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Service and support centers are unique when it comes to sales.
Many centers have introduced sales and sales quotas long after
the service element has been cemented into the minds of the
telephone associates (customer service reps). "I wasn't
hired to sell," or, "Pushing products on callers
isn't providing excellent service," are common complaints.
To exacerbate the problem, many floor supervisors and managers
don't reinforce sales. Rather, they spend their floor time
solving associates' problems, taking escalated calls, approving
credit requests and more. Although these are important issues,
center management has to make sales a top priority. Coaching
sales is where it begins. Try the following tips to improve
your center's sales.
Tip No. 1: Emphasize the priority
(not just the importance) of sales results.
Senior management in a call center must stress the importance
of sales in a variety of communications to the rest of the
center. They should also emphasize that sales is going to
remain an integral part of how telephone associates and floor
supervisors and managers are measured. Stress to the center
that sales is both something that is good for the customer.
Most centers have research that shows that customers want
to know more about the products that they offer. Although
it is important to take a value-oriented approach to making
sales a priority, it is also critical to measure and track
sales. One without the other tends to fail.
Tip No. 2: Eliminate certain phrases
from associates' vocabulary.
This may sound a bit extreme, but it isn't. Too many associates
in inbound service centers say, "I wasn't hired to sell."
It is imperative to remove these insubordinate phrases from
what is acceptable conversation within a center.
Each floor supervisor must tell his/her associates, "Since
sales is now part of the expectation, do not tell me that
you 'weren't hired to sell,' or that 'selling isn't servicing'.
Now that sales is part of what we do, that's the same as saying,
"I won't sell. And that is not something that you want
to say in our center."
Tip No. 3: Build real sales quotas.
Nothing says "sales is important" like sales
quotas. And it isn't enough to give a team quota only. Each
telephone associate must be responsible for a certain amount
of sales or your center really isn't taking sales seriously.
The best way to generate sales is to make it a part of each
telephone associate's expectation. Sure, there will be grumbling
and you may lose a few folks that are afraid of their own
potential and will refuse to sell. Every center goes through
it, but the results are worth it.
Tip No. 4: Create product-specific
quotas.
If you have already established a sales quota for each
telephone associate, you may want to consider the next step.
If your center sells different product lines, you can establish
quotas for the more important ones, especially if some important
products are lagging behind in sales.
We realize that some products simply don't sell, or are priced
out of the market, but establishing quotas for these products
will force telephone sales people to mention them to callers,
which they very likely are not doing now. Once you are effectively
measuring offer rates, you will be able to tell for certain
that the problem is the product, rather than the lack of sales
offers.
Tip No. 5: Offering real compensation
is a must.
If yours is the only call center in town and jobs are
scarce, then you really don't have to offer the telephone
associates a compensation plan. But you still should do so.
Commission plans stress the importance of sales and they let
associates know that they will be compensated like real sales
people get compensated.
Too often a call center will add selling to the associate's
expectation, even enforcing a quota, but then will not pay
the associates for making the sales. Associates grow to resent
this, and rightly so. Additionally, it won't be long before
these same associates are working for your competitors. They
will be making sales using the skills they learned at your
center, but your competitor, who offers a commission plan,
will be the beneficiary. Contests and incentives are also
not enough. These should be done in addition to a real compensation/salary
package. Although it seems like you will pay too much for
each sale, consider the cost of hiring and training new associates.
Tip No. 6: Differentiate (through
training) between floor sales coaching and floor problem-solving.
There is a big difference between these two activities.
In a service center that is just learning sales, chances are
that your supervisors are out on the floor problem-solving.
This means that they are answering questions, taking escalated
calls, making credit request approvals, taking over for associates
who don't know/don't remember how to access a certain system
screen, etc.
True floor sales coaching means going out on the floor and
listening, observing, giving feedback and other types of coaching,
focused completely on how well associates are demonstrating
sales skills. "I can't seem to get them out there on
the floor, except to answer the reps' questions. They won't
get proactive," was a comment we heard recently from
a new client. This problem exists in many inbound centers.
The trick is to differentiate between problem-solving and
real sales coaching, and then to build a plan to get supervisors
out on the floor a whole lot more of the time, conducting
sales coaching.
Tip No. 7: Build a sales coaching
schedule.
We know from experience that simply lecturing to supervisors
to get out on the floor to do more sales coaching just doesn't
work. Whether they are afraid to do it, don't know how to
do it, or just like what they do today instead, you cannot
just tell them to do it.
