Sales and Sales Management Blog

March 30, 2010

Get a Hit Everytime You Go To Bat on the Phone

Do you use the phone to connect with potential clients?

Would you like to eliminate fear and rejection from your prospecting and get a win on every call?

You can with Art Sobczak’s Smart Calling method. In Smart Calling – Eliminate the Fear, Failure, and Rejection from Cold Calling, Art gives you the field-tested, practical information you need to make your calls work.

Packed with hundreds of real-world examples, Smart Calling shows you how to:

– Grab your prospect’s interest in critical first 20 seconds;

– Use “social engineering” to get the inside scoop on prospects;

– Have screeners, gatekeepers, and assistants working for you;

– Stay motivated and avoid morale-killing rejection!

Nobody likes cold calling, and for good reason. Most of the time, cold calls don’t work and end up wasting everyone’s time. Smart Calling gives you a better way to approach prospects and win sales. Order today and start Smart Calling.

Order you copy today and you’ll get several hundred dollars worth of bonuses from great thought leaders such as Keith Rosen, Dan Seidman, Jill Konrath, Kelley Robertson, myself and many others.  You get Art’s great book and a ton of other great ebooks and other incentives for only the cost of Art’s book which is less than $15!

Receive instant access to special bonus gifts from leading business experts when you order today.

Check out Smart Calling now.

February 26, 2010

The Sales Winner’s Handbook–Sharpen Your Phone Skills, Increase Your Sales

If you’re familiar with my work you know I’m not a big fan of cold calling—but you also know that I fully understand that there are great prospects we all have that we just can’t reach any other way.  Whether we like it or not, we have to pick up the phone and make some calls.

The problem is most of us just aren’t very skilled in using the phone to prospect.  Sure, we set an appointment here and one there, but we’re wasting so much time.  It costs us a fortune in time and energy—and lost sales possibilities.

Fortunately, my friend, Wendy Weiss, The Queen of Cold Calling, has just completed The Sales Winner’s Handbook. This new book gives you tools you need to turn the phone into a REAL, effective sales tool that make using the phone profitable.

http://www.salesdog.com/the_sales_winners_handbook.html

You’ll learn how to break free of old habits and discover proven ways to close more sales. You’ll never work the same way again!

Here’s just some of what you will learn:

– How to engage buyers in conversations that close sales

– Surefire ways to beat the price objection

– How to increase your sales by simply changing a few words

– Proven ways to whiz past gatekeepers

– Ways to grab your prospect’s interest in 15 seconds or less

– Secrets to voicemail messages that have prospects calling you 

 The quickest and most certain way to get your phone skills into high gear is to use these secrets.

The Sales Winner’s Handbook gives you 20 fast-moving chapters that will have you selling more in no time. You get 48 scripts you can use over the phone to set appointments, overcome objections and close. You also get 12 real-life example scripts to see it in action, and 103 questions you can use to qualify prospects, gather information, gain agreement, justify your price and close the deal.

Take a few moments to learn more at http://www.salesdog.com/the_sales_winners_handbook.html. You’ll be glad you did.

October 5, 2009

Can B2B Salespeople Succeed Without Cold Calling?

Filed under: cold calling,prospecting,sales,Sales Failure,selling — Paul McCord @ 9:12 am
Tags: , , ,

A couple of months ago I was on a Roundtable discussion with Wendy Weiss, Nancy Solomon, Tibor Shanto and Jonathan Farrington over at the Top Sales Experts when the question arose as to whether business-to-business salespeople can be successful without cold calling.

My answer at that time—and still my answer today—is that of course sellers can be successful without cold calling, just as they can be successful without generating referrals or networking within their target market industry associations or consistently connecting with their prospects and clients through a disciplined communication program or by eliminating any given element of a strong, well defined business generation plan.  There’s nothing magical about any individual prospecting method.  They all work to one extent or another depending on how much time and effort the seller commits to learning and perfecting the particular method.

But I think the question that was asked really isn’t the right question.  It isn’t a matter of can one succeed without cold calling (or generating referrals or networking where one’s prospects congregate), but rather why would one try to succeed without taking advantage of all of these proven strategies?

Now frankly, I’m not a big fan of cold calling in its most basic sense of “smiling and dialing.”  I think there are far more effective phone strategies for business-to-business salespeople.  But whether one uses the issue discovery strategy I use and teach or just picks up a list and starts dialing, the phone should be an integral part of how we connect with our prospects. 

My business is built primarily on referrals, strategic networking, and using various media to connect with prospects.  I’ve been very successful at using these strategies to connect with and meet some of my best prospects.  Referrals and networking allow me to meet a great number of specific prospects I know I want to reach and using media such as books, articles, giving speeches and presentations, and being quoted as an expert in business and industry publications has brought many great prospects to me.

But no matter how good at generating referrals I am or how much time I invest in networking where I know a large number of great prospects will be or how many prospects my use of media cause to call me, there are still great prospects out there that I just can’t reach any other way than picking up the phone.  I’m willing to bet you’re in exactly the same situation as I am.

During my three decades in sales, sales management, and consulting/training, I’ve met thousands of sellers who would rather commit murder than pick up the phone and call a total stranger.  The fear of calling someone with the intent of setting an appointment is so overwhelming for some salespeople that they would rather fail in sales than pick up the phone.

