Paul Borgese - Fearless Cold Calling
Paul Borgese - Fearless Cold Calling
Paul Borgese - Fearless Cold Calling
Copyright © 2005
By Paul Borgese
paul@FEARMarketing.com
www.FEARMarketing.com
To license and/or private label this material for use at your company,
please call 201.533.9282 or email
the author at paul@FEARMarketing.com.
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About The FEARLESS Series of
Special Reports
Typically, we recommend that salespeople and marketers who want to
improve their selling skills should consider studying FEAR Selling since
its individual components work synergistically as an effective holistic
system.
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Who Needs FEAR Selling?
Life is all about sales. You must persuade:
The FEAR Selling System has been designed to help anyone who is trying
to persuade someone else – anybody else - to their way of thinking.
Some might say that a boss has more control over her employees than a
salesperson has over his prospects, but only the illusion of control
separates the two situations.
If you don’t perform, or if your boss doesn’t like you, you could be let go.
Similarly, if you as an employee find a better job tomorrow, you can quit
and move on.
Competition is fierce. If you are looking for another job, remember, there
are dozens of other candidates with similar backgrounds to yours. The
question is: how can you position yourself so that you stand out from the
crowd?
Marketing and sales skills– and the core skills of writing and speaking
which underlie the marketing/sales processes - are crucial in today’s service
economy.
This is why the Scholastic Aptitude Test (S.A.T.) is being modified to test
writing and other language knowledge such as grammar. The S.A.T. is being
changed in order to meet the needs of a changing world.
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Why is that?
Well, for one, it is easier to test technical skills like how to value a
company by using the mathematics of discounted cash flows than it is to
test political skills like making a sales presentation that will close the sale.
Valuing a company by means of a certain mathematical technique has only
one right answer. But judging whether or not a sales presentation was
effective is very subjective.
Similarly, it is relatively easy to teach technical skills such as the steps you
should take to launch a new product or do an initial public offering. But
political persuasion skills are far more elusive. How do you teach someone
to conjure the magic ingredients of charisma, rapport and credibility?
This is where the FEAR Selling System comes in. This System is designed
to fill this all-too-common gap in our formal education.
First off, let me say that we don’t presume to have all the right answers.
Anyone that tells you that their system works for every type of product or
service, in any economic environment and with every type of buyer (and
many desperate sales consultants will tell you that their system will) – is
selling you a dream.
As we will see, the famous Greek philosopher, Socrates, knew how to get
to the truth – and it’s not by having the right answers but rather by asking
the right questions.
And what we can guarantee you is that by the end of FEAR Selling, you
will know most – if not all – of the right questions to ask, and perhaps
more importantly, how to ask them.
FEAR Selling is a flexible framework that you can adapt to your product
or service, depending upon the specific economic conditions, competitive
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situations, and buyer objections that you face in your day-to-day life as a
salesperson.
So early on, I began to study the sales process from several angles.
All told, up until my last day of graduation, I had spent nearly 14 years of
my life and had obtained more than $250,000 worth of education – but all
that education didn’t seem to do me much good in the real world.
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I obtained most of my five degrees on a part-time basis, while I worked full-
time as a marketing and salesperson. My formal education had given me a
good foundation in sales, marketing, communication and psychology
theory, but I was still fairly clueless when it came to applying all I had
learned about human nature when I was under pressure in front of a
prospect.
It was depressing when I finally realized that even after all that time and
money spent, I had not even scratched the surface of all there was to know
about the selling process. It was only later when I gathered the experts
necessary to piece together the entire FEAR Selling System did I
appreciate how important this formal foundational education was.
I spent tens of thousands of dollars attending courses, not only on sales but
on psychology, marketing, philosophy, leadership and business strategy. As
you will see, this multidisciplinary approach to sales is what makes FEAR
Selling more powerful in influencing buyer behavior than the majority of
other systems that you may have already encountered.
I felt like those blind men, fumbling around in the dark. I knew bits of the
sales puzzle, but I also knew that the big picture was eluding me. And
because I didn’t have the proper perspective, I was blind to the real power
of having an effective sales process. I knew tactics but didn’t know how to
piece them together into an effective overall strategy. But I at least knew
that I didn’t know. And I knew that I needed a system.
