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Richard Gee Presents....
 

Subject: E-phone Contact from the telephone man

 
E-phone Contact
business by phone newsletter from
the telephone man
 
In this issue:
  • Thought for the day
  • Feature: The call-back - how to make it work to your advantage  and get more "Yeses"
  • PLUS receive a FREE training resource: Telephone Tips the professionals use direct from the telephone man  
  • Credible communications: how to get your customers to read what you send them

Thought for the day from the telephone man:
 
You can do nothing about other people's actions ...
but you can always control your own reaction!
 

 

Developing an effective call-back technique

 
I have received quite a number of emails over the Christmas period covering a huge variety of issues and topics. I always welcome any contact from readers and I try to reply personally to these enquiries whenever possible. 
 
A common topic seems to be about the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the call-back to follow up on a prospect . Thought I would take the opportunity to respond through E-Phone Contact in the hope that other readers may find some value in establishing a firm call-back technique.
 
We all have to call back prospects during our business by phone activities. Sometimes it's to follow up a mail-out, check on partnership/management positions or to seek a potential buyer's decision.

Whatever the reason, many business by phone professionals seem to shoot themselves in the foot here. There was no agreed time to re-call the prospect, therefore no call to action. I often hear things like:

TSR:    Oh, hello John, it's Wendy from XYZ company, we spoke last week. I sent you some info and I wondered if you'd read it yet?

I guarantee that at least 50% of call-backs handled this way will NOT have read your literature, another 40% will give an excuse or an objection around time and how busy they are, and the remaining 10% might, just might, engage you in a conversation about the main thing and the original point of the call. 

Here are a few ideas and proven ways to develop an effective call-back that at least opens the door to meaningful discussion with your prospect and will give you greater opportunity to present your product or service with an eye to gaining new business.

The thing to get sorted in your mind about this technique, is to recognise the call-back commitment begins at the close of the first call! It sets the scene for further discussion and relies on helping your prospect keep their side of the bargain and actually read the blooming material they have requested during your call.

Prospect:    Umm, sounds good, can you email me something?

Of course it's important to ascertain and qualify why the prospect wants the mail-out in the first place, a technique I covered in an earlier issue of E-Phone Contact. Once you've done that and accepted they are a genuine case and deserve your info pack try this:

TSR:    OK John, I'll get this off to you today and ... you should have all the information you've asked for by tomorrow.

What I'll do, John, is give you a quick call back around 10am on Thursday to make sure everything has arrived with you safely and in case you have any questions. Will you be at your phone for around (xxx) minutes at 10am on Thursday John?

That's great thanks for taking a moment to read through our info pack and I look forward to speaking with you again on Thursday ... OK?

What do most people reply when you say "OK?" ... Exactly!

Now you have a time and a purpose for the call. Good prospects will bookmark either mentally or in their diary that you'll be calling back to talk about their information request. See this as a call to action.

Now, the call-back itself.

TSR:    Hello, John, it's Wendy calling (as promised) from XYZ company. I sent you through the information on (product/service) you requested and I just wanted to make sure that everything has arrived safely and see if you have any questions I can help you with ... (into a hot-button question of your own.)

Sometimes it's of real value to add a benefit right here, something you "forgot to mention" on the first call. This should be a hot-button statement about your product or service you know will appeal to the prospect.

Even if you just use the call-back technique above you will show your prospect that:

  • You keep your promises - always good to know in business.
  • You're not looking for a straight yes or no, you're calling to be of assistance. People buy from people - sure, prospects will buy perceived value and they are more likely to respond positively to your call if they feel you are customer and service orientated and not just ringing to close a sale.
  • By seeking to answer questions, there is no pressure, only assistance.
  • You're not just ringing to close another deal. You're seeking their input and ready to offer any assistance, advice or information a genuine prospect may have.

One other point. I'm a great believer in closing on as few calls as possible, however some prospects need to be nurtured along. Over the years, I and others I work with have earned thousands of dollars in commissions and product sales by using an effective call-back technique.

Whatever you do, try not to make this the last call to the prospect. Look to keep the door open and remember ... send info out on request ONLY if you have made a full presentation to your prospect. Establish the reason why they want it in the first place, close a time and day to call back and seek the prospect's commitment to actually read through the written material you send. Try and explore your product/service further and seek to find a hot-button benefit statement that you can use to stimulate further interest in your prospect when you call back. And last, but certainly not least, make sure you keep to the agreed time to call back. Even if your prospect is absent, log the call or leave a message.

There are some excellent, successful ways you can phrase a message on an answerphone or leave with reception. You're seeking to leave a footprint in your prospect's mind that you kept to your side of the arrangement and called "as promised". This will often prompt the prospect to read through your stuff and get positioned ahead of when you call back again.