The fear is real, just as the fear of public speaking is real.  But just as you can overcome the fear of speaking in public, you can learn to master your fear of using the phone to prospect.

Although you can be a successful seller without using the phone to connect with strangers, you’re asking to succeed the hard way and you’re putting yourself at needless risk.  The cold hard fact of the matter is that you can succeed without using the phone but you’re far more likely to fail than to succeed.

If you were in a fight for your life would you volunteer to have one of your hands tied behind your back?  Of course you wouldn’t.  No one would handicap themselves in such a manner when their life was at stake.  So why would you handicap yourself by caving into your fear of connecting over the phone when your business life is at stake?  Why would you volunteer to tie one of your hands behind your back and invite disaster?

We sellers have two primary ways to conquer our fear of using the phone:

The Nike “Just do it” method:  Easy to say, hard to do.  Just do it.  Just pick up the phone and start dialing.  This is the preferred method of many companies and managers—it doesn’t cost the company anything and being tough and doing what you know “needs to be done” is what “professionals” do.  Not surprisingly it doesn’t work very often.

Building Confidence and Skills:  Where the Nike method requires little, this strategy requires a great deal.  It requires an investment of time and energy—and more than likely money—to learn and perfect the skills necessary to confidently pick up the phone and begin connecting with quality prospects.  The salesperson or company will most likely have to invest in a trainer and coach to help the seller learn the required skills.   The seller will have to invest the time and effort to learn, to practice, to screw up, and to be coached.  But as the lessons are learned, the confidence increases and as the confidence increases, the phone becomes a tool that can be conquered, not feared.

If you insist on ignoring the phone as a way to connect with prospects, good luck.  Many sellers have succeeded without the phone.  Far, far, far more have failed.  It’s your choice, but why would you want to substantially increase your chances of failure?  The phone may never become your friend, but it doesn’t have to be your enemy.  If your company won’t invest in helping you learn how to master the phone, invest in yourself.  Your bank account, your career, and your family will be glad you did.

June 5, 2009

Boost Your Sales Series: “Turn Your Cold Calls into Welcome Introductions,” by Paul McCord

Here’s the last article for the “Using the Phone to Generate Business” week.  It’s my contribution about the process I use to connect with prospects via the phone.  I never make cold calls, but I speak with a lot of decision makers I’ve never interacted with before.  This is how I turn what would be a cold call into a referred introduction.

Next week we’ll deal with Successful Networking.  First up will be The Sales Hunter–Mark Hunter; Tuesday bring in Andrea Sittig-Rolf; on Wednesday it will be Jonathan Farrington’s turn; Thursday I’ll introduce you to Will Kintish; and then Friday, as always, it will be my turn to tackle networking.

Come back everyday to get your daily dose of great, actionable sales and management guidance and discussions.

——————————————————————————————————————————————–Never a Cold Call, Always an Introduction
By Paul McCord

Are you a business-to-buisness seller who must use the phone to generate buisness and who is frustrated with amount of time you must spend, the number of calls you must place just to get a single appointment?  I feel your pain.

Are you tired of trying to find ways around the gate keeper, create voice mail messages that will be returned, and find a way to capture and keep your prospect’s attention?  Again, I feel your pain.

I’m a salesman, too.  I sell sales training, management consulting, coaching and speaking presentations.  My clients are companies, individual salespeople, business owners, and business and industry associations.

I prospect.  I have to if I want to stay in business.  I, like every other seller, am constantly looking for potential new business.

I also market my services and myself.  I have to invest a significant amount of my time and effort in getting my message out to potential clients.  The marketing I engage in takes many forms–from writing articles to giving interviews to writing newsletters to attending events and functions to networking and seeking referrals.

In other words, my business is exactly like yours.  I engage in the same activities you do.  I face the same obstacles, the same setbacks, the same disappointments, and enjoy the same victories. 

Whether you sell insurance, parking lot maintenance, copiers, communication systems, or the most sophisticated computer networks, business-to-business selling is in its essence the same for all of us.  The details are different.  The process may be vastly different.  The sales cycle may be months or even years apart.  But the basic essence is the same, and the most basic is you have to have a prospect that will accept your efforts to connect with them.

Like almost every other seller, I must use the phone to connect with some of those prospects.  Nevertheless, I refuse to make cold calls.  In my opinion, there is hardly a more worthless use of my time and energy than cold calling.  Cold calling is time consuming for the sellerCo and it immediately signifies to the recipient of the call that the person making the call isn’t an expert in their field because most prospects assume that true experts aren’t sitting at a desk pounding the phone.

Yet, that creates a dilemma for me—there are prospects I can’t find a way to reach without picking up the phone and calling them.  Despite being a strong advocate of referral selling, networking, developing referral partnerships, and using PR to create interest and get prospects to pick up the phone, those methods, no matter how expertly I implement them, just can’t get me to every possible prospect that I’m interested in reaching.

Not having a way to connect through other means and refusing to cold call presents a serious problem.

Fortunately, there is a solution that allows me to NEVER make a cold call and still call prospects that I’ve never interacted with before.  In fact, it always allows me to begin establishing a relationship with almost every prospect I connect with that I can expand and nurture over time.  In addition, this simple method allows me to gather a wealth of information about the company, their needs, their plans, and in many cases, key information about the person I’m about to speak to before I ever make the call.  Before I call, I know whom I’m calling, why I’m calling, and I have a very good idea of where the conversation will be going. 

