayton:

that's yes or no, but just so you can make a decision and it's fine either way.

Jon Clayton:

So I sort of gave them the reassurance to say, look, I don't mind whether it's

Jon Clayton:

a yes or no, but I know that you're going to have these questions, so let's save

Jon Clayton:

everybody time, book it in now, and then usually I would just say, look, typically

Jon Clayton:

15 20 minutes is enough, because you might just have a few questions, and then

Jon Clayton:

I've never had anybody that said, No, like people just say, yeah, yeah, that

Helen Tebay:

Makes sense.

Helen Tebay:

And it's really helpful.

Helen Tebay:

It's actually really customer centric.

Helen Tebay:

It's really customer focused.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

And, um, the other, the other suggestion that you made there about the, being a

Jon Clayton:

little bit more direct with that email for those people that maybe, maybe you miss

Jon Clayton:

that step of booking in the next call.

Jon Clayton:

Maybe you've got somebody that you emailed something to, such a great

Jon Clayton:

idea to follow up with a direct email.

Jon Clayton:

I've tried.

Jon Clayton:

Something very similar and the wording was similar to what you described.

Jon Clayton:

The direct version was kind of something like, because we haven't heard from you,

Jon Clayton:

we assume your priorities have changed.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

Something like that.

Jon Clayton:

So it's sort of saying that, you You know, we're assuming you're not

Jon Clayton:

interested in doing this anymore.

Jon Clayton:

And then often either you don't hear anything or people will

Jon Clayton:

be like, reply straight away.

Jon Clayton:

Oh no, no, John, it's not that it's not that it's just that, you know,

Jon Clayton:

something else happened or we've had a change of circumstances.

Jon Clayton:

We still want to do it.

Jon Clayton:

We're still thinking about it.

Jon Clayton:

And it starts the conversation again.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Helen Tebay:

Absolutely.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Helen Tebay:

I love that.

Jon Clayton:

the other one that I've tried, which has been really effective

Jon Clayton:

is, um, It's a similar idea, but it's a slightly softer, more empathetic

Jon Clayton:

approach where literally if I've been sending them like follow ups to say, you

Jon Clayton:

know, we're waiting to hear from you.

Jon Clayton:

Do you want to go ahead?

Jon Clayton:

And we're not getting a reply.

Jon Clayton:

I'll just send them like a one liner email and just say like, are you okay?

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

we've not, we've not, we've not heard from you and actually we're

Jon Clayton:

just concerned that like, are you all right, and then that has worked as well,

Jon Clayton:

where people have replied and said, you know, and actually sometimes it has been

Jon Clayton:

something like that, where it's like, Oh, you know, we've had a family member

Jon Clayton:

passed away or, or, we've been, someone's been ill or something and, and we've

Jon Clayton:

really not had a chance to think about it.

Jon Clayton:

And

Helen Tebay:

It's so nice.

Jon Clayton:

that response.

Helen Tebay:

because again, it's really customer focused, isn't it?

Helen Tebay:

It's about them.

Helen Tebay:

It's thinking of them.

Helen Tebay:

It's putting your feelings of discomfort to one side.

Helen Tebay:

Um, they might get angry, they might shout, they might say,

Helen Tebay:

just F off and leave me alone.

Helen Tebay:

Honestly, in 25 years of sales, I can count on one hand how

Helen Tebay:

many times that's happened.

Helen Tebay:

Um, and when you think about each of those times, it's been.

Helen Tebay:

It's stuff that's happening for them, it's not you, you know, like, and

Helen Tebay:

you just strike them off and you move on, I kind of think next, just next

Helen Tebay:

opportunity, next thing, how many people out there need an architect right now?

Helen Tebay:

I mean, there must be hundreds and hundreds of thousands.

Helen Tebay:

If your community got their heads together, you still couldn't

Helen Tebay:

service between you all, all the opportunity that's out there.

Helen Tebay:

But when you're sitting there and the diary's a bit sparse and the phone stopped

Helen Tebay:

ringing and the emails aren't coming, it's really hard to kind of think like that.

Helen Tebay:

So, so it's, yeah, just getting into that, the demand is there.

Helen Tebay:

Maybe that's a really good thought.

Helen Tebay:

Like demand is there for my services.

Helen Tebay:

Maybe that's like something that just really invigorates you a little bit.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah, maybe we should print that out and stick

Jon Clayton:

it on your desk or something.

