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A
"dead moose," according to sales trainer Steve McClatchy, is
anything that festers. He coined the odd phrase to denote a
thorny issue—the type people fixate on and think about
constantly while simultaneously avoiding. “Imagine you’ve just arrived at a gala event and as you look around, no one is dancing, celebrating or having a good time. As you look further, you see a large dead moose on the center of the dance floor. You can tell by the smell, the rotting and the flies that it’s been there for awhile. You wonder why no one is mentioning it or even looking at it. You try to make eye contact with people to gauge what is going on but they avert their eyes and don’t want to discuss it. The moose has everyone tense and is distracting them from meaningful conversation but they continue to let it fester and many opt to leave in silence and frustration rather than address it. This mega event and all the money invested in it are about to be ruined by the dead moose. As a late-comer maybe you should just keep your mouth shut and go on in bewilderment, creating awkward relationships with these people. On the other hand, if you start asking questions perhaps you can shed some light on the issue that everyone is thinking about but afraid to address. Maybe you could even get the moose removed and get on with the party.”
McClatchy
says dead moose are stinking up offices throughout Corporate
America. Your salesperson returns from a meeting and says
it "went great." Instead of asking whether she met with the
top decision maker or if a second meeting has been
scheduled, you pat her on the back—all the while fearing her
eternal optimism will foil your forecast yet again. Here's
another one: You invite your top salesperson to a strategy
meeting, wondering the whole time if she's headed for the
competition.
The
concept is catching on with Alleer’s clients. Mark Hansen,
vice president and general manager of PPSI Communications, a
Stamford, Connecticut–based company that provides
communications services to the pharmaceutical industry,
recently led a meeting about new business. After
training on the Dead Moose A few of his
team members had concerns about whether the company had
enough internal resources to deliver what had been sold, let
alone future business. After a salesperson interjected, "I
have a dead moose," Hansen and his team discussed the
concerns, then created a plan to tackle them.
Steve McClatchy is the president of Alleer Training & Consulting a provider of training, consulting and speaking services in the areas of Consultative Selling, Time Management and Leadership. If you would like to learn more about the ways Alleer can be a resource to your organization email Steve.McClatchy@Alleer.com or call 1-800-860-1171. | |
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