A.I. 's Business Newsletter
7 Cold Calling Secrets Even The Sales Gurus
Don't Know
By Ari Galper
More
and more e-mails are arriving in my in-box from people who hate cold
calling. Here's what they're saying:
• “Cold calling terrifies me.”
• “The phone feels like a
10,000-pound weight.”
• “Every time I have to make a cold
call, I freeze up.”
• “I feel like a fraud when I’m
cold calling.”
• “I can’t take the rejection when
I do cold calling. It just kills me.”
• “I’ve gone from top producer to
‘hermit’ because of my mental brick wall when it comes to cold
calling.”
Cold calling the old way is a
painful struggle.
But you can make it a productive
and positive experience by changing your mindset and cold calling
the new way.
To show you what I mean, here are 7
tested cold calling ideas that even the sales gurus don’t know.
1. Change Your Mental Objective
Before You Make the Call
If you’re like most people who make
cold calls, you’re hoping to make a sale -- or at least an
appointment -- before you even pick up the phone.
The problem is, the people you call
somehow always pick up on your mindset immediately.
They sense that you’re focused on
your goals and interests, rather than on finding out what they might
need or want.
This short-circuits the whole
process of communication and trust-building.
Here’s the benefit of changing your
mental objective before you make the call: it takes away the frenzy
of working yourself up mentally to pick up the phone.
All the feelings of rejection and
fear come from us getting wrapped up in our expectations and hoping
for an outcome when it’s premature to even be thinking about an
outcome.
So try this. Practice shifting your
mental focus to thinking, “When I make this call, I’m going to build
a conversation so that a level of trust can emerge allowing us to
exchange information back and forth so we can both determine if
there’s a fit or not.”
2. Understand the Mindset of the
Person You’re Calling
Let’s say you’re at your office and
you’re working away.
Your phone rings and someone says,
“Hello, my name’s Mark. I’m with Financial Solutions International.
We offer a broad array of financial solutions. Do you have a few
minutes?”
What would go through your mind?
Probably something like this:
“Uh-oh, another salesperson. I’m about to be sold something. How
fast can I get this person off the phone?”
In other words, it’s basically over
at “Hello,” and you end up rejected.
The moment you use the old cold
calling approach -- the traditional pitch about who you are and what
you have to offer, which all the sales gurus have been teaching for
years -- you trigger the negative “salesperson” stereotype in the
mind of the person you’ve called, and that means immediate
rejection.
I call it “The Wall.”
The problem is with how you’re
selling, not what you’re selling.
This is an area that’s been ignored
in the world of selling.
We’ve all been trained to try to
push prospects into a "yes" response on the first call. But that
creates sales pressure.
But, if you learn to really
understand and put yourself in the mindset of the person you call,
you’ll find it easier to avoid triggering The Wall.
It’s that fear of rejection that
makes cold calling so frightening.
Instead, start thinking about
language that will engage people and not language that will trigger
rejection.
3. Identify a Core Problem That You
Can Solve
We’ve all learned that when we
begin a conversation with a prospect, we should talk about
ourselves, our product, and our solution. Then we sort of hope that
the person connects with what we’ve just told them. Right?
But when you offer your pitch or
your solution without first involving your prospect by talking about
a core problem that they might be having, you’re talking about
yourself, not them.
And that’s a problem.
Prospects connect when they feel
that you understand their issues before you start to talk about your
solutions.
When people feel understood, they
don’t put up The Wall. They remain open to talking with you.
Here’s an example based on my own
experience. I offer Unlock The Game™ as a new approach in selling.
When I call a vice president of sales, I would never start out with,
“Hi, my name is Ari, I'm with Unlock The Game, and I offer the
newest technique in selling, and I wonder if you have a few minutes
to talk now.”
Instead, I wouldn’t even pick up
the phone without first identifying one or more problems that I know
VPs often have with their sales teams. Problems that Unlock The
Game™ can solve.
For example, one common problem is
when sales teams and salespeople spend time chasing prospects who
have no intention of buying.
So I would start by asking, “Are
you grappling with issues around your sales team chasing prospects
who lead them on without any intention of buying?”
So, come up with two or three
specific core problems that your product or service solves. (Avoid
generic problem phrases like “cut costs” or “increase revenue.”
They’re too vague.)
4. Start With a Dialogue, Not a
Presentation
Let’s return to the goal of a cold
call, which is to create a two-way dialogue engaging prospects in a
conversation.
We’re not trying to set the person
up for a yes or no. That’s the old way of cold calling.
This new cold calling approach is
designed to engage people in a natural conversation. The kind you
might have with a friend. This lets you both of you decide whether
it’s worth your time to pursue the conversation further.
The key here is never to assume
beforehand that your prospect should buy what you have to offer,
even if they’re a 100 percent fit with the profile of the “perfect
customer.”
If you go into the call with that
assumption, prospects will pick up on it and The Wall will go up, no
matter how sincere you are.
Avoid assuming anything about
making a sale before you make a call.
For one thing, you have no idea
whether prospects can buy what you have because you know nothing
about their priorities, their decisionmaking process, their budget,
etc.