3) Too often we are dealing with prospects that don’t have decision-
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making power.
4) Our prospects use our quotes to get better prices from our
competition.
7) The prospects we do get into the pipeline never seem to develop into
actual sales.
These are all very common problems that salespeople encounter, and we
will address each of these issues and many more as we delve into the FEAR
Selling System. But we can only begin to understand how to solve these
problems by studying buyer attitudes and behavior.
Following is a summary of the five most prevalent reasons for not buying as
reported by prospective buyers:
1) I get worried when salespeople don’t take the time to get to know my
specific problem.
3) I’m afraid that they won’t be able to deliver what they say they can
deliver.
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As you can see, the majority of the answers to this survey revolve around
fear and mistrust.
The decision to buy or not to buy is more subjective than you might think.
We have found that despite bidding processes and return-on-investment
analyses that your prospects might demand, they typically buy based on
emotions.
Even though we suggest that you use the FEAR Selling System because of
its multi-disciplinary approach to influencing human behavior and its
extensive field-tested, results-oriented tactics, our greatest piece of advice is
to use a system – even if it’s one that you’ve developed on your own.
As difficult as it sounds, you must test and track your results to avoid
wasting time with strategies and tactics that just don’t work.
Now, with help from the professional affiliates of the Sales Career Training
Institute, we are able to offer this comprehensive course at a fraction of the
cost of attending an SCTI-sponsored event.
Ask The Right Questions At The Right Times In The Right Way: How
To Find Out Your Prospect’s Specific Hopes And Fears That You Can
Then Use To Sell To Them
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Reveal The Hope Of Your Solution: How To Position Your
Presentation So That You Play Off of Your Prospect’s Hopes and
Fears
As you will see, the first three steps in the System focus more on listening
while it is only at the end of the process that you launch into your
presentation.
Typically, salespeople use the complete opposite strategy. They talk at their
prospect from the beginning without gathering the crucial information that
can close the sale at the end. They immediately plunge into presenting first
– providing their prospects with information without gathering the key
information about their prospects’ hopes and fears that they should be
inputting into their presentation.
If you follow the FEAR Selling System, you will avoid this all-too-
common mistake since the System forces you to ask questions and listen
upfront as much as possible.
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FEARLESS
Cold Calling
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Before we get started, we want to note that many sales training
organizations teach you that the first step in the sales process is to bond
with your prospect. Typical sales training systems start with the second step
in the FEAR Selling System, which is the Empathy Step (covered in the
Special Report, FEARLESS Relationship Building).
Our research shows, however, that one of the most difficult aspects of
selling involves prospecting through cold calling and networking. So the
FEAR Selling System starts with how to approach a prospect in order to
get them to sit down with you, listen to your pitch, give you the
opportunity to bond and qualify them as a potential prospect.
FEAR Selling doesn’t jump the gun by assuming that your foot is already
in the door. So, let’s first talk about strategies that you should use to get the
attention of your target prospects and get that first meeting.
1) finding the right people to talk to who are most likely to buy your
product/service – this is the Targeting aspect of strategy.
They don’t tell you too much in the commercial, but rather just enough to
get you interested to stay up and tune in at 11 o’clock that night. They
might tease you with the latest terrorist threat. And so, you might be
anxiously awaiting that nightly newscast so as to ease your fears about the
situation. Maybe you’ll find out something from the news that will help
you avoid injury or even death. That’s how the news networks keep you
glued to your TV set. It’s all about fear.
For a more in-depth look at how the media uses fear to get your attention,
you might want to refer to the book, The Culture of Fear, by Barry
Glassner, Professor of Sociology at the University of Southern California.
Glassner has written for many magazines and newspapers, including The
New York Times, The Los Angeles Times and The Chicago Tribune.
Through his studies and broad experience with the media, he gives a
detailed inside look at how the media sells itself by using fear.
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Now that you are aware of this technique, look out for it being used by
your local TV news stations. Understanding how to use fear in order to
grab attention will undoubtedly help you sell more and sell faster.