And if my prospect doesn’t answer the phone, I almost always get a return call from the voice mail I leave.

What is the incredible system I use?

Actually, it is so simple and so obvious I almost hate to admit it.  But it works.  It takes the pressure off me, as well as off the prospect.  When I call, I’m simply doing follow-up work, fulfilling my obligation to one or more of the prospect’s employees.

Once I’ve identified a company to approach about any of my services, I do my homework.  I call three or four of the company’s salespeople (remember my prodict– I’m selling sales training and consulting).  My hope is to speak to a salesperson that has been with the company for only a short time, to another who is an old hand with the company, and one who is a top producer. 

When I speak to these individuals, I am upfront with the purpose of my call.  I let them know who I am, why I’m calling them, what my intentions are regarding calling the company about my services, and request their permission to ask them some questions about the company and their experience with the company.  Seldom does anyone refuse speaking with me.  If they do, I’ll just call another salesperson within the company.

I ask a number of information gathering questions such as:

  • what type of sales training the company provides
  • their personal evaluation of the quality of the training
  • whether training is provided by outside vendors on in-house trainers
  • if they use outside trainers, what companies do they use
  • what training needs do they see the company has that aren’t being met
  • who in their opinion I should speak to about training
  • if there is anything else I should know prior to calling the person they suggested I call
  • prior to ending the call, I ask for permission to use their name when I make the call.

Three or four short calls—each will only last a very few minutes—gives me a tremendous amount of information about the company and potential opportunities for me.  Often I learn a little bit of personal information about the person I’m about to call that helps me connect with them.  Typically, at least one and often two or three of the individuals will not only give me permission to mention their name, but will encourage me to call, giving me a referral into the company.  Now, I’ve not only upgraded the call from a cold call to a warm call, but I’ve upgraded the warm call to a referral. 

When I do call the company, I use the introductions provided by the salespeople to break the ice and gain credibility.  Those introductions turn the call into a conversation about their needs and observations rather than a sales pitch.   In fact, most prospects actually appreciate my call.  In many cases I’m informing them of issues and concerns their sales team has that they aren’t aware of, and in virtually all cases I’m not calling them wasting their time fishing for  a reason to meet with them, I’m discussing a real specific issue that their team has that needs to be addressed.

If I am directed to voice mail, I don’t panic.  I don’t hang up without leaving a message.  I don’t leave some misleading message hoping to trick someone into returning my call.  I leave a very brief factual message that introduces myself and mentions that salesperson X and salesperson Y asked me to call about some issues that concern them.  I almost always get a return call.

Naturally, the person I’m calling wants to know how and why his or her salespeople encouraged me to make the call.  Again, I don’t beat around the bush.  I tell them that I was doing my homework prior to making my introductory call.  The fact that I was willing to spend time learning something about the company, their needs, their salespeople, and their processes tends to impress the person with whom I’m speaking. 

Seldom do sellers take the time to be prepared before making a call.  Seldom do they find a way to turn a cold call into a referral.  So unusual is it that when someone calls who is fully prepared, the impression is not only positive but also deep and lasting.  Furthermore, by demonstrating my ability to find a positive, honest and effective way to connect with them that pricks their interest and almost demands they pay attention to me, they make the connection that I just might have something of value to teach their sales team. 

Naturally, I don’t turn every call into a sale.  I do, however, begin the process of developing a positive and trusting relationship that will, hopefully, turn into a sale in the future.

My method of reaching the prospects that I otherwise cannot find another way of reaching doesn’t allow me to make tons of calls.  I give up quantity for quality.  And to tell you the truth, I’d much rather have an introduction to a quality prospect than sit and pound the phone hoping that sooner or later I’ll fall into an appointment.

No matter your product, you too can find individuals within your target companies who can give you the information you need—and their endorsement when you do make the call.  Getting past gatekeepers and gaining the prospect’s interest doesn’t have to be a game of deception or manipulation.  Investing a little time before calling your prospect opens doors, eliminates resistance, pricks interest, and helps begin the relationship building process. 

You virtually never have to make another business-to-business cold call.  With a little bit of research and effort you can turn almost every cold call into a referred call.  Give it a try, it makes life much easier and making those calls much more enjoyable—and productive.

Paul McCord, a leading Business Development Strategist and president of McCord Training, works with companies and sales leaders to help them increase sales and profits by finding and connecting with high quality prospects in ways prospects respect and respond to.  An internationally recognized author, speaker, trainer and consultant, Paul’s clients range from giants such as Chase, New York Life, Siemens, and GE, to small and mid-size firms, as well as individual sales leaders.  He is the author of the popular Sales and Sales Management Blog (http://salesandmanagementblog.com). 

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June 4, 2009

Boost Your Sales Series: “Why Your Voice Mails Are Ignored, and What to Do Instead,” by Art Sobczak

Filed under: cold calling,prospecting,sales,selling — Paul McCord @ 6:01 am
Tags: , , , ,

Art Sobczak is up with guidance on what to do to get your voice mails answered.

Tomorrow ‘s my turn as I talk about how to turn a business to business cold call into an introduction and conversation about a real problem the prospect has that needs to be dealt with.