Helen Tebay:

People need me, they need this result.

Jon Clayton:

yeah.

Jon Clayton:

I mean, are there any other thoughts that you have about how we can stay

Jon Clayton:

focused and, and stay in our lane, working towards our long term goals

Jon Clayton:

when we're having those slow months?

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, so for me, I always think of high impact, high action stuff

Helen Tebay:

because what tends to happen is we'll go and like, file our emails away or faff

Helen Tebay:

around over here with some like system.

Helen Tebay:

Um, it's, it's not gonna change the diary.

Helen Tebay:

What we really need to be focusing on is conversations, offering, whether

Helen Tebay:

it's like a, I have a calendar link.

Helen Tebay:

How many times do I give that link out?

Helen Tebay:

How many times am I asking people to take that next step with me?

Helen Tebay:

What, how, where am I showing up?

Helen Tebay:

What am I doing?

Helen Tebay:

How can I help my audience?

Helen Tebay:

So it's all like.

Helen Tebay:

impactful stuff for the receiver or the audience.

Helen Tebay:

So when the temptation is to go and like clean the kitchen or

Helen Tebay:

do something, you know, for me, I've got a flavor of cleaning.

Helen Tebay:

That's what happens when I get a bit angsty.

Helen Tebay:

Um, but it's, it's that, that's the thing.

Helen Tebay:

It's like, right, stop.

Helen Tebay:

I know why I'm doing that because it just feels easier somehow.

Helen Tebay:

But actually, I really want to get like, how could I be really

Helen Tebay:

impactful to my audience right now?

Helen Tebay:

I could jump on and do a live.

Helen Tebay:

I could jump on and talk about a client's situation and how I've helped them.

Helen Tebay:

Um, I could jump on and just share some insight about the process and how

Helen Tebay:

working with me would make it easier.

Helen Tebay:

Um, I could share like a little visual of a timeline just to put some of my ease.

Helen Tebay:

I could show some before and afters.

Helen Tebay:

I could go out when it's a nice day, take pictures of all my work,

Helen Tebay:

you know, like, I could go and do that, get a portfolio together.

Helen Tebay:

So there's all these kind of things, that's highly actionable stuff.

Helen Tebay:

Messing around with CRM systems, integration, tweaking the

Helen Tebay:

website, cleaning the stuff, reorganizing the office.

Jon Clayton:

sought out.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, it's not going to help you, like, change the diary.

Helen Tebay:

It literally boils down to conversations, adding value, getting better at selling.

Helen Tebay:

That's it.

Helen Tebay:

That's like the evergreen work.

Helen Tebay:

If you're avoiding any one of them three things, We probably need a conversation

Helen Tebay:

or like, like lean into me a little bit because I post a lot of content.

Helen Tebay:

There's a lot of stuff out there that, you know, I get out there on my platforms

Helen Tebay:

that will help you, especially when you're in that kind of technical world.

Helen Tebay:

It feels like it's really hard to translate that technical isms to, you

Helen Tebay:

know, the language that your audience use.

Jon Clayton:

Got it.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

So there's a lot, there's a lot of actionable stuff that we can do there.

Jon Clayton:

And the message I'm taking from that is around pro act being proactive, that

Jon Clayton:

if you haven't got enough, if you're having a slow period and you don't

Jon Clayton:

have enough customers and you need more sales, that there is actually a ton of

Jon Clayton:

really actionable stuff that you've just mentioned that we can be doing, um, in

Jon Clayton:

order to, to fix that problem and to plug, plug that gap in our pipeline.

Jon Clayton:

something else I wanted to ask was about understanding what our clients

Jon Clayton:

really value in order to in order to help get those sales, do you have

Jon Clayton:

any suggestions there about how we can get a better understanding of our

Jon Clayton:

clients and what they really value?

Jon Clayton:

What they want.

Jon Clayton:

Remember.

Jon Clayton:

Don't forget to download the architecture business, blueprint the

Jon Clayton:

step by step formula to freedom for architects, architecture, technologists,

Jon Clayton:

and architecture designers.

Jon Clayton:

You can grab the blueprint without any charge@architecturebusinessclub.com

Jon Clayton:

forward slash blueprint.

Jon Clayton:

And if you enjoy this episode, then please leave a five star review or

Jon Clayton:

rating wherever you listen to podcasts.

