Oxytocin

See this here? It’s an oxytocin molecule:

It causes people to trust each other.

It gets released during sexual orgasm. It also gets released when you see the house you grew up in, or when you hug your mother.

If you sell stuff, you need to know how to make it appear in your customers’ brains, because without it, it’s unlikely anyone is going to buy from you.

Fortunately for those of us working for big companies, it gets released in our customers’ brains automatically when they see our logos. Microsoft. Bosch. Unilever. McKinsey.

But for those of us who run small shops or solo consultancies, there’s a bit more of an uphill battle. “Hi, I’m Joe from JoeCo” doesn’t trigger the same oxytocin flood as “Hi, I’m Joe from Microsoft.” And as a result, Microsoft wins contracts easier than JoeCo.

There’s good news for us little guys though: Certain word structures can also trigger a flood of oxytocin. If you are JoeCo, not Microsoft, your sales documents (proposals, case studies, etc) need to be using words in ways Microsoft doesn’t have to worry about.

Related Posts

Don’t believe your own press

This morning, I read a phrase I've seen a million times: The world is changing faster than ever. This is a very common phrase. It's one of those phrases people throw around like it would be insane to argue against it. However, arguing against it is exactly what I am...

Crossing the bridge

When you are selling into a new country or a new vertical where you might be a relative unknown, you know the bridge to the future is safe, but your prospect sees the risk of getting fired. To make things more difficult for you, in many, if not most, industries,...

Laughing out loud

Reminder: A point of view is not a marketing slogan. A marketing slogan can be a clever spinning of words to make you sound good. For example, the other day I noticed a label on a package of toilet paper in my bathroom: “100% Biobased.” I laughed out loud. What is...