Upcoming topics:

Next week:  Successful Networking

The week after:  Referrals and Word of Mouth Marketing

The week after that:  Prospecting and Using Social Media

Come back every weekday for a summer’s worth of great guidance from the world’s top experts.

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Why Your Voice Mails Are Ignored, and What to Do Instead           
By Art Sobczak

“I leave voice mail messages all day long for prospects,” the salesperson complained to me. “Why don’t people call me back?”

I didn’t need to listen to his calls to give an answer. The same reasons apply to all salespeople leaving voice mails. Pick any three (or more) of the following reasons.

The message is too long. Grab their attention within 10 seconds or you’re “sixed” (or whatever their delete key is.) Picture someone picking up their voice mails in a busy, noisy airport; they don’t have time to listen to your life story.

It’s not about them. They don’t care about you, your products, or that you’re their new “account manager.” And really, why should they?  They’re just like Toby Keith in his song, “I Want to Talk About ME.”

You sound salesy. Mention that you have a new product, a service, that you want them to do business with you, or that you want to meet with them, and you evoke the same resistance as when the retail store sales rep says, “May I help you?”  Face it: most people run the other way when a salesperson approaches them.

Most people don’t return voice mails from sales reps. News alert: They’re swimming upstream as fast as they can just to stay up with their daily piles of work and emails. Very few say, “Oh, good. Another call from a sales rep. Move that to the top of the to-do list.”

You only called once. Even if someone returns the occasional voice mail, who do they call? Probably not the one-time caller. A buyer I interviewed told me that he never returns calls, and the only sales reps who have the remotest chance of even getting through his screener next time are those he recognizes as having left several interesting voice mails.

So is voice mail a lost cause for sales reps?

On the contrary, it’s a great tool to separate you from the majority of reps making mistakes. Here’s what to do.

Learn about them first. Be a detective. Glean info wherever possible. Go to their website. Enter the company name and prospect’s name into search engines. Read trade publications, your local Business Journal, and the ones in your territory. Then use that information in your message as it relates to how you might be able to help them get or avoid something.

Talk to others in the company. Anyone and everyone. Continue your info-gathering. Identify yourself and company and say, “I hope you can help me. I’m going to speak with Ms. Byer, and I want to be sure that what I have would be appropriate.” Then ask questions.

Be prepared. Voice mail is not new technology. It shouldn’t be a surprise that you will be asked to speak after the tone. So why not be prepared for what you’ll say, without hesitation?  (Just notice how many messages you get that begin with, “Uhhh.”) There’s no excuse to not be smooth and confident.

Use a “possible results” statement. This is the grabber. Mention what you might be able to do for them. Personalization increases their interest level: “I understand you’re now looking at ways to increase the number of long-term leases at your Highland Park property. We specialize in some unique marketing methods that help property managers minimize vacancies…”

Use a multi-media approach. Don’t rely on voice mail to carry the entire load. Back up your message with an email, a fax, a letter, or a message that you ask the screener to write on the pink message pad and give to the boss. And don’t overlook the lowest tech, but highest touch approach: handwritten letters.

Say YOU’LL call back. You need to control the communication. It’s your responsibility to reach them. Tell them you’ll call back Thursday morning. Then DO it. But do give them options to reach you, leaving your phone number and email just in case they want to contact you.

Use a “last resort.” At some point of repeated futility, depending upon their future potential and the size of your prospect pool, you need to punt and leave a final, firmer message. What is that point?  If you sell office supplies, everyone could be a prospect, so the magic number at which you let go would be smaller than for someone selling train locomotives to railroads. What to say?

“… I’ve tried several times to contact you about how we might be able to help cut your cost of customer acquisition by 20% like we have for B.O. Industries. If I don’t hear back from you I’m going to assume this is not something you’d like to discuss at this time …”

This often elicits a response (I’ve even heard apologies) from people who are interested and simply were too busy to reply.

While most sales reps are ensuring they never get through because of their voice mails, you can set yourself apart and pave the way for a productive conversation. Avoid these mistakes, use these ideas, and the sound of the tone will be like the music of a cash register!

(For over 26 years Art Sobczak has helped sales pros say and do the right things to minimize resistance and rejection, and get “yes” answers by phone in their sales and prospecting. Get his free weekly emailed tips, see more examples of articles like this one, and hear recordings of actual calls at his Telesales Blog, http://www.TelesalesBlog.com)

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Want More Great Content?

Subscribe to POWER SElLING my twice monthly newsletter.  Great material to help you sell and manage better.  Named as one of the top sales and sales management newsletters two years running.

Just drop me an email at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com with your name and email address and I’ll get you signed up.

June 3, 2009

Boost Your Sales Series: “Why Prospecting is Like Baseball,” by Trish Bertuzzi

Staying with Trish Bertuzzi’s analogy of baseball, I guess as the third contributor of the week, that makes Trish the power hitter and tommorow Art Sobczak will the week’s clean up hitter with “Why Your Voice Mails Are Ignored.”  I’ll bat fifthy on Friday when I talk about how to convert your business to business cold calls into welcome introductions to the decision maker.