Jon Clayton:

Now, back to the show.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, so you can just ask them, and I know that sounds like really

Helen Tebay:

stupidly simple, but you can just ask them, you can ask them down the pub, you

Helen Tebay:

can ask them when people are just talking to you and I have spoken in the local

Helen Tebay:

micro pub and talking about things and we realise we have this connection and

Helen Tebay:

this is where this opportunity came from.

Helen Tebay:

So you just never know who you sat next to and what they're dealing with and I think

Helen Tebay:

everybody knows someone who knows someone who will need an architect at some point.

Helen Tebay:

So, you know, you can start having those conversations for sure.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah, I think, um, I mean, that's so true, isn't it?

Jon Clayton:

Everybody's got to live somewhere.

Jon Clayton:

And a lot of people live in a property that they own, or maybe they, um, have a

Jon Clayton:

business and have a building that might need renovating or replacing or something.

Jon Clayton:

So there's probably all sorts of, well, there is, there's all

Jon Clayton:

sorts of opportunities there.

Jon Clayton:

If you're having those conversations and letting people know, uh, about

Jon Clayton:

what you do and I guess being curious and kind of asking questions,

Jon Clayton:

maybe, maybe reaching out to.

Jon Clayton:

I mean, if you've got a list of past clients that you've worked

Jon Clayton:

with, if you want to get a better understanding, that's a great place

Jon Clayton:

to start by asking them, isn't it?

Jon Clayton:

To say we're following up with, we're just trying to learn a little bit more

Jon Clayton:

about, what your questions were that you had in your mind and what did you

Jon Clayton:

really value about what we, what we did

Helen Tebay:

Oh, yeah.

Helen Tebay:

I love that.

Helen Tebay:

And if you can get those kind of testimonials, not

Helen Tebay:

just like, Oh, John's great.

Helen Tebay:

John's brilliant.

Helen Tebay:

It was great working with him.

Helen Tebay:

They're kind of a little bit more vanilla testimonials.

Helen Tebay:

Now, if you can kind of get the whole snapshot of what told you

Helen Tebay:

you needed an expert, like at what point did you want to reach out?

Helen Tebay:

What problem did you have?

Helen Tebay:

What things were you saying in your head?

Helen Tebay:

Um, What, how was it working with us?

Helen Tebay:

What can you do now that you couldn't do before?

Helen Tebay:

What's the result that we got together?

Helen Tebay:

Did we get that faster, quicker?

Helen Tebay:

Was it easier?

Helen Tebay:

You know, like if someone was on the fence, what would you tell them?

Helen Tebay:

You know, and then capture that whole experience piece and you can just do

Helen Tebay:

some little, you can chop that up.

Helen Tebay:

You can get that out, you can start putting links together with lots of

Helen Tebay:

these, where you can just send people, here's a load of stuff that we did

Helen Tebay:

for people, and especially if like, on here, say we crop this, this thumbnail,

Helen Tebay:

you could put, you know, like, for example, for my clients, like, John

Helen Tebay:

made 5k months in 3 months or less.

Helen Tebay:

You know, it's super compelling what the result is.

Helen Tebay:

So, you know, got planning permission within X amount of months.

Helen Tebay:

And I know there's variables in this industry, but if you can

Helen Tebay:

demonstrate that you can get people through a process quicker or easier

Helen Tebay:

or with less guesswork, that's ultimately what they're looking for.

Helen Tebay:

So we have to plug that into our marketing.

Helen Tebay:

You could, and the best way, the best way to get that value out

Helen Tebay:

is to get the client to say it.

Helen Tebay:

It's all good and well, you typing it and then the next layer.

Helen Tebay:

So that is them typing it.

Helen Tebay:

But if you can get a video of them saying that, that's, that's

Helen Tebay:

like where the magic happens.

Helen Tebay:

There's so many stats about conversion.

Helen Tebay:

So again, you might be thinking, well, people don't want to go on and

Helen Tebay:

proclaim that they were struggling or they needed help or whatever.

Helen Tebay:

It's just a thought that you've got.

Helen Tebay:

You need to actually ask your clients, you ask enough people.

Helen Tebay:

And again, it's how you frame this of like, I could really do with your

Helen Tebay:

help, I want to reach more people.

Helen Tebay:

You've had a great experience.

