<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"><html><head><title>Smart Ways To Work</title><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"></head><body bgcolor="#000099" leftmargin="0" topmargin="0"><table border="0" width="766" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" bgcolor="#FFFFFF"><tr align="left" valign="top" bgcolor="#FFFFFF"><td colspan="4" align="left" valign="top"><a href="../index.html"><img src="../img/header_logo.gif" alt="Logo" width="170" height="83" align="top" border="0"></a><img src="../img/header_address.gif" alt="" width="596" height="83" align="top"></td></tr><tr align="left" valign="top" bgcolor="#FFFFFF"><td bgcolor="#000099" width=88 height=1 nowrap><spacer type=block width=88 height=1><center><a href="../index.html"><img src="../img/nav_home.gif" width="75" height="20" border="0"></a> <a href="../about.html"><img src="../img/nav_about.gif" width="75" height="20" vspace="1" border="0"></a> <a href="../books.html"><img src="../img/nav_books.gif" alt="Books" width="75" height="20" border="0"></a> <a href="../columns.html"><img src="../img/nav_columns.gif" width="75" height="20" vspace="1" border="0"></a> <a href="../consulting.html"><img src="../img/nav_consulting.gif" width="75" height="20" border="0"></a> <a href="../diversity.html"><img src="../img/nav_diversity.gif" width="75" height="20" vspace="1" border="0"></a> <a href="../media.html"><img src="../img/nav_media.gif" width="75" height="20" border="0"></a> <a href="../speeches.html"><img src="../img/nav_speeches.gif" width="75" height="20" vspace="1" border="0"></a> <a href="../training.html"><img src="../img/nav_training.gif" alt="Training" width="75" height="20" border="0"></a> <br><br><a href="mailto:odette@smartwaystowork.com"><b><font color="#FF9900" size="2" face="Geneva, Arial">Contact<br> 
Odette</font></b></a>
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<b><font size="3" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Selling Ideas to Upper Management</font></b>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">You have a great idea for a project. It 
  will be useful, save money and effort for your department, not to mention solve 
  a nagging problem. This should be an easy sell, but your request for additional 
  budgeting is denied. What happened? Not getting funding for an idea, project, 
  or training strategy is not always a reflection on the quality of the idea. 
  Many factors affect a "yes" decision. Timing, presentation style, perceived 
  criticalness of the issue, are a few factors. It is difficult to get management 
  to loosen the purse strings, particularly when they are faced with a myriad 
  of good ideas from their other managers, who are simultaneously trying to push 
  their initiatives. Try this five-step plan to break out from the pack and get 
  the green light.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 1. Language is key. How you ask is 
  as important as what you are asking. People who are successful in the art of 
  the deal attest that it is all in the way you say it. Approval is easier when 
  your packaging and positioning is in alignment with and uses language management 
  understands. When building your presentation, focus on benefits to them and 
  ways their situation will be eased.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 2. Understand motivation. Learn what 
  drives those who run your organization. If you can understand the motivation 
  and the needs of senior managers then you can build a case that makes it easier 
  for them to support funding your project. This is where information via the 
  grapevine and knowing the scoop about what is going on underground can be critical. 
  Even in circumstances in which an initiative pushed by a vice president is highly 
  publicized, it is sometimes the case that resources are actually being diverted 
  elsewhere.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 3. Link to bottom line. Clearly indicate 
  how your project can help the bottom line. Tie it into existing strategic initiatives 
  and your project is more likely to be funded. If your project will benefit your 
  department and you base your arguments on that foundation, you will probably 
  be less effective than using departmental benefits as only one of a series of 
  stepping stones that bolster your major point which is bottom line driven.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 4. Be real. As you build your presentation 
  as much as possible, use real figures to support your points. Estimates are 
  vague and likely to be dismissed as exaggeration or fantasy. Internal statistics 
  are always good, but so are figures from competitors. Sometimes basing a case 
  on moving away from a situation, i.e.. a fast-gaining competitor, can be more 
  powerful than moving toward an ideal.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 5. Track your return on investment. 
  Show how you will track your ROI through the duration of the project. This will 
  indicate the thoroughness of your plan. If you are in a "soft" area, like training 
  or human resources, you must be particularly diligent about this when requesting 
  large expenditures for expanding facilities, hiring staff, or setting up a new 
  multimedia training library.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Step 6. Keep it brief and cogent. It is 
  tempting to provide too much information and more details than senior managers 
  are interested in trying to absorb in your initial meeting. Give them the summary 
  information with your key points but bring your supporting documentation just 
  in case you must justify a particular figure or assumption.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">There is no foolproof, guaranteed way to 
  make the sale every time but these strategies will help you successfully sell 
  your budget proposals more often. Your common sense and pragmatic approach to 
  presenting a project can help upper management make changes and take steps the 
  organization needs to undertake in order to successfully pursue its mission 
  and goals. </font></p>
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