Next week we tackle the issue of Successful Networking and the line up is:

Monday June 8:    Mark Hunter   

Tuesday June 9:   Andrea Sittig-Rolf   

Wednesday  June 10:   Jonathan Farrington

Thursday June 11: Will Kintish

Friday:  Me again, as is the case every Friday

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Why Prospecting is Like Baseball
by Trish Bertuzzi

I am not a fanatical baseball fan like some of my friends.  My friend Linda can quote stats and facts about the Red Sox till your head spins.  She lives for the game.

Anyway, the reason I want to talk about why prospecting is like baseball is because I recently saw a quote by Mickey Mantle that struck home. 

“During my 18 years in baseball, I came to bat almost 9,000 times.  I struck out over 1,700 times and walked over 1,800 times.  That means I played seven years in the major leagues without even hitting a baseball.”

Wow – 7 years without hitting the ball! What dedication, what a positive mental attitude, what a viewpoint that you have to put in the time to get the results you need to be an all star. 

Don’t you wish your sales organization understood that successful prospecting needs to be based on the same positive attributes?

How many times have you heard Reps say: “I called those leads and they are terrible”? Then you go into the database and see that they lobbed out a few calls to a few of the leads and, big surprise, they got out of that effort what they put in – nothing

Or, how many of them lament that cold calling yields no results yet they never do it? Or, and this one gets my blood boiling, how many times have you heard them call a prospect and say “Bob, I was just calling to follow-up on a whitepaper you recently downloaded”?  Yeah, that’s a compelling message!

So, how do you provide them with the dedication, positive mental attitude and the understanding that every prospecting exercise may not result in a home run?  You coach them – every great athlete has a great coach behind them.

  • Coaching Step 1:
    Give them the metrics against which to measure themselves.

    Baseball is all about stats and so is prospecting.  Set their expectations that they will connect with 20 – 25% of their dials and that 10 – 17% of those connections will result in a qualified opportunity.
  • Coaching Step 2:
    Provide them with the equipment they need to be successful.

    Give them great leads, give them accurate lists and give them great tools.  Have you created elevator pitches that are about your buyer persona and not about you?  Have you crafted voicemail messages and emails templates that deliver value and resonate with your prospect’s issues? 
  • Coaching Step 3:
    Act like a coach.

    When was the last time you swung a bat?  If you lead a team, you should spend at least 4 hours a month doing their job.  Get in there and prospect.  There is a double benefit to this – you will walk a mile in their shoes and just as importantly, you will get to hear how the market responds to your messaging.  Then take all that great knowledge and coach your team.
  • Coaching Step 4:
    Let them compete.

    Sales Reps like to compete and allowing them to compete at the level of prospecting levels the playing field.  Not everyone is a superstar when it comes to revenue but everyone can be a superstar when it comes to prospecting.

Well, I am out of baseball analogies so I guess I will wrap up now, but what I hope you take away from this is that just like Mickey Mantle, your team has to invest time on the playing field if they are going win the game!

Trish Bertuzzi is CEO of The Bridge Group Inc.—Inside Sales Consulting.  With over 120 distinguished technology clients, Trish and The Bridge Group have built their business by delivering unparalleled service. Prior to founding the Bridge Group, Trish designed and built best practice inside sales organizations for companies including Legent Corporation, Cadre Technologies, Bachman Information Systems, and Telesales, Inc.

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Want More Great Content?

Subscribe to POWER SElLING my twice monthly newsletter.  Great material to help you sell and manage better.  Named as one of the top sales and sales management newsletters two years running.

Just drop me an email at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com with your name and email address and I’ll get you signed up.

June 2, 2009

Boost Your Sales Series: “Are You Losing Them at Hello?” by Jill Konrath

We welcome Jill Konrath as our guest expert today.  If you use the phone to generate business, don’t miss this article–and take what Jill says to heart.  It will garner you more business.

Tomorrow Trish Bertuzzi is up with “Prospecting Baseball.”

This summer you’ll be exposedto 52 of the top sales and management experts in the world addressing issues that can immediately change you or your sales team’s success.

Come back every weekday–or better yet, save the Sales and Sales Management Blog in your RSS Reader.

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Are You Losing Them at Hello?
By Jill Konrath

In the movie Jerry Maguire, when Tom Cruise is in the midst of his proposal to Dorothy, she stops him with, “You had me at hello.” Every seller dreams of hearing those exact same words when they approach corporate decision makers.

Unfortunately, the opposite usually occurs. Instead of capturing their prospect’s attention, most sellers create resistance with their opening remarks and blow the opportunity.

                    Why do bad things like that happen to good people?
                    In short, weak value propositions.

If you’re running into trouble cracking into corporate accounts, most likely the root cause is your failure to clearly articulate the business outcomes that customers realize from using your products, services or solutions.

A couple weeks ago, I did a new exercise while training a group of sellers. In small groups, they rated common value propositions that sellers could use when prospecting for new customers.

Using a 1-10 (tops) scale, they evaluated value propositions such as these on their effectiveness in initiating change from the status quo: 

____    We offer one-stop shopping for all your (fill in the blank) needs.

____    We’re the industry leader in (fill in the blank) and have been recognized for our exceptional (fill in the blank).

____    We specialize in (fill in the blank) and work with well-known clients such as Microsoft, Best Buy and Kraft.

After serious discussion amongst the sellers, these value propositions received scores between 4-6. Their rationale? They were nice benefit statements about the company, but not quite as punchy as they could have been.

Since my book, Selling to Big Companies, was required reading prior to the session, I assumed these sellers would ace this exercise. Not so! In fact, they were way off.