Helen Tebay:

We want to really get across how it's been and I think you'd come

Helen Tebay:

across great if we did a short video.

Helen Tebay:

Would you be open to helping us?

Helen Tebay:

Um, you know, you can just name your name there or maybe they've

Helen Tebay:

got a business, you can put your business name on it, you know, give

Helen Tebay:

them a little bit of something back.

Helen Tebay:

But generally speaking, they're happy to help, they want to help.

Helen Tebay:

If someone messaged me and said, Oh, I need your help, Helen, I suppose

Helen Tebay:

you could Like do a little thing.

Helen Tebay:

Oh, it's like a nice little ego rub that someone's thought of you.

Helen Tebay:

So like most people are generally happy to give a testimonial.

Helen Tebay:

Just very rarely do people ask.

Helen Tebay:

It starts the other way around.

Helen Tebay:

More people are willing to give, less people ask.

Helen Tebay:

So ask.

Helen Tebay:

Um,

Jon Clayton:

to ask.

Jon Clayton:

Ask a little bit more often, you might feel comfortable because often that even

Jon Clayton:

generally speaking, I would say this probably goes to most service business

Jon Clayton:

owners and particularly with architects that they might ask for a testimonial.

Jon Clayton:

If they ask at all, they might just ask once really timidly

Jon Clayton:

at the end of the project.

Jon Clayton:

And it's like, well, actually.

Jon Clayton:

It might be one or two peak points throughout the project

Jon Clayton:

where that might be a nice time.

Jon Clayton:

Like maybe when you've just secured planning permission for that tricky site,

Jon Clayton:

maybe you've sent them a nice little gift or something as well to kind of

Jon Clayton:

celebrate getting planning permission.

Jon Clayton:

Now, wouldn't that be a great time to ask for a testimonial?

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Helen Tebay:

When they're on a bit of a high and they've got that like really peak thing

Helen Tebay:

that they've been struggling with that key milestone and really video and photography

Helen Tebay:

is one of the best ways to capture this.

Helen Tebay:

And imagine that if someone comes onto your LinkedIn or onto your website

Helen Tebay:

and they've got all this like, massive case study of all the things that

Helen Tebay:

you've got involved in and all this like milestones and hurdles that

Helen Tebay:

you've helped your clients with.

Helen Tebay:

And it's feels like that you're going to be a safe bet that you're going

Helen Tebay:

to help them get through that faster.

Helen Tebay:

The thing that they're really struggling to get their head round.

Helen Tebay:

I mean, that would have most people leaning in.

Helen Tebay:

So for sure, talking about the results you deliver, talking about how you do it.

Helen Tebay:

It's the thing that I see missing for most people's content.

Helen Tebay:

And that's the thing that, Really, if you look at it,

Helen Tebay:

your clients are searching for.

Helen Tebay:

So if someone said, well, go with so and so, they're, they're great.

Helen Tebay:

The first thing you do is go and look at their website.

Helen Tebay:

You're going to have a look at their LinkedIn.

Helen Tebay:

So it's that kind of stuff that we need to make sure that's

Helen Tebay:

bolstered as much as possible.

Helen Tebay:

Um, the other thing you can do, it's just really simple stuff.

Helen Tebay:

You can go onto like LinkedIn and do a poll.

Helen Tebay:

I mean, I know lots of professional people that have second properties that

Helen Tebay:

have investment properties that needs.

Helen Tebay:

Like an architect's expertise, um, and so thinking that your audience

Helen Tebay:

isn't there is going to be a problem.

Helen Tebay:

And that's usually one of the thoughts that causes you to back off and

Helen Tebay:

not be visible in the first place.

Helen Tebay:

But you can go and sort of ask people, what are you trying to

Helen Tebay:

achieve that you're struggling with?

Helen Tebay:

What's like hard right now?

Helen Tebay:

Like, what are you running into?

Helen Tebay:

What would you like to do quicker, easier, better that you'd need an architect for?

Helen Tebay:

And like you do some polls and just start asking, but you get to ask

Helen Tebay:

the audience, like whether it's virtual or whether it's in person,

Helen Tebay:

like, what are they struggling with?

Helen Tebay:

And then you just go and solve for that, even content in products,

Helen Tebay:

offerings, like you like, Oh, that's what they're struggling with.

Helen Tebay:

That's what I need to position myself.

