Sales
and Telemarketing: 6 Steps for Turning Cold Calls into Hot Sales
Telephone Cold Calling Skills
The biggest obstacle to
successful, effective cold calling is simply the emotional inertia that keeps
many people from getting started in the first place. The fear of rejection and
the anxiety some people experience when they are forced to interact with
strangers and the unknown can become a very big obstacle to the process of cold
calling. We have that the best to overcome this call reluctance and break down
emotional inertia is to establish a regular daily calling routine –
essentially a kind of job description or work schedule that helps you break the
ice and get started everyday. In our Telephone Cold Calling Skills seminar we
will walk you through all the steps in developing this routine, and even help
you practice it.
Overcome your fear of cold calling with these
tips When Donna Chaiet looks
for new students to enroll in self-defense classes at Prepare Inc., her New
York City-based business, she does something many start-up entrepreneurs consider
totally outside their comfort zone: She makes cold calls. Her goal: to encourage
the person to request information about Prepare Inc., drop by the school for
a tour or sign up for a 20-hour Impact Personal Safety training seminar.
"I make 20 to 50 calls
a day, depending on my schedule," says Chaiet. "I found it intimidating
[at first]. But I took a deep breath and told myself to believe the person wouldn't
be turned off by my call but would want to hear about my seminar. This shift
in my attitude, plus being passionate about my services, makes cold calling
more palatable and a successful marketing tool."
Calling strangers to get their business
can sound daunting. The process becomes easier once you practice what you plan
to say, map out your prospects and learn how to handle their objections or rejection.
Here are six proven techniques you can use to turn your cold calls into hot
sales:
1. Analyze your fear. Fear is simply
an anticipation of negative results. Once you understand this, you can turn
the adrenaline fear produces into a positive motivator. Rather than thinking
about the rejection you might experience calling a stranger, think about the
potential business you could gain by making the call.
2. Develop a target market. The key
to effective cold calling is identifying the right prospects before you call.
Rather than randomly selecting names from the phone book, target individuals
who have an interest in your product or service and the money to buy it. Chaiet
finds her ideal cold-call prospects by inviting the public to attend open-house
graduations after the completion of each series of classes taught at her school.
"We invite the general public
to watch what the students have learned. They sign a guest book when they come
in the door. I follow up the next day or two with phone calls to these people
to see if they're interested in enrolling in a training seminar," she says.
Other ways to find prospects include
asking existing clients for referrals; calling people you meet at civic, business
or service organization meetings; or taking the names of people attending a
trade show or conference and calling them afterward.
3. Know what the prospect wants.
Prospects aren't interested in what your product or service is (its features);
they're interested in what it will do for them (its benefits). That's why it's
critical you talk in terms of benefits. Will your product or service help the
prospect make a profit, reduce costs, save time, improve productivity or attract
more customers?
4. Use a script. Once you have your
prospect's attention, ask specific questions to learn more about what your prospect
wants and how you can fulfill his or her expectations. Chaiet asks prospects
if they're concerned about personal safety, want to increase their self-confidence
in threatening situations and would like to learn techniques to protect themselves.
"I speak from a list of prepared questions," she says. "It gives
me confidence, lets me concentrate on what the person is saying [instead of
what I'm going to say next], and helps me direct the conversation in a fairly
organized manner."
5. Be a good listener. "Listen
more than you talk," advises Chaiet. "This way, you find out what
the person's needs are rather than simply telling him [or her] all about your
product and how wonderful it is." You'll also score big points with prospects
by not interrupting and by asking relevant follow-up questions to clarify or
acknowledge what they're saying.
6. Accept "no" and go on.
Not everyone wants or needs what your company offers. Don't take rejection personally;
just proceed to the next call. Says Chaiet, "Your success rate definitely
increases as you make more and more cold calls."
By Carla Goodman

Sales Training - Overcome
Your Fear of Cold Calls
Telemarketing/Sales
Training
"If you do
build a great experience, customers tell each other about that. Word of mouth
is very powerful"
Jeff Bezos
Suggested Reading:
Telemarketing
Tips from A to Z: How to Make Every Call a Winner! (Crisp 50 Minute Book)
by Nancy Friedman
Top
Telemarketing Techniques
by Ellen Bendremer
Successful
Telemarketing: Opportunities and Techniques for Increasing Sales and Profits
by Bob Stone, John Wyman
How
to Manage Growth and Maximize Profits in Outbound Telemarketing
by Steven A. Idelman
The
Complete Guide to Telemarketing Management
by Joel Linchitz
Basic
Telemarketing: Skills for Sales and Service Productivity
by Mary D. Pekas
Complete
Handbook of All-Purpose Telemarketing Scripts
by Barry Masser
The
Dialamerica Teleservices Handbook : A Guide to Successful Inbound and Outbound
Telemarketing
by Robert Doscher, Richard Simms
Fleeced!:
Telemarketing Rip-Offs and How to Avoid Them
by Fred Schulte
Total
Telemarketing
by Robert J. McHatton
Scriptwriting
for Effective Telemarketing
by Judy McKee
Successful
Telemarketing/Opportunities and Techniques for Increasing Sales and Profits
by Bob Stone, John Wyman |