                         The truth is that all the above value propositions really deserve a
                         score of one.  Not four. Not six. Just a measly score of one.

“C’mon, Jill,” you might be saying. “How can that be? They’re not horrible statements. They’re nice.”

Yes, they are nice. I’ll give you that. But they’re grossly ineffective and that’s why they rated so poorly.

Capturing the Decision Maker’s Attention
While those commonly used value propositions listed above might be important at some point in the decision process, they’re totally and utterly worthless when prospecting.

When it comes to capturing a decision maker’s attention, here’s what you need to think about:

  • Strong value propositions pique curiosity and entice. When prospects hear them, they want to learn more.
  • Strong value propositions create a stark contrast from the status quo. When prospects hear them, they’re willing to consider making a change.

Consider this: If you were on the other end of the phone and a seller called with this message, what would your impression be?

                          “Eric. Jill Konrath calling from Selling to Big Companies. We offer one-
                           stop shopping for all your sales training needs – everything from lead
                          generation to closing. We use state-of-the-art methodologies to
                          ensure our training sticks.”

Does it entice you? Not one iota. Does it get you to consider switching sales training vendors? Not likely. Does it make you want to invest lots of money that’s currently allocated elsewhere? Not on your life.

Statements about your company and what it does are NOT value propositions. Period. They are not value propositions.

                                   If you want to get decision makers “at hello”, you need to clearly
                                   articulate the results the customers can expect from using your
                                   product, service or solution. That’s results, spelled R-E-S-U-L-T-S.

For example, a few months ago I trained the national accounts team of a well-known media company. All sellers identified one large corporate client with whom they wanted to set up a meeting.

                                   As a result of the workshop, 87% of the sales force landed an 
                                   appointment with their targeted account.

Those outcomes are unheard of in my business. Virtually every Vice President of Sales will want to learn more.

That’s the power of a strong value proposition. Even decision makers who weren’t considering a change will think it’s worth their time to find out about the sellers offering.

If you really want to “get them at hello,” then make sure you:

Talk results.
Decision makers don’t care about your products or services. They only care about the results they’ll see. Stress that and you’ll catch their attention. Omit those results and you’ve lost them.

Get real.
Refer to actual client successes and include measures or statistics. Success stories from other companies in their industry are especially compelling. By giving specific examples, you really pique their curiosity.

Test your message.
After you’ve planned what to say, ask, “If I were the decision maker, would this message entice me? Would it make me want to spend an hour of my valuable time with this person?”

If your answer isn’t a resounding yes, rework and revise your message till it is enticing. Don’t leave it to chance. Don’t hope that it will work. Your job is to make it so compelling that your decision makers “get it at hello.”

 

Jill Konrath, author of Selling to Big Companies, helps sellers crack into corporate accounts and win big contracts. She’s a popular speaker at annual sales meetings, professional conferences and industry events.

For more articles like this, visit www.SellingtoBigCompanies.com. Sign up for the newsletter and get a BONUS Sales Call Planning Guide.

June 1, 2009

Boost Your Sales Series: “A ‘Warm Calling’ vs. ‘Cold Calling’ Rant,” by Wendy Weiss

This is the first of 57 blog posts by 52 of the world’s top sales and management authorities dedicated to helping you or your sales team build their business.

This week’s topic is “Using the Phone to Generate Business” and our first expert is the Queen of Cold Calling herself, Wendy Weiss

————————————————————————————————————————————————-

A “Warm Calling” vs. “Cold Calling” Rant
By Wendy Weiss

Had another conversation with yet another entrepreneur who told me he does not “cold call,” he only does “warm calls.”

I continue to be baffled by those who cut off possibilities with a semantic twist. “Cold call, warm call,” it’s simply a state of mind. Your mind. Your prospect does not make those distinctions. Just because you have designated a call to be “warm” doesn’t mean that the person you are calling thinks it’s “warm.”  This “warm call/cold call” concept is a smoke screen that covers the real issue.

The real issue is controlling your message. The real issue is being able to communicate with a prospect so that they understand and resonate with what you have to say. The real issue is about having the skill necessary to communicate with a prospect under any circumstance.

Prospecting by phone, introductory calling as I prefer, is a communication skill. Like any communication skill it can be learned and it can be improved upon. The idea when introductory calling is to contact a qualified prospect and entice them with your message. You have a brief amount of time on the telephone to catch and engage your prospect. If you are not able to do that, the call ends without achieving your desired result. If you have the proper skills, however, it is possible to have extremely productive conversations with prospects no matter how you choose to categorize them, “warm” or “cold”.

The idea of a “warm call” is that you’ve had some prior contact with your prospect and that you have somehow “warmed up” the call. The prior contact might be with a letter sent before your call, it might be that you have encountered the prospect elsewhere or it might also be that you have a referral.

All too frequently callers who use the “I only warm call” approach do not adequately prepare for their calls. Instead, they rely on the appellation “warm.” If you are one of these callers, stop right here and ask yourself these questions:

v  How many “warm” prospects have said “no” to me over the years?

v  Would those calls have been more productive if I had been better prepared and more in control of my message?

Although you may have sent a letter or email, you have no guarantee that your prospect has read it. Although you may have met previously, your prospect may not recall that. Although you may have a referral this is no guarantee that your prospect will meet with you or have any interest at all in your products or services.