Helen Tebay:

I get to demonstrate how I help them through that process.

Helen Tebay:

Super quick and easy.

Helen Tebay:

Um, that's what gets people leaning in a lot quicker.

Helen Tebay:

Um, a lot softer.

Jon Clayton:

that's a great idea.

Jon Clayton:

I would say with the poll thing, um, great idea to run polls and the key, I guess,

Jon Clayton:

with anything like that, or any content is in, it's in the follow up, isn't it?

Helen Tebay:

Oh, yeah.

Jon Clayton:

you know, that once people respond to that, if they take part

Jon Clayton:

in that, then you've got a list of people that you can then follow up with

Jon Clayton:

according to how they've responded.

Jon Clayton:

And, um, the thing, the idea about the video testimonials.

Jon Clayton:

Brilliant idea.

Jon Clayton:

And I imagine there might be some people listening thinking, well, well,

Jon Clayton:

Helen, that's a great idea, but I can't afford a videographer and this,

Jon Clayton:

that, and the other, and actually the videos don't need to be anything fancy.

Jon Clayton:

Like I've seen some really impactful tech video testimonials for

Jon Clayton:

businesses, and it's literally just like the clients recorded it either

Jon Clayton:

on the smartphone or it's just been a snippet from a zoom meeting.

Jon Clayton:

And, um, actually.

Jon Clayton:

There's a way that you can do that.

Jon Clayton:

Sometimes if you just reach out and say, can we get a testimonial?

Jon Clayton:

Okay.

Jon Clayton:

Some clients will do that, but others might be a bit,

Jon Clayton:

Oh, I'm busy or not too sure.

Jon Clayton:

There's another way that you can kind of reframe that ask.

Jon Clayton:

Something that I've done is that I've reached out to say, look,

Jon Clayton:

we'd like to get some feedback.

Jon Clayton:

You know, would you be willing to hop on a zoom call for

Jon Clayton:

like 20 minutes or something?

Jon Clayton:

And what you can do is you can basically include the ask for the

Jon Clayton:

video testimonial on that call.

Jon Clayton:

So when you're asking them the questions about, you know,

Jon Clayton:

just remind us, what was it?

Jon Clayton:

That you, you know, you were really struggling with and what

Jon Clayton:

did you find particularly valuable about what we did for you?

Jon Clayton:

You can ask those questions as part of this getting feedback.

Jon Clayton:

And then if you, um, ask for permission and you record that

Jon Clayton:

zoom meeting, you could then say, well, look, this has been so great.

Jon Clayton:

Thanks so much for all that amazing feedback.

Jon Clayton:

Would you mind if we took a couple of snippets out of this to use, uh, as a

Jon Clayton:

testimonial on our website and because they've then already recorded it.

Jon Clayton:

It's far easier for them to say yes to it than just getting a cold email invite

Jon Clayton:

saying, can you record a video for us?

Jon Clayton:

And we don't really know what to say and blah, blah.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah.

Helen Tebay:

I've done that before in a webinar webinar and someone came

Helen Tebay:

on and um, it was unsolicited.

Helen Tebay:

I did not set this up at all.

Helen Tebay:

Um, but she, she said like, this has been super helpful and can I just say,

Helen Tebay:

I've just booked a call with Helen.

Helen Tebay:

I've signed up and the call went like this.

Helen Tebay:

So if anyone's thinking of booking a call.

Helen Tebay:

Like, what Helen's just said, I genuinely, that's how I've experienced it.

Helen Tebay:

So, and I just thought, oh my God, what amazing sound bites.

Helen Tebay:

So I cropped it.

Helen Tebay:

Um, I'm saying I did it, the person did it, because I don't know how to do that.

Helen Tebay:

Um, but then sent it to her, and just said this bit, and

Helen Tebay:

we blurred everybody else out.

Helen Tebay:

Um, and we said this bit was just gold, can I use it?

Helen Tebay:

And she was like, oh my god, use it.

Helen Tebay:

Like, just share it with as many people.

Helen Tebay:

Because I want more people to have the experience.

Helen Tebay:

And she said, I think a lot of people hold back from booking a

Helen Tebay:

call with you, because they don't feel ready, or they don't see it.

Helen Tebay:

Think it's Helen's a salesperson I'm gonna get sold to here.

Helen Tebay:

That's not how you run a permission based sales call.