Getting people to raise their hands and ask you to pitch them on your
product or service is getting more and more difficult. Generating leads for
salespeople to call on typically falls into the realm of marketing. (For more
on how to get people to call you, check out the book, FEAR Marketing.)
If you are lucky enough to have a great marketing department that funnels
you leads – or if you know how to take advantage of Internet-enabled lead-
generation strategies like pay-per-click advertising or affiliate marketing,
then you are in good shape, but nowadays, we find that salespeople are
doing more and more of their own prospecting. You typically must take the
first step and call on your prospects. (But for more on how to use the
Internet to generate leads, check out the book, FEAR Marketing Online.)
The first step in the FEAR Selling System is all about how to grab your
prospect’s attention.
You need to create two things in the mind of your prospect: curiosity and
trust – both of which are related to their fears and hopes.
By creating curiosity, you will tap into a fear – the fear that they might have
of missing a potential opportunity. Or, if you look at it from the flip side,
you are tapping into a hope – the hope that you have some product/service
that can help them reach their personal goals in a faster and easier fashion.
But that hope is not easy to conjure. They are not going to get excited
every time a salesperson calls them. You must differentiate yourself from
the hordes of other salespeople that ring their phone every day. In addition
to curiosity, you must create trust.
By creating trust, you will ease other fears that they might have – fears that
you aren’t credible – that you will waste their time or make them
uncomfortable with a sales pitch for something they don’t want or need.
2) Expertizing Yourself
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3) The Machine-Gun Client List
We will show you specifically how to use these tactics together in the
context of an actual prospecting call when we show you how to create your
30-Second Commercial later, but for now, let’s explore each one in turn.
We suggest that you focus more on problems, pains and fears because once
you know what they are trying to avoid, you typically understand the other
side of the coin – what they want, what they hope for.
Plus, every salesperson is out there talking about product benefits, which
are related to prospects’ hopes. With FEAR Selling, you’ll differentiate
yourself from the hordes of other salespeople by focusing on your
prospects rather than your products. And by focusing on their emotional
hot buttons – their fears, you’ll have a better chance of capturing their
attention.
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showing prospects that you understand their problems, you will have a
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better chance of getting them to trust you a bit and getting them curious
enough to meet with you.
And don’t just limit your thinking to the problems, pains, fears and hopes
that your product or service can solve. The key is to focus first on your
prospect rather than your product’s benefits. If you focus on product
benefits first, you may fall into the trap of assuming that a prospect has the
problems or fears that your product can solve. What you want to do is hear
about your prospects’ problems and fears from their perspective first, and
then tailor your pitch appropriately. This is a much more effective strategy.
So what are your prospects’ needs? What are they concerned about? What
are their worries? Their problems? Their fears? Their hopes?
So at the very beginning, when you are first starting to sell something new,
before you make your first prospecting call, before you step out onto the
street to visit your first prospect and try to make your first sale, you need to
gather as much information as possible about the personal problems and
aspirations of your potential buyers in a general sense. With this
information, you will create what we call your Prospect Fear and Hope
List.
We will show you how to use your Prospect Fear and Hope List to arouse
their curiosity, but first let’s talk about how you conduct the market
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research needed to create the List.
There are two main sources that you should tap in order to gather the
information that you need to create this List:
· yourself
· your fellow salespeople
· your colleagues in the marketing department – if you are lucky
enough to have one
· others within your company who may stimulate your thinking.
Keep in mind that such self-questioning is not the best type of market
research. You are relying on what you and your colleagues think are the
problems that your prospects need to solve. At this point, you are asking
people who are one step away from the real problems. You are asking
people who are emotionally divorced from the true pains and fears that are
haunting those who are really experiencing them in the industry.
But you have to start somewhere, and thinking about these issues before
talking with prospects will help prepare you to better gather information
once you are in front of a prospect.
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Again, you are only making assumptions as to the worries, concerns, fears
and hopes of your prospects. And if you’ve read The 7 Deadly Sins of
Selling, you will recall that making assumptions, which is related to the Sin
of Pride, is the most deadly sin that you can commit in sales. If you make
the wrong assumptions about your prospects upfront, you will pitch to
them with ineffective positioning and almost undoubtedly lose the sale.
