Article Sphere Logo
 
Main Article Categories

 Alternative Medicine
 Arts And Entertainment
 Automotives
 Beauty
 Business
 Communications
 Computer And Technology
 Disease And Illness
 Finance
 Food And Beverage
 Health And Fitness
 Home And Family
 Home Based Business
 Insurance
 Internet And E-Business
 Legal
 News And Society
 Pets And Animals
 Product Reviews
 Real Estate
 Recreation And Sports
 Reference And Education
 Self Improvement
 Shopping
 Travel And Leisure
 Women Health And Fitness
 Women Interests And Issues
 Work At Home
 Writing And Speaking
 All 511 Categories
 
"Sales" Article
 Article Directory Home Business Sales

How to Stop Your Cold Calls From Losing Steam

By Expert Author: Ari Galper
View Summary | Submitted: 2008-10-14 | Word Count: 679 words
Ari Galper
We’ve all had the experience where everything seems to be going well during a cold call, and suddenly the person we’re talking to “hits the brakes.” They raise an objection. And we start to panic, thinking we’re about to lose the sale.

So we fall back into the old traditional cold calling approach. We try to overcome objections and keep things moving forward. The notion is that if we’re persistent enough, we’ll make the sale.

Keep pushing?

In this old traditional cold calling mindset, we keep pushing. We try to present more information until we “close” the sale. We try to bypass people’s objections and concerns because we’ve already decided for them that they should buy what we have to offer.

However, in the new cold calling mindset, we know that sales pressure is always a recipe for disaster. Instead, we respond to objections by first trying to understand whether they’re genuine concerns or resistance to sales pressure.

Why? Until we do this, we have no way of responding appropriately to someone’s objections. We especially have no way of tackling the underlying cause of resistance, which is a reaction to sales pressure.

Genuine concern is about the product or service. Resistance is about a person’s mindset.

The old cold calling approach doesn’t distinguish between “genuine concerns” about what you’re selling, versus “resistance” to how you’re selling it.

But this is crucial. If a potential client is genuinely concerned with something about your product or service, then you address it thoughtfully and directly.

However, if they’re resisting the process itself, then they’ve felt sales pressure in some way. Resistance is almost always a negative response to perceived sales pressure. So we need to consider how we’ve introduced that pressure, or how we can reassure them we’re only focused on helping them solve their problems.

Different responses

When potential clients raise objections about what you’re selling (pricing, delivery, quality, etc.), these are genuine concerns. They’re rooted in the client’s world. So you must take them seriously rather than overriding or ignoring them.

When someone is resistant to the conversation itself, then you’re dealing with a reaction to sales pressure. This needs addressing, but in a different way. This is what I would call real “resistance,” because clients are resisting the whole cold calling process. They think that you’re trying to ‘sell’ them.

A tricky distinction

What gets tricky is when people raise objections that sound like genuine concerns. But they’re actually resisting perceived sales pressure.

On the surface, comments like these sound as if they’re about your product or service,
don’t they?

• Send me more information.
• Sounds good. Let me think about it.
• Your price is too high.
• Great. Let me talk it over with my co-workers.

But they may actually be code words for “I’m feeling pressured by how you’re selling.”

Your potential client probably isn’t going to tell you the truth. After all, when was the last time someone said, “You know, I feel as if you’re really focused on getting the sale here. And that’s making me feel pressured. It’s creating a slight tension in my stomach. And at this point, I don’t trust you.”

Fortunately, you can figure out whether potential clients are raising genuine concerns or covering up their discomfort. Just do these two simple things:

1. Assume pressure is always present, even when you’re doing everything you can to create a pressure-free environment. People expect sales pressure, and we can’t always immediately diffuse that expectation 100 per cent.

2. Trust your intuition and instincts. Over time, you’ll learn to be able to tell whether potential clients are telling you the truth. You’ll start picking up signals that they’re feeling pressured, such as giving you short answers.

As you learn to distinguish between genuine concerns and resistance, you’re likely to hear fewer and fewer “objections.” You’ll stop triggering evasive responses or false concerns when you stay focused on what’s actually being communicated. And you’ll get far better reactions to your cold calling efforts.
About the Author/Author Bio

Ari Galper, founder of Unlock The Game, makes cold calling painless and simple. Learn his free cold calling secrets even the sales gurus don't know. To receive your 10 free audio mini-lessons visit http://www.UnlockTheGame.com

Article Source: http://www.articlesphere.com/Article/How-to-Stop-Your-Cold-Calls-From-Losing-Steam/163647

Comments on this Article


More "Sales" Related Articles

 

Listed below are more articles related to the above article from the "Sales" article category.

People interested in the above article "How to Stop Your Cold Calls From Losing Steam" are also interested in the related articles listed below:

Imagine what it would be like if you found an advertising technique to increase your repeat and referral business. What if this technique not only gave you top of mind awarness with your clients and customers but also provide them with real value? Not staying in contact on a regular basis with past clients and customers is a mistake many salepeople make. It's a costly mistake because people who have bought your product or service are a great source of repeat and referral business.
Being effective at prospecting requires that you maintain a steady pace with your sales calls. That's how you ensure your sales funnel remains large enough so that you meet your sales targets year after year (and remember, that funnel has to be three times the value of your targets). In making those calls to new leads and prospects, sales people often complain to me that when they are intercepted by someone's voicemail, it too often becomes a black hole.
"Is it possible that what we’re selling is just priced too high?" I hear that question a lot when troubleshooting sales issues for clients during my seminars and coaching sessions. Plus it’s worth noting that it’s a question that tends to turn up again and again like a bad penny particularly in challenging economic times. My answer is always the same: price isn’t the problem.
One concept in sales marketing that is so under used but will bring you out of sales mediocrity to fortune and fame is a Unique Selling Proposition or USP. Focusing on the USP in every advertising and sales marketing effort is the key to creating super successful products and services.
An elevator speech is a very important sales tool. However, you must know how to develop one the right way for it to be effective. An elevator speech is your quick, concise answer to "What you do?" When asked in an "elevator" or any other "icebreaker" or networking type of situation. It is very important to have an effective elevator speech.
Use this goal setting technique after you've written down your goals, gotten specific about what you want and why you want it and developed a clear mental image of your goal. When those steps are completed, it's time to take action.
The software-as-a-service (SaaS) model is disrupting traditional approaches to business analytics. The long deployment cycles, high costs, complicated upgrade processes and IT infrastructure required of traditional on-premise business intelligence solutions are no longer acceptable in the era of on demand.
Article Directory Home Business Sales

Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
(Search in 26 languages: English, Spanish, French, Japanese, Arabic, Italian, German,
Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Dutch, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Greek, Serbian
Slovak, Hebrew, Swedish, Romanian, Polish, Norwegian, Finnish, Danish, Czech, Croatian, Bulgarian)
 
 
Copyright © 2005 - by Larry Lim, Singapore - Article Search Engine Directory at ArticleSphere.com™
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.
Template Design by Internet Marketing Singapore | Internet Marketing | Singapore Classified
Español Français Bulgarian 汉语 漢語 Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Finnish Deutsch Ελληνικά Italiano 日本語 한국어 Norwegian Polish PortRomanian Русско Serbian Slovak Swedish [أربيك] Hebrew