Helen Tebay:

So she said, I wanted to tell people what it was like because I want more

Helen Tebay:

people to get to that stuff, that good stuff that you helped me with.

Helen Tebay:

So generally speaking, people want to help you.

Helen Tebay:

Um, and so crop that video and sent it out and other people have booked a

Helen Tebay:

call and I honestly, I think that has got to have compounded that for sure.

Helen Tebay:

Like for sure.

Helen Tebay:

So the things that we care about, like how we look, I often

Helen Tebay:

think, Oh, I can't go live.

Helen Tebay:

My hair's greasy.

Helen Tebay:

The real thing about my face and my hair and everything.

Helen Tebay:

And people have said to me, like, it's like, don't really care what you like.

Helen Tebay:

We don't notice if you've got your hair tied back or not.

Helen Tebay:

If it's greasy, we're more interested in what insight when you pop up live.

Helen Tebay:

We're like, Oh, Helen, what, what she's got to say, you know, so then they're

Helen Tebay:

not thinking the same stuff that you are.

Helen Tebay:

And so it's very much like an us thing that I've got, um, a lady in my network

Helen Tebay:

and she's in construction and she just does videos of her at site in a high vis.

Helen Tebay:

Just going to just knock this building down, you know, and it'll, it'll snap

Helen Tebay:

and she's like, this is what we put up, you know, and obviously there's

Helen Tebay:

a time lapse and sometimes she's done a recording where she's time lapsed

Helen Tebay:

and you can see them digging out, excavating, putting foundations in,

Helen Tebay:

building it, and then it's finished.

Helen Tebay:

So you can get super creative with this.

Helen Tebay:

And she's just doing everything on an iPhone.

Helen Tebay:

Like, some of her videos are just iPhone of her at sight, just like that.

Jon Clayton:

Our people love stuff like that.

Jon Clayton:

it's so

Helen Tebay:

so real!

Helen Tebay:

Like, cause it's real.

Helen Tebay:

And actually she did one and got her boot stuck in the mud and like, and

Helen Tebay:

she just carried on going with it.

Helen Tebay:

Cause she was like, this is what we're dealing with.

Helen Tebay:

A waterlogged sight.

Helen Tebay:

Just lost a shoe.

Helen Tebay:

You know, when she did it, she went back and it was in the mud

Helen Tebay:

and she said, but we'll keep going.

Helen Tebay:

And that's like one of the things that you get when you work with me.

Helen Tebay:

And I thought this is just bloody brilliant because it's real.

Helen Tebay:

Whereas most people would have been like, right, stop, cut, start again,

Helen Tebay:

just get it out in its rawest format.

Helen Tebay:

It's the most real.

Helen Tebay:

When you try and market stuff up, that's when it loses the edge.

Helen Tebay:

That's when it loses its meaning.

Helen Tebay:

It loses the whole point of what you were trying to do.

Helen Tebay:

So just like get it out as raw as possible.

Helen Tebay:

It comes because that's what your audience want to see.

Helen Tebay:

They don't want to see something manufactured and polished

Helen Tebay:

because it's not relatable.

Helen Tebay:

It's not believable.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

I totally agree.

Jon Clayton:

Helen we could do wrapping things up now.

Jon Clayton:

I think, what, what would be the main thing that you'd like Everyone to

Jon Clayton:

take away from our conversation today.

Helen Tebay:

do not hold back when you're holding back, whether it's

Helen Tebay:

about being visible, whether it's like doing the thing, posting,

Helen Tebay:

asking the question, ringing the client, that's what keeps you unpaid.

Helen Tebay:

That's what keeps the diary sparse.

Helen Tebay:

Do the thing that you're most scared of, because when you're holding back,

Helen Tebay:

it's actually not very customer centric.

Helen Tebay:

It's you, it's very self, it's like self centered because you

Helen Tebay:

just don't want to feel something.

Helen Tebay:

Um, usually it's discomfort of some sort.

Helen Tebay:

So feel that discomfort, sit in it for longer, and go and do the things

Helen Tebay:

that you know you should be doing.

Helen Tebay:

Because this isn't all rocket science, if you ask someone to write down what do I

Helen Tebay:

need to be doing, speak to more people, invite them to stuff, do more quotes,

Helen Tebay:

you know what you need to be doing.

Helen Tebay:

So it's just, it's over to you guys now, it's like time for

Helen Tebay:

some action, so you need to go and like, literally take action.

