The Somewhat Interested Prospect
Some smarty coined the phase that in sales, "everything is fair
game". Actually it's quite unfair; tilting unfairly in your
favor or someone else's. So - are you going to play the game to
win? If you are here's your first lesson: winning this game is
not a one-time event: it's a daily challenge. And the key to
your success is learning how to melt sales resistance like
butter.
Online activity has increased over the years. Joe Citizen
doesn't hesitate about giving his personal information anymore.
But your response better be quick or he will move on.
Persistence and follow-up is what your prospects want. Even then
95% will fade away by your second contact.
Competitive marketers that I've studied wander around imitating
each other: people following people that are following people
who are lost. Everyone gets dumber every year. Prospecting for
customers might as well be prospecting for gold. Where are those
nuggets?
* Reply to spam mail with your own offer? no, trash them * Leads
from your company's website? most are only lookers * Open the
phone book and begin? I'd rather jump off a bridge
We have already learned discipline and persistence thanks to
MLMs who fed us a daily diet of "you have winner written all
over you" or "you're doing everything right, you just have to do
more of it". Brainwashed to the max we plowed on laboring for
prospects knowing full well that nothing begets nothing.
Your text or banner ads are not meant to sell but generate
interest. Your killer ad brings them to your door. They are
curious enough to respond. Here then is your somewhat interested
prospect.
At this very moment you are in that vise being squeezed between
marketing and sales. You know, that middle part that binds the
two verbs together. Prspects view us as sharks circling for the
kill - we've all heard the jokes. Somehow you must find the
words to rise from the "sea of sameness".
To do this you must abandon some old myths and shift your
selling mindset.
Sales is a numbers game: Only when all you know is traditional
selling. You can change your sales approach and make fewer calls
resulting in more sales.
Use a sales script: I can tell when someone is reading a script
and I think you can too. Learn to get your message across by
knowing your company and product. You will eliminate red flags
instantly and people will listen.
Focus on closing the sale: Prospects are people and "going for
the kill" is an old technique that leads to that push-and-pull
result you are trying to avoid.
Erasing these myths from your selling mindset will change your
next contact by phone. There will be no fear of a positive
outcome because mentally you already know it's premature to even
be thinking about an outcome. Create a natural dialogue without
feeling awkward. Use language that will engage them and not
language that triggers rejection.
It's always about answering their unspoken questions. Express
the value of doing business with you. Feel them out for that
'want' vs 'need' thing and establishing yourself as the choice.
Selling is more about listening than it is about talking. Your
prospect may be ready to buy and you could be too busy talking
to notice.
Your takeaway lesson is: New Thinking = New Results.
2005