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Do you confirm every prospect appointment before you head
out the door?
Or…
Do you not confirm, believing that it gives your prospect
an "out?"
Far too many coaching clients, workshop participants and
readers have
said to me, "If I confirm the appointment it gives them
a chance to get out
of it." Let's examine this statement and the beliefs
that go with it.
The above statement implies that the scheduled appointment
is something that, given a choice, your prospect would avoid.
This must mean, therefore, that you somehow tricked or manipulated
your prospect into agreeing to the appointment in the first
place. Now on reflection, your prospect could only want to
bolt.
If you had to trick your prospect to schedule the meeting,
the meeting itself must not have any real value. It logically
follows then, that the agenda for the meeting, your products
or services, you and your time also have no value!
Well, that's demoralizing!
If, however, you truly believe that your product or service
has value, if you have done your homework, targeted your market
and are calling on qualified prospects then there is no reason
that a prospect should want to avoid meeting with you. It
is time to change some of your beliefs about the meeting.
If a prospect schedules an appointment with you, that means
they are interested in talking about what you have to offer!
And here's another thought: Do you really want to spend your
time racing
around your territory to meetings with prospects who don't
show?
I've had some sales professionals tell me that when a prospect
stands them
up, they like it, because the prospect then feels guilty and
"owes them."
These sales professionals believe that their prospects will
meet with them
because of that sense of guilt. And perhaps some do. But barring
a last
minute emergency that takes a prospect away unexpectedly,
someone who
stands you up once, will more than likely have no qualms about
standing
you up again. This "guilt" approach goes hand-in-hand
with the belief that
prospects must be tricked or manipulated into meetings.
So here's a better approach: Change the way you think about
prospect
meetings and confirm them! Call your prospect the day before
or early the
morning of the appointment. Try to reach the prospect directly.
Say:
"I'm calling to confirm our brief meeting tomorrow (or
later today) at (fill
in the time.)"
(The use of any of the following sentences is optional.)
"I've put together
those samples we discussed."
"I've given a lot of thought to your situation."
"I have some very interesting ideas to share with you."
"I'm looking forward to meeting you."
If your prospect says the agreed upon meeting time no longer
works,
reschedule immediately! Otherwise, you now know that when
you show
up tomorrow or later the same day, your prospect will actually
be there!
(Do make sure that your prospect has your phone number so
that they can
reach you if something unexpected does happen.)
If you are not able to reach your prospect directly, and
if your prospect has
a secretary, ask her if she keeps the prospect's calendar.
If she does, you
can confirm with her. If she does not, deputize her. Give
her your name
and phone number and say: "I'm calling to confirm my
brief meeting
tomorrow at (fill in the time) with Ms. Prospect." Ask
her to speak with
the prospect for you and then call you back to let you know
that the
meeting is on.
If you are not able to reach a human being leave the following
message on
your prospect's voice mail:
"Hello, Ms. Prospect. This is (fill in your name) from
(fill in your
company name.) My phone number is (your phone number goes
here.)"
"I'm calling to confirm our brief meeting tomorrow at
(fill in the time.)"
(The use of any of the following sentences is optional.)
"I've put together
those samples we discussed."
"I've given a lot of thought to your situation."
"I have some very interesting ideas to share with you."
"I'm looking forward to meeting you."
Please be good enough, to give me a call back and let me
know that
tomorrow at (fill in the time.) still works for you."
"And again, this is (fill in your name) from (fill in
your company name.)
My phone number is (your phone number goes here.)"
Most prospects will call you back, either to confirm or to
reschedule.
Over the past years, many, many coaching clients, workshop
participants
and readers have asked me about differentiating themselves
from the
competition. This is one way to do it. By confirming your
appointments
you are setting yourself up to be viewed by your prospects
and customers
as an expert and a professional. You are a consultant, like
any consultant
your time is valuable and your prospects will see that if
you conduct
yourself in that manner. Far too many sales professionals
allow
themselves to be treated poorly, feeling perhaps, that it
comes with the
territory. It doesn't have to.
Confirming appointments is a far better use of your selling
time. A
prospect who will not meet with you, is not a qualified prospect!
Those
prospects who do cancel and are unwilling, for whatever reason,
to
reschedule are doing you a favor. They are saving you the
time and energy
you would have spent going to see them, following up with
them and then
not selling anything!
*********************************************
INVITATION
*********************************************
I invite your participation in this email newsletter. Please
email your comments, suggestions, success stories and questions
to me at
wendy@wendyweiss.com.
I will include them in future issues of
"Opening Doors & Closing Sales."
Editors Note: Wendy Weiss is known as “The Queen of
Cold Calling.” She can be emailed wendy@wendyweiss.com.
Her website is www.wendyweiss.com
March 2004
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