Contact Info
Home Page
Content Index
Meeting Themes
Meeting Outlines
Meeting Scripts
Product Intros
About This Site

Customer comments

Add your website

Working with writers

Executive humor

Build your career
with sales meetings


 Site search

Links we like

Contact info

Tell a friend

A MEETING MASTERS MEMO

Created by
John K. Mackenzie

Renovation vs Innovation 

Last month this column described a method for using 50 cents worth of index cards to revitalize your meeting agenda. Now, let's take a look at why it's dangerous to confuse renovation with innovation, or innovation with renovation.

Renovation vs Innovation: Confuse These At Your Peril!

First, some basic definitions:

1) i n-no-va-tion n. the introduction of new things or methods.

2) ren-o-va-tion v.t. to bring back to an earlier condition by extensive repair.

Creating a meeting outline for client review? Great. But watch out for words like: new, novel, unique, different, original, and innovative. It's okay to use them. In fact, it's mandatory to use them. But don't confuse proposal rhetoric with presentation reality.

Your first job is to get the job. Your second job is to help the client forget about all those new ideas you promised to get the job in the first place. Experienced meeting pros understand this. Those just starting out often get burned. And the reason is quite simple:

Sales meetings reflect the same rules that sustain most aspects of American commerce. In actual practice new, novel, unique, different, original and innovative usually mean one thing: creative revision of the status quo, i.e. the brand extension. New and improved!

This is not as cynical as it seems. Renovation has a proud and profitable history. Just ask George Lucas, Bill Gates, or Procter & Gamble.

  • Renovation is:
    • comfortable
    • friendly
    • convenient
       
  • Renovation:
    • expedites approval
    • facilitates acceptance
    • usually costs less.
       
  • And, most important, renovation saves time! It cuts the comprehension curve that new concepts (of any kind) require.

Example: Star Trek parodies have been used at sales meetings for 30 years. Audience get-up-to-speed time is reduced to zero! Everybody gets it, immediately! Company problems and products can then be dealt with at warp speed.

Coming up next: Marvelous Meeting Machines (And other Heimlich meeting maneuvers.) A nostalgic review of third-party meeting devices often used to energize weak presentations and events. So old, they're new!

Black-Belt Meeting Moves

Room Setups & Letdown

The Executive Roast

Qualifying Event Producers

Amplifying RFPs

Killer-Client Profiles

A Sales-Jock Requiem

Business Theater

The Agenda Juggle

Renovation vs Innovation

Meeting Machines

Themes vs Names

Meeting Master Triage

Anatomy of An Offer

ADA Low Vision Specs

Venue vs Virtual Meetings

A Case for Case-Histories

Speaker Contracts

Client Invoice Collections

Power for the Planners

Speaker Fee Negotiation

"Sound" Advice

AV Projection Tips

Your Audio-Visual RFP

New Business Proposals

Public Presentations

Music Licensing

Hotel Negotiating

Site Selection Checklist

If you like this one, click here to tell a friend.

The Writing Works is an idea bank, not a production or planning company.

Home

Index

Themes

Outlines

Scripts

Product Intros

 Special