Jon Clayton:

Great advice.

Jon Clayton:

Um, was there anything else you wanted to add that we, we haven't

Jon Clayton:

already covered about the topic?

Jon Clayton:

I

Helen Tebay:

Well, I think we've covered a lot.

Helen Tebay:

Yeah,

Helen Tebay:

we're,

Jon Clayton:

covered a lot.

Helen Tebay:

yeah, I think value and result like that's key.

Helen Tebay:

If that's not in your marketing, go and put that in.

Jon Clayton:

I love that.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

Value and result.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

Make sure that we're sharing, sharing

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, that is up front and center.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

I like to ask.

Jon Clayton:

a question to all of the guests and it's nothing to do with the topic.

Jon Clayton:

It's about travel.

Jon Clayton:

Um, I love to travel and to discover new places.

Jon Clayton:

And I wondered if you could just tell me about one of your favorite

Jon Clayton:

places and what you love about it.

Jon Clayton:

Oh,

Helen Tebay:

Yeah, sure.

Helen Tebay:

So we actually go every year, a couple of times a year to Cape Verde.

Helen Tebay:

Um, and we go to the island of Sal.

Helen Tebay:

And it was quite new to us, we didn't really know about

Helen Tebay:

it, um, about seven years ago.

Helen Tebay:

We've been going like a couple of times every year.

Helen Tebay:

I actually feel a bit sick because we were gonna look at buying something

Helen Tebay:

out there and we just didn't have the appetite for that risk of buying a

Helen Tebay:

property or getting a loan or anything.

Helen Tebay:

But I really kick myself now because it's, it's getting more commercialized

Helen Tebay:

and now there's like a one or a two in front of like the, Property prices,

Helen Tebay:

whereas we could have got a small loan and bought a small holding out there

Helen Tebay:

and now it's just exponentially gone up.

Helen Tebay:

Um, but yeah, I like it because it's quiet.

Helen Tebay:

I like it cause it's, it's like Tenerife was 40, 50 years ago when it first

Helen Tebay:

started, um, you know, it's got the heat, it's got the sun all the time.

Helen Tebay:

It's very, very consistent weather.

Helen Tebay:

So that's why,

Jon Clayton:

that sounds lovely.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah.

Jon Clayton:

Helen, this has been absolutely fantastic.

Jon Clayton:

You shared so much value.

Jon Clayton:

Really appreciate you being a guest on the show.

Jon Clayton:

Where's the best place for people to find you online?

Helen Tebay:

yeah, sure.

Helen Tebay:

So in the online world, it'd be LinkedIn.

Helen Tebay:

and there's probably a link, isn't there?

Helen Tebay:

That.

Jon Clayton:

Yeah, I can put a link in the show notes.

Helen Tebay:

Um, if you're not on LinkedIn, then you can join my mailing

Helen Tebay:

list where twice a week I send out tips about how to sell better and

Helen Tebay:

they're all designed to be consumed in about three minutes and actions

Helen Tebay:

like highly actionable stuff.

Helen Tebay:

Um, and again, there's a link for that there.

Helen Tebay:

So LinkedIn, if you're not on that platform, the mailing list.

Jon Clayton:

Awesome.

Jon Clayton:

Thanks so much.

Helen Tebay:

Thank you.

Jon Clayton:

Next time where your party hearts as we'll be

Jon Clayton:

celebrating architecture, business clubs, one year anniversary.

Jon Clayton:

Thanks so much for listening to this episode of architecture business club.

Jon Clayton:

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Jon Clayton:

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Jon Clayton:

Then please leave a glowing five-star review or rating wherever you listen

Jon Clayton:

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Jon Clayton:

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Jon Clayton:

And if you haven't already done, so don't forget to hit the subscribe button.

Jon Clayton:

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Jon Clayton:

If you want to connect with me, you can do that on most social media

Jon Clayton:

platforms, just search for at Mr.

Jon Clayton:

John Clayton.

Jon Clayton:

The best place to connect with me online, though is on LinkedIn.

Jon Clayton:

You can find a link to my profile in the show notes.

Jon Clayton:

Remember.

Jon Clayton:

Running your architecture business.

Jon Clayton:

Doesn't have to be hard and you don't need to do it alone.

Jon Clayton:

This is architecture business club.