The cold call is THE lowest percentage sales call. It's an interruption, it's a fight, it's often a lie, it's maximum sales manipulation, and it's a rare appointment and a rarer sale. Wanna go from low to lower? Cold calls are made by people who are new to the job and have limited capabilities. Or worse, they are made by seasoned salespeople convinced that "cold calls work, they have made me a lot of money."
We differ on the definition of the words "a lot."
"But Jeffrey, you don't understand, I HAVE to make cold calls, it's a job requirement," you whine.
It is not.
Suppose you doubled your sales quota for the month and made more sales than anyone else in the company. If you sheepishly went to your boss and said, "I didn't make one cold call," is your boss going to fire you?
Or is it likely that he could CARE LESS. He'll hoist you on his shoulders. He'll tell everyone in the company how great you are. In fact, he'll want to know how you did it. In fact, you may be put in charge of training. In fact, you may be next in line for the boss's job.
Let's get the facts straight:
Cold calls are a great supplement.
Cold calls are a great place to practice.
Cold calls are a great place to learn sales skills.
But, cold calls are a LOUSY place to make a sale. Let's go one step further - of all the sales opportunities, options, and scenarios, cold calling is worst one.
Everyone wants to "make more sales." And most salespeople have a monthly goal or quota. The question remains: What's the BEST way to make that happen?
ANSWER: Look at the value of your sales call. Or, better stated, the valuable-ness of your sales call. In other words, which sales call will produce the best results, the most sales, the greatest return on time and money, and be best for building a great relationship and loyal customer? And oh, by the way, which is the most profitable?
Ranked in order - here are the categories of sales calls, both outgoing and incoming, for your painful pleasure. BE ADVISED: The more valuable they are, the harder you have to work to get them - but the easier they are to make the sale. The fact is - most salespeople won't do the hard work it takes to make sales easy.
Worst - the cold call
Almost as bad - an appointment made from a cold call
Fair - a response from an ad or direct mail or unsolicited email
Semi-good -- an appointment made from a trade show or networking event
Pretty good - a social media inquiry
Pretty good - a web inquiry
Pretty good - an email blast to your existing customers
Real good - a referral from another customer or friend
Real good - an unsolicited referral
Great - an unsolicited call from a prospect wanting to buy
Best - an unsolicited call from an existing customer wanting to buy more
OK, now that you know the types, write the percentages that go with them. No, no -- not the percentage you close. The percentage of each that makes up the type of sales call you make or sales inquiries you receive. What you’ll discover is that if you change the TYPE, you automatically change the percentage.
Eliminate cold calls and concentrate on earned referrals and your sales completion ratio will skyrocket. A hundred cold calls or a hundred referrals? You tell me, Bubba. And while you're telling me, tell your boss to read this.
"OK, Jeffrey," you say. "Now that we have established the types and percentages, tell me how to get from the lowest level to the highest level."
OK, I will... Next week. But let me give you a clue - it has more to do with networking, positioning, personal reputation, business reputation, web presence, social media presence, Google ranking, and service than cold calling. Stay tuned...
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