ancientnet.com ancientnet.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Add Your Link :> Add Article   
 
 

Training Dollars Shrinking? Thinking About Workshop Alternatives? Teleclass Training Benefits

With training budget cuts, continued reduced staff situations and even gas prices affecting the deci ... - Patricia Weber
 

How to Improve the Management Teams Wins for Winning More Business Part 2: Focus on People Skills

Management can create more wins by focusing on developing the people skills necessary to conduct bus ... - Leanne Hoagland-Smith
 

Are Your Marketing Pieces Up to Date?

Our businesses are constantly changing and so are the ways we present ourselves. Keep on top of thes ... - Mike Shannon
 
 

Managers, Your PR - Sizzle or Fizzle?

A fact of PR life is this: when you need to move a message from here to there, communications tactic ... - Robert A. Kelly
 

Ten Ways To Sell Your Ideas To Anyone

You have a great idea you know is a winner. All you need is support from some key people. Phut! No i ... - Adrian Savage
 
 

Site Home » Business & Companies » Sales
 

The Email Blow-Off

 
Author: Shamus Brown

This week's article is my response to a question by Lisa Boudreau of ePresence.

"I cold call into Fortune 1000 companies, often times the admin will tell me to send the CIO, or whoever I'm calling, an email about who we are and what we do. I tend to think of emails as a last ditch effort, but others think they are a good follow up to a live conversation. I'd be interested in what you think! - Lisa Boudreau, Sales Rep, ePresence Inc.

Thanks for writing in Lisa. The title I gave this article pretty much sums up what I think. When making cold calls, administrative assistants are instructed to get rid of salespeople as nicely as possible. One of the easiest ways to blow off a sales rep is to ask you to send some information, literature, or an email.

Many sales reps then think "I got one!" They believe that they have a prospect, and they put it onto their follow-up list, and they call and call again until they get through, give up, or are told to get lost. The reality is you were just told that your sales pitch didn't work. Your email, or brochure or whatever, goes into a huge pile of other solicitations, that may never get reviewed.

It's useful to think of cold-calling as advertising, only one at a time. In advertising, you are "interrupting" people with your message. By delivering it to hundreds, thousands, or millions at the same time, you can persuade a certain percentage of the people who view the ad. The people who are persuaded are those who fit the target profile that the advertiser is looking for.

Cold-calling is just like shoving a billboard in one person's face, or running a commercial for one prospect, and then asking them if they want the product. How well you do at this depends on two things. First the quality of the target list of prospects you are calling on is very important (this is akin to which freeway you post your billboard on, or which TV show you run your commercial on). When you have the right target list, the next element under your control is the effectiveness of your message at getting the prospect's attention.

The reason why I use the advertising analogy is that when cold-calling we are an interruption, until we have the prospect's attention and the permission to probe further and ask questions. When we fail at this, prospect's nicely ask us to "send info please".

To improve the effectiveness of your message, I advise you to focus on using prominent customer references with benefits centered around revenue increases, cost reductions, or efficiency gains in your cold-calling approach. Combine this with effective prospect targeting and some persuasive questioning techniques and you will get through to more decision-makers.

1999-2004 Shamus Brown, All Rights Reserved.

Author Bio:
Shamus Brown is a reputed author. Shamus likes to write articles about this subject.
You can search for this article using: business sales, small business sales, sales leads for business, sales business plans, sales business
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Secrets of Successful Business Relationships Online
 
Real Estate Marketing Postcards - 3 Powerful Strategies
 
Reward Your Employees with Travel Incentives
 
6 Danger Signs You May Be Headed to Micro-Management
 
Whats So Special About You? Defining Your USP
 
Starting a Small Business: Get Out of Your Comfort Zone
 
Five Secrets to Creating the Ultimate Mastermind Group
 
How to Build Sales With Extended Benefits
 
Cutting Business Expenses Through Outsourcing
 
Top 10 Ways To Irritate Your Visitors
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 
 

Computers & Software

 

Online & Board Games

 

Realty & Property

 

Society & Issues

 

Employment & Careers

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Travel & Accommodation

 

Online Shopping

 

Business & Companies

 

Self Help

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

News & Events

 

Creative Arts

 

Science & Space

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Recreation

 

Teens & Kids

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Academics & Education

 

Food & Recipe

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Finance & Banking

 

Garden & Home

 

Politics & Government


 
Site Home :> Privacy :> Terms of Service
All Rights Reserved © 2006 www.ancientnet.com