We'll leave the details and techniques around "positive message leaving"  to another issue but if you are getting more flat no's than responses of interest on your call-backs, you're definitely losing income, missing opportunities and often having the door shut to you for future contact. Your main presentation is great on the first call, doesn't it make sense to develop an effective call-back so you can reap the benefits of the earlier call?

Talking of calls to action and information mail-outs, I have been lucky enough to work with an excellent communications specialist over the years and I have to say that the difference  good, clear and effective written material can make to future sales is massive. The thing that constantly astounds me is the number of organisations who send out all sorts of stuff without a thought to the continuity of the initial phone call, no attempt to personalise for the prospect and little thought about what it feels like to receive your literature.

Is it any wonder that most of the requests for information end up either in the bin or unread near the bottom of the stacker trays? I agree that written material is not going to be anywhere near as effective as a quality, trained TSR but lack of thought and content can definitely hamstring the very best of callers. With this in mind I have begged and cajoled my communications specialist Lynnaire to share her skills with E-Phone Contact readers in the hope that a quick review of the phone-to-mail process can help you secure more "Yeses" (see below).

Wishing you all a great start to the year and if you haven't reached target yet: get ready, you're starting today!

Matthew Mewse - the telephone man


 Tips and ways to make effective introductions and openings on every call

The telephone man produces a series of Telephone Tips that many callers and managers find of practical use in their business by phone operations. The tips cover a variety of subjects and the initial series is about the three main elements that compose a successful telephone script and presentation.
 
Ground rules, hot-button ideas for introductions, sales delivery and closing components are highlighted in an easy-to-read and apply format that fits into most selling situations and call centre training resources. Many managers, TSRs and callers of all types have benefited from these simple tips and they are often used as part of a business by phone sales team's prospecting resource and business by phone activities.  
 
If you would like to receive Telephone Tips the Professionals Use from the  telephone man's library, 
please email a request to matthew@telephoneman.co.nz and we'll forward them to you absolutely FREE!

Credible Communications: How to get customers to read what you send them

 

You’ve made the call to your prospect. They say they’re interested but want to see some written material. You’ve established that they’re not wasting your time by saying this, they genuinely do need more information in order to consult with another decisionmaker on the team. How do you ensure that when they receive it, they don’t just bin it?

 

One way is to make the introduction such a humdinger that they’re hooked from the beginning. But how do you do that? Easy. In journalistic terms, it’s called “looking for an angle”. Once you put your mind to it, you’ll come up with some great ideas which make your communication stand out from the crowd.

 

You want to design your communication, or at least the beginning of it, to appeal specifically to your prospect. In the same way that with your phone call, you reach down the phone to them, by writing to them or sending them a communication, you’re also reaching out to them. But your prospect doesn’t want to feel that you’re writing to just anyone, they want to feel special, they want to feel that you’re writing specifically to them. So, don't just fling a brochure in the mail; you need something personal.

 

So before you begin, think about who they are, their likes or preferences. What do you know about them? Did you pick up any information during the course of your phone call which might be of use? Target them with an introduction written entirely for them.

 

These suggestions will help get you thinking:

 

1.         Use some of the hot buttons from your phone call.

This has the advantage of reminding your prospect, in a subtle way, of your presentation on the phone and will help bring it back to mind. Don’t overdo it and don’t just repeat your phone call or you’ll lose any advantage you’ve already gained.

 

2.         Reflect the season. Eg Christmas, New Year, Easter etc.

Think of some interesting ways to incorporate this though, don’t just say “Merry Christmas” or “Happy Easter”. Instead try something a little offbeat which attracts attention. If you’re not sure whether what you've written works, run it by others in your office. But be original. Nothing puts people off like clichés.

 

3.         Tie it in with a current affairs issue or something that everyone's talking about, for example the awful early summer we had. You might like to try something like, “For those of us who’re back behind our desks now that the good weather has finally arrived…” But be careful. Don’t choose events like the Asian tsunami or you could be accused of taking advantage of others’ misfortune.

 

4.         Link something you know about them with your company or product.

If, for instance, reliability is a hot button for them, tie that up with your organisation (its service reliability), or what you’re selling (the reliability of the product).

 

Whatever you come up with in terms of an introduction, be sure in your own mind that’s it’s going to work for this particular audience: your prospect. The aim is to get them to read it, so you want to make it stand out from the clutter of all the other information you receive. Like any planning, the more care you take before you start, the better the result.

 

Lynnaire Johnston
Communications Specialist

E-Phone Contact is brought to you by Matthew Mewse, the telephone man

an independent professional trainer and specialist of business by phone. 

He welcomes your contact on (09) 483 5300 or 027 616 3272, or email him at: telephone.man@telephoneman.co.nz

If you wish to pass on this newsletter to a colleague who is interested in business by phone,    

please feel free to do so.

If you wish to reproduce any of this material, please credit the telephone man as its author.

 







Phone Richard: 0800 GEEWIZ  (0800 433949) 


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