Ideally, you want to hear it straight from the horse’s mouth – from
prospects and customers themselves. But at first, you must rely on those
who have made the calls before you and have already talked to or
conducted some form of research on your prospective customers. Just
remember not to simply rely on what your more-experienced colleagues
tell you is the truth about your prospects’ problems. You have to find that
out for yourself. So again, asking yourself and your colleagues lots of
questions is only the first step in an ongoing process of market research.
“What are our prospects’ hopes? What are they trying to accomplish on
a personal level?”
We recommend this strategy since our studies have proven that the more
time and effort salespeople spend in developing their Prospect Fear and
Hope List and generally getting to know what makes their typical prospects
tick, the better their chances are of engaging and then closing their future
prospects.
Once you are on the phone or out in the field, think of yourself as a
detective. You are trying to find out as quickly as possible the kinds of
frustrations that your target market of prospects are facing everyday as well
as what their aspirations are. So you must ask lots of questions.
Once you are in a conversation with a prospect, ask for their help. Say
something like:
“I was hoping you could help me out. Could you give me some advice?”
Pause – wait for them to give you permission to ask your question.
And remember, don’t be shy about this – people love giving advice. You’re
stroking their egos by asking them for their help. You’re basically saying:
“You’re smarter - and therefore better - than me in some way – can you
help me?” This is very appealing positioning since people like to have their
egos stroked. People like to see themselves as smart and important.
“I’m just trying to get a better sense of what is currently going on in the
industry…what do you think are the top three problems that people in your
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position are facing right now?”
This is a sly way of asking them what their specific pains and fears are
without coming right out and asking. They may tell you their specific
problems or they may share with you problems that they have heard or read
about that are relevant in their industry.
Either way, listen and make a note of what they tell you, because you are
going to use this information later.
Whether they tell you one problem, three or a dozen, always ask: “Is there
anything else? Are there any other problems that you see coming down the
road for you and others in your position?”
“Maybe you can share with me – how does that problem affect you
personally?”
Once you have explored the negative (problems, fear) side of the equation,
ask them:
The objective here is to gather the material for your Prospect Fear and
Hope List, which you will use to open new doors and engage new
prospects.
Remember, as it says in the Bible, “Ask and it shall be given.” This research
is priceless because the information that you gather now is going to help
you seal more deals later.
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Your Prospect Fear and Hope List will help you build trust with your
prospects since they will feel that you have some understanding of the pain
that they are going through. As we will discuss later in the Empathy Step,
by asking such questions, you are “feeling their pain” and walking in their
shoes. As Stephen Covey says in his best-seller The 7 Habits of Highly
Effective People, you must “Seek First To Understand, Then To Be
Understood.” In other words, you want to understand how your prospect
thinks before you try to sell them your product/service.
So remember, focus first on research. At this stage you are trying to get a
sense of the problems, fears and hopes of a typical prospect. And keep in
mind that you are constantly gathering information about your prospects’
fears and hopes. It is a never-ending process. This List is a work-in-progress
because companies and industries are always undergoing changes, and so
your prospects’ fears and hopes might change over time.
Don’t start by thinking about how your product can make or save their
organization money. Stop thinking of organizations as entities unto
themselves. Instead, think of your prospects as individuals with personal
pains, fears and aspirations. Don’t think of yourself as selling to IBM or the
Government. Think of yourself as selling to Bob Johnston, an individual, -
who happens to work for IBM – but more importantly someone who has
personal goals that he wants to achieve, in addition to satisfying his
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company’s needs.
Think about the person who is sitting across the table from you. What are
their problems, pains, fears and hopes?
· To get a promotion; or
This sounds obvious, but too many salespeople whom we have studied and
consulted to waste their time and energy trying to sell logically to an
organization rather than emotionally to a person.
We’ll cover this more in depth later in the Ask Step, but for now, keep
reminding yourself that you are a person selling to other individuals.
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Creating Your Prospect Fear and
Hope List: An Example
Now, let’s show you how one of our top-performing students gathered
information and created his Prospect Fear and Hope List. It’s easier to show
you an example of how to create the List rather than simply explain it to
you abstractly.
