"You are never a loser until you quit trying."
Mike Ditka
Mike Ditka
It is often asked:
when does one stop calling after they’ve tried calling so many times
without success or at least a returned call?
My thoughts are simple: if you are calling, calling and calling
and you aren't getting a response, it should tell you that you haven't done
your research aka homework. People will only buy if there is a
need. If you haven't uncovered a specific need that your product or
service can address, then you will call until you're told to get lost ... or you give up .... or your manager
asks you why same has been on your prospect list for so long. Initially,
all leads, cold calls, etc. are "Suspects". Before you turn
them into a "Prospect" you should be able to answer why they
are a prospect? What tipped you off to make you confident that they would
buy from you? If you cannot answer that, they are still a
"Suspect". If you haven't had a scheduled appointment with a
decision maker to uncover a need, they are still a "Suspect".
If you marketing department or web gave it to you as a lead that has not been
followed up on, even if there were specific inquiries, they are still a
"Suspect".
If you have had a chance to sit down with a decision maker and ask them qualifying questions you have a "Prospect". In other words you have qualified them as a prospect:
- They have said they're going to buy your product or service
- They have budget allocated
- They have a time line established for purchase
or engaging service
- They have developed a criteria on how they are
going to award the business
- There are business, industry or government
factors that are advancing their decision:
1.
There is a deadline
2.
There is a project
3.
There are business advantages for them to make the
decision
4.
There may be a penalty if they don’t act on a) by
b)
5.
Your organization can help meet, avoid, eliminate 1
to 4.
6.
You understand 1 to 5.
Once the "Prospect" has been identified, then you should determine what will make them buy from you to become an "Account". In order for this to happen you can answer:
- What they like about your product, company,
solution, service
- Who might also be part of the decision making
process (i.e. committee, board of directors, executive, manager)?
- You understand their needs and you have
provided a proposal, bid, letter outlining what it is they are asking for
and what you are addressing
- You have asked how, who, what are the decision
making criteria
· They can afford your solution, service, product or
you have carved out a way that they can afford it by looking at financial
landscape.
· They can sign on the dotted line today
- You have scheduled and performed a
demonstration, trial, beta test, and/or review of their needs in person
with them confirming that you have understood what they are looking for
- You understand whether they understand what
they are buying or simply doing research in case it comes up in the future
(which relegates them back to the "Suspect" pile)
- They have a budget, enough money, to spend on
what you are proposing?
- They are budgeting for the future and you have
diarized to follow up in a specific time frame to move them from
"Suspect" to "Prospect"
- They agree that you are being considered
because you
1.
Understand the problem(s) they will encounter if
they do not move forward
2.
Understand how this solution, service, product will
help them by itemizing
their specific "Benefits":
ü
solve administrative headaches
ü
streamline process
ü
fix problems
ü
increase employee morale
ü
make them more competitive
ü
increase reputation or brand
a)
Deposit
b)
Credit Application
c)
Agreement Terms
d)
Service Level Agreements
e)
Operational readiness
f)
Resources assembled
g)
Product Availability
h)
Warranties
i)
Approved price concessions
j) The executive sponsor from the "Account"
who will help you implement
k)
Authored an Implementation Plan (if applicable)
with all the people who have to be involved assigned tasks, responsibilities,
time lines
Before you start to get up and run out to scream to the world that you've "got it" there is one important thing that you must do:
1. Schedule a follow up to ensure they are happy with
what was promised, delivered, agreed to.
Based on that you may have to:
Ø Review
the promises made together with “Account”
Ø Fix
any issues that have been identified
Ø Understand
how the short comings impacted their business (time to market, competitiveness,
serving their customers, lost revenue, lost new business, etc.)
Ø Address
those issues with your operations, resources
Ø Collaborate
with operations BEFORE you offer any discounts, refunds,
Ø Follow
up that those issues have been fixed to their satisfaction
Ø Ask
for a testimonial for your website, quotes for your other proposals, references
Ø Ask
for a referral only then
If you are truly really lucky, you will turn this "Account" into a "Partner" ... but I'll leave that for another day. You have some homework to do right now.
"Happy customers are repeat customers ... and
repeat customers refer you to their friends, colleagues, business associates
and relatives"
Jeannette Marshall
@optioneerJM
#QUOTE
Comments? Feel free to provide your feedback ... did this help you? Do you agree with this post? Do you have additional tips or tricks that help you better qualify to ensure success?
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