Main Page :: About Us :: Place Your Link :: Security & Privacy :: Terms of Service :: Add Article
Search:   
webtweety.com webtweety.com
Add Url
 

Software & Networking

Education & Learning

News & Media

Art & Creative

Online & Indoor Games

People & Society

Relationship & Lifestyle

Music & Entertainment

Jobs & Employment

Self Healing

Garden & Home

Business & Companies

Tour & Travel

Fitness & Health

Online Shopping

Medical Care

Science & Space

Children

Automotive

Politics & Government

Adventure & Sports

Banking & Finance

Property & Estate

Eating & Drinking

 

Main Page › Business & Companies › Sales
 

The Wasted, Unproductive Follow Up Call

 
Author: Wendy Weiss

I received a telephone call yesterday. It was someone Id met at a networking group months ago. She reintroduced herself, mentioned the group where wed met and said she was calling to follow up. She did not say about what. I asked the question for her, Why are you calling? What did we discuss?

She told me that she makes customized covers for laptops. I thought that was nice, but I didnt need one and still didnt understand why she was calling me. She then told me she makes other types of customized covers too. I said, Oh.

We had now been on the telephone for a couple of minutes. I still really didnt understand why she was calling me. She seemed to want me to leadbut she was the one who had made the call!

I try to be nice, I always talk to people who call meits my business. Other people are not always so nice or willing to give time to strangers who call for no apparent reason.

Finally my caller asked if I was developing products that might need covers. Im currently developing a new product that will go in a binder. I told her about that. She said they also could do customized packages for products. She continued to point out that the work was customized and I could get whatever I wanted. Now what I wanted was binders, I could get them in Staples or some internet discount site or from a vendor who specializes in these types of products, so telling me I could get what I want doesnt make a lot of sense.

I asked if she could give me an example. She had no samples to send and no brochure or catalogue with appropriate examples. She had a web site, which only showed laptop covers. The caller kept reiterating that her creations are customized and that I could get whatever I wanted. She kept reiterating this as if it was important. It wasnt.

She was selling features, Its customized, rather than benefits, It will make your product unique and it will make it stand out. It will add value. It will help with your brand and image. You will sell more because of the way it is packaged. These are benefits. What a better outcome to the conversation if she had only mentioned one of them!

Think also what a better outcome if she had suggested, Lets get together and talk about your product. We could do some brainstorming as to how it might look and what you want to accomplish with the packaging and I could make some recommendations. I would have gladly met with her. Who knows what might have followed that meeting?

At that point it was time for me to get off of the telephone. I had a coaching client calling in 5 minutes and I needed to get ready. As we ended the phone call she said, Im here if you need me. Thats nice, but she had never given me a compelling reason to think that I might need her.

I was annoyed. She was probably very frustrated.

So what are the lessons learned?

1. Understand your sales cycle and the goal of your telephone call. This caller had no agenda beyond calling to follow up. After that, she expected me to lead.

2. Focus on the benefits not the features! Imagine your prospect thinking to themself, Why should I be interested? What will this do for me? If you want your call to succeed, you must answer those questions.

3. Ask for what you want. (See #1.) Once you know the goal of your phone call, you must ask for what you want.

4. Keep asking for what you want.

Author Bio:

Wendy Weiss

Wendy Weiss, The Queen of Cold Calling & Selling Success, is a sales trainer, sales coach and author. She helps entrepreneurs, business owners and sales professionals gain confidence, reach more prospects, close more sales and make more money. Her clients include Avon Products, ADP, Sprint and thousands of entrepreneurs throughout the country.

Wendy has been featured in BusinessWeek, Entrepreneur Magazine, Selling Power, Sales & Marketing Management and various other business and sales publications. Wendy?s e-mail newsletter, Opening Doors & Closing Sales has an international readership and her columns are syndicated to 168 different print and Internet publications.

Wendy is the author of the recently released, self-study program, Cold Calling College, and the book, Cold Calling for Women.

She is also a former ballet dancer who believes that everything she knows in life she learned in ballet class.

You can search for this article using: business sales, small business sales, sales leads for business, sales business plans, sales business
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Akron OH; A great place to do business
 
Improving Patient Sensitivity in Doctors and Hospital Staff
 
Six Sigma And Beyond
 
Telemarketing Do Not Call Lists
 
Network Marketing, The Business Model
 
5 Requirements For Being A STRONG Telemarketing Manager!
 
5 Copywriting Secrets for Knowing Your Market
 
Do Kaizen Events Help in Non-manufacturing Units?
 
5 Techniques To Hyperforming Employees
 
The Howl
 
 
 
Main Page :: Security & Privacy :: Terms of Service
Copyright © www.webtweety.com - All Rights Reserved