When you are on the phone with a prospect you must deal with them, where they are, at that particular moment in time. If your prospect hasn’t read your letter or email, doesn’t remember the person who referred you, or is simply having a bad day, that’s out of your control. What is within your control when prospecting is to have honed your skills so that your message is clear and so that you can respond in any situation.

When you have skills, you know how to catch a prospect’s attention, you know how to keep their attention, you know how to respond to questions and objections and you know how to ask for what you want. When you have those skills it’s no longer about a “warm” call or a “cold” call, it’s about communication, conversation and results.

Get the Free Special Report, “Getting in the Door: How to Write an Effective Cold Calling Script,” at http://www.wendyweiss.com. Wendy Weiss, “The Queen of Cold Calling,” is a sales trainer, author and sales coach. Contact her at wendy@wendyweiss.com.

© 2009 Wendy Weiss

————————————————————————————————————————————————-

Tomorrow:  Jill Konrath discusses “Are You Losing at Hello?”

Wednesday:  Trish Bertuzzi’s article “Prospecting Baseball”

Thursday:  Art Sobczak talks about “Why Your Voice Mails are Ignored”

Friday: I’ll give you my take on “Turn Your Cold Calls into Referred Introductions”

April 2, 2009

Survey Results: What Do Prospects Respond To?

How many individual and business customers respond to cold calls?

How many respond to direct mail?

Do your prospects read and respond to unsolicited email ads?

Over the past several weeks McCord Training has surveyed over 450 individuals and businesses to get an idea of just how effective some of the marketing and prospecting methods salespeople, professionals, and small businesses use really are.

The survey was conducted over the phone and by no means is it a scientific study.  The survey respondents included over 200 individuals and just under 250 businesses.  About 80% of the respondents reside or are headquartered in the US, with the remaining 20% from Canada.  Business respondents included companies from numerous industries, and although they ranged in size from mom and pop stores to multi-national companies, the majority of the respondents were small to mid-size companies.  The responses from larger companies represent only the purchase practices of a single division, region, or even a single executive within the company.

The survey sought answers to a number of questions about how the individual or company responded to various prospecting and marketing methods. 

Although the survey was taken for internal use and full results are not being released, here are a few of the more interesting finding of the survey:

  • Have you (or the company)purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to you was made by a cold call?
    YES  3.38%  NO 96.62% Individuals  (business respondents bought at a rate of 6.07%, almost double the rate for individuals)
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to you was made by a letter, post card, or other direct mail piece addressed to you or your company?
    YES 12.36%      NO 87.64%
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to you was made by an unsolicited email?
    YES 1.77%      NO 98.23%
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to you was made via a referral or introduction from someone you knew (or someone within your company)?
    YES 62.47%      NO 37.53%
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to you was made via meeting the salesperson or other company representative at an event or meeting?
    YES 39.07%      NO 60.93%
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where you contacted the company or salesperson due to a recommendation of the product, service or company from someone you knew?
    YES  17.22%        NO 82.78
  • Have you (or the company) purchased any goods or services in the past 12 months from a salesperson or company that you had never done business with previously where the initial contact to was made at a trade show or conference?
    YES 18.32%      NO 81.68%

We believe these numbers are instructive and can help salespeople and companies determine where they want to invest their time and money; however, the results are from a limited number of consumers.  In addition, the answers given reflect only the respondent’s best memory of their actions over the past 12 months; involve purchase decisions for only a 12 month period; and do not reflect the quantity of purchases a respondent may have made through any of the above contact methods (that is, a respondent who bought from a cold call may have only bought from one cold caller or might have bought from several cold callers).  Also, respondents were asked only about purchasing from salespeople or companies they had never done business with previously.

The survey indicates that virtually all of the contact methods surveyed are viable.  Some are certainly more effective than others, but all, given large enough numbers, can and do produce results.  One of the most glaring but not surprising results is the more personal and intimate the contact method, the better the result.  In each case, the positive response results were higher for business consumers than individual consumers, with the exception of referrals/introductions and unsolicited emails where the response rates were almost the same for each group.

It would be interesting and beneficial if an organization with the necessary resources would undertake a similar survey on a far larger scale.

January 14, 2009

Guest Article: “Stop Sounding Like a Self-Serving Salesperson,” by Jill Konrath

Filed under: cold calling,prospecting,sales,selling — Paul McCord @ 7:22 am
Tags: , , ,

Stop Sounding Like a Self-Serving Salesperson
By Jill Konrath

After several months of leaving a series of voicemail messages for a prospective customer, she finally picks up the phone. “Marie Trent speaking,” she says in a flat tone.

Startled by the human voice on the other end of the phone, the message you spent hours crafting disappears instantaneously from your memory bank. Instead, you blurt out:

“Hi. My name is __ and I’m the sales rep for Generic Industries. You’ve probably heard of us. We’re the fastest-growing firm in the market right now and we have locations in 13 different cities. The reason I’m calling today is I’d like to get together with you to explore your needs and show you …”

“Excuse me,” she interrupts. “We’re already working with another company.”

“Which one?” you ask, fingers crossed.

“Newco. And we’re quite happy with them.”

“What do you like about them?”

“They take good care of us, they know our firm and their pricing is great.”

