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The following tips come directly
from our Telephone Sales Mastery workshop. These ideas and
suggestions can help you and your telephone sales associates
make better use of every customer contact. We will have more
for you in the weeks to come. Please e-mail us when you have
had success with any of the tips that follow.
Tip No. 1: Avoid using brand jargon
and technical acronyms when speaking to callers.
Saying, "Our X1000 Plan works with Series R and Series
S type systems," doesn't usually peak a potential buyer's
interest, especially on the telephone. Stay away from brand
jargon as much as possible. Jargon and technical acronyms
are problems. When a caller doesn't understand what we're
saying, he/she will get bored or anxious quickly. And that's
a hang-up waiting to happen. If it is absolutely necessary
to use brand jargon in a conversation, make sure you define
it or explain it right after you mention it.]
Tip No. 2: Get right back on the
phone when you've been rejected.
Getting back on the phone immediately eliminates "sulking,"
feeling bad about the job and its negative side. We recommend
making a plan for how to handle rejection. Perhaps the sales
associate can look at a picture of something he/she is saving
money to buy. Perhaps there is a saying that he/she can repeat.
(e.g. "One more 'No' on the way to my next 'Yes.'")
It is important to know what we're going to do to keep our
spirits up. Have a plan and implement the plan whenever they
hang up on you or use expletives.
Tip No. 3: "Natural dialogue"
is more appealing to callers.
Natural dialogue means communicating in a casual, relaxed
manner. It is like what you hear when two friends chat, without
any slang or expletives. Most telephone sales people are trained
to speak in a professional, somewhat big-worded, corporate
manner. Natural dialogue will seem more familiar to callers,
and therefore, more comforting and relaxing. We build rapport
more quickly and more often with natural dialogue. This is
especially important at the beginning of a call as well as
when delivering benefit statements on products.
Tip No. 4: Find the Right buyer
before attempting to sell or set and appointment.
Directional Selling stresses to sales people to identify
the right buyer at the beginning of a call. We can do this
by asking the receptionist for the "department head that
will most benefit from" what we have to offer, or ask
for the person that the responsibility rolls up to "at
the vice presidential or director level." This is not
always possible, but the strategy can pay big dividends if
you try it. By locating the "right" buyer first
we eliminate a lot of wasted chatter with callers that have
little or no interest in what we are saying. If we know that
the caller we are speaking to has an understanding of what
we offer and a need for it, we increase our chances for success.
If we do not, we will often lose opportunities where there
could have been a need, but we spoke to a person that did
not know about it.
Tip No. 5: Limit your product offer/description
to two sentences.
Tip No. 6: Stay positive, friendly
and "value-rich."
If you think about typical telemarketing calls, most sales
people seem to be reading from scripts that were written by
a lifeless person that didn't really care about what he/she
was writing. When callers hear immediate Value, specific to
them, it is something that they are not expecting and it can
change the paradigms on the call. Once we surprise a caller
with something positive and rich with value for the caller,
he/she often rewards us by giving us more time on the phone.
Callers like to get in on a good thing. Immediate value will
encourage the caller to hang on and listen a little longer.
A little longer is all we need to further entice them.
Tip No. 7: When a caller objects
early on a call (we call this a "reflexive" objection),
begin by Acknowledging before trying to work through the objection.
It may sound too simple to be of any value, yet this one
easy step can make the difference between a rejection and
a sale. For example, "I understand that you may be a
little hesitant." When we Acknowledge we express empathy.
This can put us "on the same side of the table"
as the caller. Acknowledging builds a bridge from the objection
to our response to the objection. It seems more natural and
real to a customer than jumping right into our response.
Tip No. 8: Try our technique
called, "That's why we need to speak!"
When you hear an early objection, acknowledge first and
then respond, "And that's exactly why we need to speak."
Then tie in their objection to the answer that you give. "That's
exactly why we need to talk! You've had difficulties with
our company in the past and I know from our current customers
that we have become the best service-oriented organization
out there. And we're even running a great promotion right
now that..." The most successful sales person in a particular
client call center introduced us to this technique. He told
us, "Any time they object, no matter what they say to
me, I can come back with this approach. If they're too busy,
I tell them we need to talk because this will help them save
time. If they had a bad experience, I tell them that we need
to talk because our customers love our service these days.
It is enthusiastic and proactive and it works more often than
anything else I've tried." He went on to become a senior
vice president in his company for great ideas like this one.
Tip No. 9: Never try to out-argue
the caller when he/she objects.
We recommend refocusing on our offer's value rather than offering
"reasoning" away the caller's objection. Since it
is likely a reflexive objection (when it comes at the beginning
of the call) there is no point in giving reasons to overcome
the concern. It is rarely a real concern. Remember that buyers
are not putting a lot of thought into reflexive objections.
When we push back reflexive objections with reason and sound
arguments, it almost always fails. Callers will usually come
up with more objections if we seem to have overcome their
initial resistance.
Tip No. 10: Close with confidence.
It is important to sound confident when you make a closing
attempt, especially if you're not sure how the caller is feeling
about the product offer. Telephone sales people often add
extra commentary, hesitate or stutter when they ask for the
business. When a caller hears the hesitation, it suggests
that there is an underlying reason why this isn't a good decision
for that caller. When a sales person closes with confidence
he/she communicates that this decision is, of course, the
right one for this caller.
Free Training
Tips Main Menu
2. Tips
for Coaching and Managing Sales in the Call Center.
3. Tips
for Changing your Service Center into a True Sales Center.
4. Tips
for Training your Directional Selling Workshops.
5.
Tips for Dealing with Difficult Associates.
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