Steve is a salesperson for a graphic design firm that helps companies create
their marketing and advertising materials – business cards, brochures,
presentation materials, etc.
Remember, here are the types of questions that Steve asked in order to
elicit the responses he needs to form his Prospect Fear and Hope List:
“What do you think are the top three problems that people in your position
are facing right now?”
“Maybe you can share with me – how does that problem affect you
personally?”
Remember, do not simply make this list up based on what you think the
problems are. Take the time to find out what your prospects’ real
frustrations and aspirations are. It will be worth the effort.
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Here is Steve’s Prospect Fear and Hope List. Remember, Steve works for a
graphic design vendor, and so, as you can tell, the List is from his
prospects’ perspective:
As you can see, Steve asked not only about the problems his prospects are
facing, but the personal consequences of having to deal with those
problems as well as their hopes.
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Here are some examples of emotional verb phrases that you can use to start
the statements in your List:
Finally, generalize the statements so that they flow from the following
sentence:
Think of each statement as a small portrait that you are painting about a
potential prospect. Try to describe their pains, fears and hopes. You will
use these little stories again and again to show future prospects that you
understand their pain – and that you can work with them to alleviate that
pain – that you can give them hope.
So here is what Steve’s List looks like at the end of the process:
1) Are frustrated with graphic design vendors that give them inconsistent
quality and service. Our typical client is looking for one reliable firm
so that they don’t have to waste time maintaining a lot of vendor
relationships or worry about constantly searching for new design
firms.
Remember, the objective here is to find painful issues that your prospect
can relate to - things that could happen to them, things that they are afraid
might happen to them in the future.
Again, we’ll show you how to use this Prospect Fear and Hope List later to
position yourself when talking to a prospect.
Now let’s explore another tactic that will help you create the trust and
curiosity needed to keep the conversation going with a prospect.
Think about it, business owners and companies spend millions each year
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sending their employees to conferences to find out what’s going on in the
industry. As an expert who is calling on lots of prospects and is willing to
share your knowledge, you’re saving them time and money by taking
critical industry information right to them so that they don’t have to seek it
out themselves. So become a respected resource to your prospects.
Then use what one of our more successful students calls the GIA Strategy –
Give It Away Strategy. You want to distribute this intellectual property as
far and wide as possible. Make it accessible on your web site, write lots of
articles for trade magazines and then get copies of them to hand out to
prospects, conduct surveys and share the information when you talk to
prospects. And, of course, always have your contact information on this
intellectual property so that interested readers can get in touch with you.
This is a great way to generate leads.
By positioning yourself as an authority in your field, you will gain the trust
of your prospects – and you will get them curious. They will want to pick
your brain, and so will be more likely to invite you in for a meeting.
We will cover more credibility-building tactics in the next step in the FEAR
Selling System, the Empathy Step, but for now, remember that you must
position yourself as an authority in your field, not in a cocky but rather in a
confident fashion.
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Curiosity and Credibility-Building
Tactic #3: Your Machine-Gun Client
List
As one business owner we work with likes to say: “People are sheep.”
What he means by this is that people have a herd mentality. If they hear –
through word-of-mouth - that other people and companies are using a
particular product/service, they are more likely to get curious about it and
want to find out more.
They’ll follow the rest of the herd of people to try to find out what’s so
special about that product/service. (For word-of-mouth marketing tactics
that work, check out the books, FEAR Marketing and FEAR Marketing
Online.)
And make sure that you have a story to tell to back up each client name
that you mention. You want to be prepared with mini-case-studies that
touch on how you were able to help each client in ways that would be
interesting to your current prospect.
For example, if you are pitching a new technology to a large retail chain,
and you can say that you have worked with Sears, Wal-Mart and Macy’s,
your prospect will be curious as to how you might be able to help them. Of
course, you may not be able to share details of previous projects you
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worked on due to confidentiality agreements with your clients, but
typically, you can drop their names and speak generally about how you
helped such former clients.
And what if you don’t have a long list of former or current clients to rattle
off?
