A.I. 's Business Newsletter
Telesales Just Got Easier!
By Mike Palman
Your
sales structure for outbound calls can be summarised using the well
know acronym AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) we will
explore at a high level what should be happening during a
telemarketing call.
Open The Call Then Set Your Agenda
The opening minutes of any sales
call are vital. You must remember that rapport is built immediately
so how you sound is important. Everyone makes decisions about who
they are talking to in seconds. This is why it is so important to
sound great as we are immediately graded and however we do will be
the starting point of the relationship. We are now at the beginning
of the process of building rapport and developing what we hope will
be a long term, profitable relationship – so sound fantastic.
When we meet someone for the first
time we typically shake hands, smile and then swap business cards.
On a call we also have some definable stages that can be measured
and optimised. The opening part of the call is where we ask low risk
questions which may, or may not concern their business. We might
have a common interest, or even know the same group of people.
Working on the phone is not really so different but in many ways is
harder as we have no visual clues and can only ‘hear’ how the
prospect is reacting. This is where you learn that, different
approaches to different people will get different results.
During the opening stage of your
telemarketing campaign should keep to a realistic timescale with
clear definable objectives. Understand early on that no rapport
means no sales regardless of how good your product or service is.
The real purpose is to introduce yourself to your prospects
establish rapport before moving into the business part of the call.
Another tip is to avoid being too familiar with your prospect - it
rarely works even if you know them! Asking low risk questions is
easier than going for a bulls eye in less than 30 seconds! Be
friendly, but not over familiar. We cannot get along with everyone
but we can be professional regardless of who they are.
The next stage is to set your
agenda in your opening statement (prepared earlier please). The
purpose of the agenda is to put you in control and establish how the
telemarketing sales call will be structured. It also gives you the
right to ask questions.
Ask Great Questions
Selling is about identifying and
then solving problems. The next stage therefore is to ask questions
in order to find and explore customer problems. It usually relates
to one or some of the following areas that need exploring including,
contact, organisation, current supplier, challenges, needs, decision
making process, competition and finance.
We ask questions at this stage for
two main reasons. Firstly to gather facts and secondly to identify
attitudes, problems and needs. Essentially we are taking a
temperature check.
One important factor here is how we
structure our questions and the quality of the questions we ask.
Open questions (starting with how, what, where, when, why) encourage
the customer to talk and closed questions (those that can only be
answered with a yes/no) give us specific information.
The sequence of our questions can
be very important, especially when a customer is only willing to
divulge a little information. We need to listen out for buying
signals and ask follow-up questions at the appropriate time.
One of the key issues is being able
to ask questions, then listening to the answer without interrupting.
(Interrupting and speaking over someone will not win you any
friends!) This is common sales behaviour and customers find it most
irritating sometimes worse. Also, while we are talking we are
cutting off the supply of free information coming from the prospect.
Identify Needs
The process of asking questions
will clarify the customer's and give you a clear idea of whether a
feature or features of your product could solve those problems and
satisfy the customers' needs.
Usually, we see the need for our
products and or services before our customers do. They see problems
rather than needs and there could be a range of potential solutions.
When people buy they also have a
number of buying criteria. This usually means there are a limited
number of reasons to buy that are of greatest interest to them.
People don’t buy for lots of reasons. They have their own buying
criteria, which we will need to establish.
Also, it has been shown that people
buy on only two levels; Logic and Emotion.
Their logical buying behaviour
wants to know if the solution they are choosing is technically
correct. Their emotional buying behaviour is asking for reassurance
that their decision is a good one and they are not making a mistake.
Present the Solution
Having clarified the customer's
problems and identified needs, present the Features, Advantages and
Benefits of your own product in such a way that the solution matches
the needs of the customer. An important issue here is timing. We
cannot present effectively if we haven’t identified their main
buying criteria. When we present we must also be aware that we are
not just listing a series of features. We must match the feature
that solves the problem turning features into benefits.
The most common mistakes made by
salespeople is to present too much information too early in the
sales process. We need to look at the problem from the buyers’
perspective. Think about it and ask yourself this question ‘If I was
in their position, how much information would I need and when would
I need it?’
Gain Commitment Using A Trial Close
Having presented a solution that
meets the customer's needs the next phase is to gain commitment, to
go ahead or else for some future action that will move you nearer
towards the sale being made. You will usually meet with objections
at various stages of the sales process and techniques will be
developed for dealing with objections later in the programme. One of
the problems with asking for commitment is that we sometimes lack
confidence and fear rejection. It is important that we keep control
of the sales process and maintain responsibility for moving to the
next stage of the process and taking the customer with us. A trial
close will flush out any last minute objection. Once you are
satisfied that there are no additional objections you can present
your solution.
Your Final Step
Once you have presented your final
solution you can then close the sale (or move to the next stage).
Remember if you break down complex sales into manageable chunks you
will be able to move forward far quicker. Gaining commitment for a
meeting, a trial or whatever your objective is means that you have
created a logical structure and you have achieved your call
objectives. With practice everything becomes so much easier. But
then if telemarketing was so easy everyone would be a runaway
success – you know just how hard it is and the fact that you may
make it look easy is a real skill!
© The Sales Academy 2005.
You may include this article in
your ezine or on your website or distribute it to others, provided
you include the copyright statement and the bio information tag line
found at the end of this article.
Mike Palman, is an
International Master Sales Coach and author. Mike helps
people and businesses do more, do it better and get the
results that they want. Mike had a successful career in
sales and sales management for over 25 years and now helps
salespeople and organisations get the sales edge. Since
starting The Sales Academy in 2000 Mike and his team have
helped 1000's of sales people and companies globally achieve
outstanding results. For more information about Mike and The
Sales Academy visit
http://www.thesalesacademy.com
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