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I suspect that you have heard the
expression "If at first you don't
succeed try, try again." This adage was
created many decades ago and it remains
true to this day. And even though many
sales people understand it, they make a
fatal mistake-they use the same approach
although their original approach was not
effective.
My wife and I once vacationed at an
all-inclusive resort in Cuba. One of the
advertised features was an in- room
mini-bar stocked with beer, water, and
soda. Both my wife drink a lot of water
(2-3 liters per day each) so this
feature definitely appealed to us.
Unfortunately, upon our arrival, the
mini-bar contained only one can of soda
so my wife called the front desk to have
our water replenished. Several attempts
failed to generate results. Early the
next morning I went to reception area
and explained our situation to a
customer service agent and was told "no
problem" but a few hours later we still
had no water. Finally my wife changed
her approach and asked an employee where
she could BUY water. The resort employee
threw up his hands and exclaimed, "Buy
water?!!? You don't have to do that! We
give it to you!" After that we always
had water in our room (until the resort
ran out of bottled water!).
What made the difference?
It was her approach. My wife was smart
enough to change her approach because
she recognized that our initial approach
had not been effective.
Here is the relevance of this scenario
to sales. It is critical to keep trying
in the face of adversity when you don't
get your intended result. After all,
persistence is a key sales skill. And
although many sales people are
persistent, they tend to use the same
tired techniques.
Successful sales people know the
importance of persistence but the key is
to change your approach or strategy with
each prospect every time you contact
them. You also need to consider the
frequency of your contacts. While it is
important to maintain regular contact
with new prospects as well as existing
customers, you can easily wear out your
welcome if you call people too often
especially if your prospect has no need
for your product, service or offering
when you contact them. I once heard that
when you are trying to initially connect
with decision maker that you should call
three times in the first week, twice
during each of the next two weeks, once
a week for the following month and then
monthly after that. To me this is sound
advice.
While it may seem like overkill, the key
is to leave a different message every
single time you call. Leaving the same
voice message won't get your call
returned and using the same strategy
with every prospect won't help you
differentiate yourself from you
competition. Spewing on and on about
your product or service won't help you
sound any different than everyone else
calling your prospect. And sounding like
every other sales person won't motivate
your prospect to do business with you.
It is essential that you modify your
approach or change your strategy,
especially in today's challenging times.
The approach you used last year will not
generate the same results this year. So,
what approach WILL work? Unfortunately,
no single approach will be effective. In
this economic climate, you need to
customize your approach with every new
prospect. Here's an example of an
ineffective sales strategy.
My wife recently contacted a company
about conducting online training
sessions. She spoke to a sales
representative and took their on-line
demonstration. Within 24 hours, another
sales rep took over her account and
began calling her. However, each voice
mail message was identical and did
little to compel my wife to return his
call.
I encountered a similar situation when I
contact a company about merchant
services for online credit cards. He was
persistent in his follow up but his
voice mail messages were the same each
time he called. Unfortunately, this is a
common scenario. Most sales people leave
the same tired, over-used voice mail
messages that fail to motivate people to
take action.
Effective persistence means keeping your
name in your prospect's mind by using
different strategies and techniques.
Varying your approach will help separate
you from your competition. You can use
email, voice mail, snail mail, letters,
postcards, web conferencing, and social
networks such as LinkedIn, Twitter, and
Facebook. The key is to develop a series
of approaches with each one delivering a
different message.
Remember this saying, "If at first
you don't succeed, try, try again."
© 2009 Kelley Robertson, All rights
reserved.
Kelley Robertson, author of The Secrets
of Power Selling helps sales
professionals close more deals in any
economy. Receive a FREE copy of 100 Ways
to Increase Your Sales by subscribing to
his free newsletter at www.Fearless-
Selling.ca. Kelley conducts workshops
and speaks regularly at sales meetings
and conferences. For information on his
programs contact him at 905- 633-7750 or
Kelley@Fearless-Selling.ca.
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