“Would you be open to considering other options? I’d be glad to show you what we could do for your company.”

“Not at this time,” she answers curtly.

“When should I call you back then,” you ask politely.

“Why don’t you try calling in six months.”

“Thank you so much. I really appreciate the time you took with me today. I’ll get back to you then,” you say, smiling inside because you “KNOW” it’s only a matter of time before get lots of business from this firm.

~ ~ ~

What’s wrong with scenario? Actually, just about everything. If you were the seller, I’d tell you that:

  • You suffer from a bad case of delusional thinking. The buyer brushed you off, plain and simple.
  • You interrupted someone’s business day with no thought as to what they were doing when they picked up the phone.
  • You lacked a peer-to-peer approach. Intelligent buyers immediately sense you’re a lightweight when you’re so eager to settle for a ‘fictional” appointment six months from now.
  • You solidified your prospect’s positive feelings about the competition by the questions you asked.
  • You were entirely focused on “what’s in it for you” – not the value your prospect gets from your using your product or service.

Certainly that wasn’t your intention. You were trying to be nice, conversational and perhaps even avoid sounding like a typical salesperson. Unfortunately, that’s not how you came across. You sounded pretty self-serving.

Tips For Getting High Quality Appointments

1. If you’re sick and tired of getting yourself caught in situations like this, use these tips to help you change the game. Plan out multiple contacts before you even pick up the phone.

  • Develop multiple scripts highlighting various aspects of your value proposition.
  • Then, write out various emails you can send depending on your prospect’s business situation.
  • Finally, develop a campaign you can roll out over time.

2. Make sure your message focuses on your value proposition. Ensure each contact states the clear business value that clients receive from working with your firm.

  • “We work with clients to significantly reduce time-to-market on new product introductions.”
  • “One of our customers saved over $1/3 million in just the past year by eliminating the redundancies in their system.”

3. Treat the person you contact like a human being, not a prospect. In calling a friend, you’d:

  • Automatically ask if you were interrupting: “Is it a bad time?”
  • Notice if they sounded distracted and address it head on: “Hey, if you’re swamped right now, I don’t want to interrupt. I’d rather catch you when you have a few minutes to talk.”
  • Immediately suggest a future contact, initiated by you: “When is a good time to call you back?”

4. Prepare for the common obstacles prior to the call – and eliminate them if at all possible.

  • “We already use ___.” You respond: “Well I assume a company of your size would be working with another firm. (pause) AND that’s why we need to meet … “
  • “We’re really busy right now. We couldn’t possibly take time to look at options.” You respond: “You and I know that six months from now your workload isn’t going to be any lighter. AND that’s exactly why we need to get together …
  • “Your prices are too high.” You respond: “Yes our prices are higher than others on the market. AND that’s exactly why we need to meet …”

Please note that the second sentence starts with AND, not BUT! Because ‘and’ doesn’t negate your prospect’s perspective, they’re interested in learning more.

Then, reel off 2-3 valid business reasons that this prospect should get together with you. They need to flow out of your mouth without hesitation, so prepare them ahead of time. These are true statements, not slippery manipulations, so make sure you state them with quiet confidence.

If you (or others in your company) can’t come up with any reasons, then you’d better take a serious look at the sustainability of your business model. Just because “you want their money” is just not a good enough reason for them to meet with you!

Recently I interviewed Amy, the “Vice President of First Impressions” for a small technology firm. Using the phone and email, she arranges meetings between her company’s sales reps and Chief Technology Officers from Fortune 1000 firms.

In less than 8 months, she’s set up appointments with over 50 of these big companies. She’s a real telesales professional. If you heard her conversations with prospects, you’d think they were her long-time friends.

Amy focuses on business, treats these C-level executives as equals and enjoys her conversations with them. But, she also has at least 4 voicemail messages and 3 emails at her fingertips, ready to use as needed.

In addition to the above strategies, Amy recommends that you:

5. Piggyback off competitors, if at all possible. When you’re trying to get into an account, don’t immediately try to displace long-standing incumbents. Instead, position your offering as one the co-exists alongside their current supplier or even enhances it.

6. Keep “tweaking” your “message” till you get it right. In her first three months on the job, Amy didn’t set up one single appointment. Yes, she was extremely discouraged. AND, she kept trying new approaches till she found ways that worked.

7. Be yourself! Laugh with your prospects, enjoy them – and let them know you’ll be coming back.

SUMMARY

Sounding like a sleazy, well-oiled seller will not get you an appointment in today’s market. Think of your phone calls as business-to-business conversations with peers. That may be a hard mind shift to make, but it’s where you need to be. If your business acumen is lacking, start reading up on the subject so you can become conversant.

And, most importantly keep working at it! Try focusing on different aspects of your value proposition. Try reframing what you say. Change a word or two, if need be. But don’t keep doing the same thing, again and again. That’s insanity.

Jill Konrath, a leading-edge sales strategist and business advisor, is a popular speaker at annual sales meetings and association events. She helps sellers crack into corporate accounts, speed up their sales cycle and win big contracts. She’s the author of, Selling to Big Companies, an Amazon Top 25 sales book for 3 years running. Most recently, Fortune magazine selected it as one of eight “must read” sales books, along with classics such as How to Win Friends & Influence People and Getting to Yes. Visit her website at www.sellingtobigcompanies.com

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