If you assume that you’re going to
sell them something on that first call, you’re setting yourself up
for failure. That’s the core problem with traditional old-style cold
calling.
Stay focused on opening a dialogue
and determining if it makes sense to continue the conversation.
5. Start With Your Core Problem
Question
Once you know what problems you
solve, you also know exactly what to say when you make a call. It’s
simple. You begin with, “Hi, my name is Ari. Maybe you can help me
out for a moment.”
How would you respond if someone
said that to you?
Probably, “Sure, how can I help
you?” or “Sure, what do you need?” That’s how most people would
respond to a relaxed opening phrase like that. It’s a natural
reaction.
The thing is, when you ask for
help, you’re also telling the truth because you don’t have any idea
whether you can help them or not.
That’s why this new approach is
based on honesty and truthfulness. That’s why you’re in a very good
place to begin with.
When they reply, “Sure, how can I
help you?,” you don’t respond by launching into a pitch about what
you have to offer. Instead, you go right into talking about the core
problem to find out whether it’s a problem for the prospect.
So you say, “I’m just giving you a
call to see if you folks are grappling (and the key word here is
‘grappling’) with any issues around your sales team chasing
prospects who turn out to never have any intention of buying?”
No pitch, no introduction, nothing
about me. I just step directly into their world.
The purpose of my question is to
open the conversation and develop enough trust so they’ll feel
comfortable having a conversation.
The old way of cold calling advises
asking lots of questions to learn about the prospect’s business and
to “connect.” The problem is that people see right through that.
They know that you have an ulterior motive, and then you’re right
back up against The Wall.
These ideas may be hard for you to
apply to your own situation at first because trying to leverage
calls based on what we know about our solution is so engrained in
our thinking.
If you stay with it, though, you
can learn to step out of your own solution and convert it into a
problem that you can articulate using your prospects’ language.
And that’s the secret of building
trust on calls. It’s the missing link in the whole process of cold
calling.
6. Recognize and Diffuse Hidden
Pressures
Hidden sales pressures that makes
The Wall go up can take a lot of forms.
For example, “enthusiasm ” can send
the message that you’re assuming that what you have is the right fit
for the prospect. That can send pressure over the phone to your
prospect.
You must be able to engage people
in a natural conversation. Think of it as calling a friend. Let your
voice be natural, calm, relaxed…easy-going. If you show enthusiasm
on your initial call, you’ll probably trigger the hidden sales
pressure that triggers your prospect to reject you.
Another element of hidden pressure
is trying to control the call and move it to a "next step".
The moment you begin trying to
direct your prospect into your "sales process ", there is a very
high likelihood that you can "turn off" your prospect's willingness
to share with you the details of their situation.
It's important to allow the
conversation to evolve naturally and to have milestones or
checkpoints throughout your call so you can assess if there is a fit
between you and the person you are speaking with.
7. Determine a Fit
Now, suppose that you’re on a call
and it’s going well, with good dialogue going back and forth. You’re
reaching a natural conclusion…and what happens?
In the old way of cold calling, we
panic. We feel we’re going to lose the opportunity, so we try to
close the sale or at least to book an appointment. But this puts
pressure on the prospect, and you run the risk of The Wall going up
again.
Here’s a step that most people miss
when they cold call. As soon as they realize that prospects have a
need for their solution, they start thinking, “Great, that means
they’re interested.”
What they don’t ask is, “Is this
need a top priority for you or your organization to solve, or is it
something that’s on the back burner for a while?”
In other words, even if you both
determine that there ia a problem you can solve, you have to ask
whether solving it is a priority. Sometimes there’s no budget, or it
isn’t the right time. It’s important that you find this out, because
months later you'll regret not knowing this earlier.
Putting the Pieces Together
Have you ever wondered where the
“numbers game” concept came from?
It came from someone making a call,
getting rejected, and the boss saying, “Call someone else.”
But with the new way of cold
calling, it’s not about how many people you call. It’s about what
you say and how you come across.
Do you remember the definition of
insanity—continuing to do the same thing but expecting different
results?
If you go on using the same old
cold calling methods, you’ll go on experiencing the ever-increasing
pain of selling.
But if you adopt a new approach and
learn how to remove pressure from your initial cold calls, you’ll
experience so much success and satisfaction that it’ll really change
the way you do business, bring you sales success beyond your
imagination—and eliminate “rejection” from your vocabulary for good.
With a Masters Degree in
Instructional Design and over a decade of experience creating
breakthrough sales strategies for global companies such as UPS and
QUALCOMM, Ari Galper discovered the missing link that people who
sell have been seeking for years.
His profound discovery of shifting
one's mindset to a place of complete integrity, based on new words
and phrases grounded in sincerity, has earned him distinction as the
world's leading authority on how to build trust in the world of
selling.
Leading companies such
as Gateway, Clear Channel Communications, Brother
International and Fidelity National Mortgage have called on
Ari to keep them on the leading edge of sales performance.
Visit
http://www.unlockthegame.com to get his free sales
training lessons.
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