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Prospects are busy and have plenty of things on their mind. They have their own
list of priorities. When your priorities, and the prospects priorities, don’t
align, frustration rises on both sides of the desk. Here’s how that plays out
in real life.
The voicemail started, “Hi, this is Leah from Forcedsales.com. Just checking in
to see if you had any questions about our service.” Blah! Blah! Blah!
The sales rep was checking in, and I (the prospect) was checking out. I don’t
mean checking out their service to see if it would help my company. Her
voicemail had me checking out of the sale process as in “if there had been some
interest, there isn’t any now!”
Why is that? The answer is simple. Who was that voicemail for? Was it for me to
help me with a business issue or problem? Or, was that voicemail for the sales
rep who is trying to generate an opportunity?
Clearly, that voicemail was for the sales rep because there was nothing in it
for me. These days no one has time for things that don’t add value. Prospects
are simply too bombarded with messages that don’t matter or don’t add value.
She was prospecting and you all have to do. But prospecting is different than
selling. These days, it is more important than ever to prospect the right way.
What is the right way to prospect? Give the prospect something they can use.
Give the prospect a reason to engage with you. Start, nurture, and develop the
conversation. Most important, listen to what the prospect says and listen to
how the prospect listens to you!
You can start with pain points, or industry facts, trends, or something else
that causes the prospect to think, feel, and then respond. In addition to
developing rapport, trust, and credibility, you have to give them something
they can use. You’ve got to add value.
As the world gets smaller and prospects have more information, the balance of
power continues to shift towards prospects. That means you’ve really got to set
yourself apart by being different and giving the prospect things they can use
and things they can’t get on their own. When your prospecting technique gives
the prospect something they can use, chances are, they will engage with you.
Once they are engaged, they can begin the buying process and you can move
through the sales process to help them complete their buying actions.
Just checking in for your reasons doesn’t add value for the prospect. The same
is true for cold calls where the salesperson doesn’t add value or doesn’t
listen. For the prospect, cold calling is an interruption and the demand for
time and attention while not providing a reason. That is why, even though the
Wall Street Journal didn’t run an obituary, cold calling is dead.
Unless you have an all referral business, you have to prospect to generate new
business opportunities. To do that effectively, follow these simple tips and
watch your results improve:
1. Ask for permission. Ask if they are open to talking with you now. If they
are, ask why they are open. If they aren’t open to talking with you now, move
on.
2. If you’ve engaged the prospect in a conversation, ask if your follow up would
be welcomed or an intrusion.
3. If your follow up will be welcomed, ask when your follow up would be
appropriate. When you arbitrarily set the follow up date, you have no idea what
is on the prospects plate and you have no idea of their priorities. If you let
the prospect set the time table for follow up, not only are you building
respect and rapport, you are also reducing the amount of time you spend
stalking the prospect and losing rapport.
4. Ask for permission to send business articles that apply to the prospects
problem. Doing that is as simple as this. “I’m constantly staying on top of the
industry trends and issues. If, between now and the time I am to follow up, I
find an article or an idea that might make sense for you, would you be open to
receiving that?” Securing permission to send articles and ideas gives you
permission to “market.” Giving them something they can use and giving them
something of value instead of “just checking in” sets you apart from everyone
else.
5. If they are open to receiving articles or ideas, ask them to tell you more
about what they are looking for. That will give you tremendous insight into
their priorities and how they think. It will also help you qualify the prospect
in a different way and help set yourself apart.
6. Use reverse psychology. When leaving your voicemail, don’t say “Just checking
in..blah blah blah!” Instead try, “I found this fact (or I had this idea) and
wanted to make sure you had it.” Then, leave your name and number, but don’t
ask them to call you back. Everyone says, “Call me back.” If the prospect is
interested, they’ll call. If they aren’t interested, they won’t. So don’t ask.
Calling back is understood. If you’ve piqued their interest, they will pick up
the phone, or email you, to further engage.
Prospecting today has changed. You’ve got to do the things that get prospects
attention and add value. If you are just checking in, your prospects are
checking out. Be a Prospecting Genius! Prospect the right way.
For more information on Ryan Sarti please visit www.ryansarti.com or send him
email here ryan@ryansarti.com
Read other articles in this issue:
Throw Out Your "Selling" Language
Just Checking In Makes Your Prospects Check Out!
Is it Satisfied Customers You're After? NO!
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