We always encourage our clients to build a schedule for each
floor supervisor/manager to be on the floor with official
sales coaching times, usually one to two hours per day. During
this time no one can take them away from their coaching and
observing. If an associate approaches them, they are instructed
to say something like, "Hey Steve, I can't answer that
right now. I'm in the middle of my coaching time. See if you
can find that answer some other way. If not, go ahead and
check back with me after 3:00 p.m. when I'm done here. Okay?"
Initially it will seem silly to most people to say that. By
the time you say all that you could have answered the question,
right? Yes, but then the next question will come, and the
one after that, and then you'll have to handle an escalation
request, and so on.
The point is, build a rock-solid schedule. Tell the associates
about it and how they should behave during that time when
they have questions or problems. The call center manager/director
must enforce this as well. When all these things take place,
you will see your sales increase rapidly. This is actually
one of the easiest ways to increase sales, even without any
additional training.
Tip No. 8: Inform associates as
to how the scheduled floor time is to take place.
In some centers we have heard, "Well, since we're
already supposed to be out on the floor coaching, there isn't
any reason to tell the associates anything new." We disagree.
If your floor supervisors have not been conducting true sales
coaching up to this point, we strongly recommend that you
inform the sales associates as to the new approach you're
going to take. In your letter, memo, e-mail or speech, we
would stress that floor sales coaching time is one of the
best ways to help the associates grow, learn and develop their
communication skills.
Additionally, it really does help sales increase, one of
the priorities of your center. In the communication we also
recommend informing the associates of the actual schedule
and that, when their supervisor is on the floor during that
time, they aren't allowed to approach him/her. Instead, call
a support person, check the on-line help, consult your manuals,
etc. Remind them that this is truly for their gain and things
should go very well.
Tip No. 9: Build sales steps into
the QA analysis.
Most centers have a team of Quality Analysts, or "QAs."
In order to make sales a priority, ask the QAs to listen for
sales skills being demonstrated by the associates. These can
become great, and very positive, coaching opportunities. It
is very important to train the QAs in the actual steps of
your sales skills, whether you use Directional Selling or
something else. A QA must be able to hear, for example, an
associate trying to overcome a caller's objection, and know
whether or not the associate used the steps that she learned
in training.
Here is another tip if your QAs use a point system to assess
telephone calls. Raise the percentage of points that can be
associated to sales so that it reflects the importance of
sales in your center. In one center that we worked with, all
seven sales steps were measured. But even if the associate
failed all seven steps, that only counted as 10 points out
of a possible 100 on the call. The associates could actually
make no sales attempts and still hit top numbers. Make sales
35-50% of the each call's value and you will begin hearing
more sales attempts.
Tip No. 10: Toughen up your floor
supervisor/manager regiment.
In general, the majority of floor supervisors are too
far down the "soft" scale. Although some are also
on the "too tough" side, most are not. Many supervisors
will not just let things go when performance targets aren't
met, they will actually make up excuses for the associates
who failed. "Well, I realize this product is tough to
sell, but just keep at it. Who knows? Maybe some day they
will ask us not to sell it anymore."
Train your managers in why it is important, and humane, to
hold people accountable for the things that they are supposed
to do, like selling. Too many floor supervisors will protect
associates who do not sell, despite the demands from upper
management. These supervisors do no favors for those associates
because the associates will not improve or grow in any way.
If life is a learning experience we must teach the lessons.
We help people when we show them that they must be responsible
for whatever they have committed to doing.
Tip No. 11: Train the floor supervisors
in selling.
If we expect to see supervisors out on the floor coaching
sales skills, we must train them in the same selling skills
received by the associates. If not, can you really expect
them to give very precise feedback after observing a call.
After participating in Managing Directional Selling, a supervisor
will be able to say to an associate, "You know, I really
liked when you used that B.A.T. Statement about the European
Vacation Pass. Your Application focused on her kids being
away at college.
That was great. On future calls, you may also want to first
ask a Quick-Question, like, "If you could travel to Denmark
or Sweden, which one would you choose? That would have helped
you narrow down the best country package to offer." Training
the supervisors in the same selling skills will make their
coaching events more useful to the associates and the supervisors
that have never sold before will coach with confidence.
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Tips Main Menu
1. Tips
for Call Center Selling.
2. Tips
for Coaching and Managing Sales in the Call Center.
4. Tips
for Training your Directional Selling Workshops.
5.
Tips for Dealing with Difficult Associates.
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