Well, to solve this common problem that many start-up companies face, we
turn to the advice of a master marketer and salesman, Herschell Gordon
Lewis. In his book, Direct Mail Copy That Sells, Lewis refers to the word
“verisimilitude” as “the magic word that can make you rich.” Verisimilitude
is not truth, but rather the appearance of truth.
Now this might all seem a bit underhanded, but, to paraphrase Lewis, the
cornerstone of successful sales isn’t truth but having your prospect regard
what you say as truth.
Now of course, we are not advocating that you outright lie to your
prospects, but you could say that you have “consulted to” or “worked
with” companies including former employers, or perhaps former clients of
companies that you worked for before you started selling this new product
– as long as you had some input into dealings with these “former clients.”
Whatever you do, don’t say that you don’t have any clients. This is a sure-
fire way to lose trust and let your prospects’ curiosity slip through your
hands. The common expression is: “Fake it until you make it.”
Now that you have been introduced to these three powerful curiosity and
credibility-building tactics, let’s move on and show you how you should
weave these tactics into your 30-Second Commercial for maximum impact.
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The Dreaded Cold Call
As many of the top salespeople we interviewed tell us, the difference
between a cold call and a warm call is 30 seconds – that is, if you know
how to fill that first 30 seconds properly.
We’ll get to exactly what you should say during your cold calls in a
minute, but first, let’s talk a little about cold calling generally.
Cold calling is one of the most dreaded aspects of selling. However, if you
want to be successful in sales, prospecting is usually necessary to find and
talk to the right people before being able to introduce your product, make a
presentation, and close a sale. And so, in order to get to the close, you must
start by prospecting - constantly and relentlessly.
Cold calling simply means to call or contact anyone with the purpose of
selling something. In cold calling, leads come from anywhere and
everywhere - from the yellow pages, from reading trade journals, from
finding lists of potential prospects on the Internet – anywhere.
Normally, salespeople do not reach their prospect on the first call, so they
should use the call to gather information if they reach a gatekeeper like a
personal assistant or perhaps a colleague of the prospect. And then you
may want to leave a message, which will provoke a response. After you
understand how to craft your 30-Second Commercial, you’ll be in a better
position to avoid Voicemail Limbo – that is leaving messages that are never
returned. With only a little modification, your Commercial also will act as
an effective voicemail message.
From our surveys, we have found that the vast majority of salespeople
don’t like cold calling. If you think about it, you might not like cold calling
because you know how annoying it is to be on the other end of a cold call.
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No one likes to receive an unsolicited call that may come to you after work,
when you’re having dinner and trying to relax with your family.
As you may already know, cold calling can be frustrating and discouraging,
especially when not done correctly. And while cold calling is by no means
the most effective way of reaching a prospect, it sometimes is the only way,
making it a necessary evil that you must get comfortable with.
Either way, make sure you have a 30-Second Commercial and that you are
constantly practicing it so that you are ready when opportunity knocks.
And by the way, you never really know when opportunity is knocking so
give your 30-Second Commercial to everyone and always ask for referrals.
Your Commercial is like bait that you dangle in front of a prospect to hook
them into engaging in a conversation with you. You must cut through the
clutter and make a good impression with your Commercial. So, we’ll show
you how to structure it so that it makes the greatest impact in the shortest
period of time.
You also must remember that you have to be flexible with your 30-Second
Commercial. You may encounter prospects in different industries that have
different problems, pains, fears and hopes than your typical prospects. You
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must be prepared to customize your presentation to get the person in front
of you curious.
1) Brief Introduction
“Maybe you can help me, did I catch you at a bad time?”
“Maybe you can help me find the right person in your organization that
might be interested in speaking with me?”
· Frustrated with…
· Struggling with…
· Trying to avoid…”
“Maybe you can help me then… who do you know who may be
experiencing these challenges?”
“We have done work with (three or four company names from your
Machine-Gun Client List).”
Instead of preparing what they are going to say before they pick up the
phone or go to a networking event, they simply decide to say whatever
comes to mind at the time.
When we asked why they don’t prepare, they usually say that they want
to sound natural or that all situations are different and so they want to
be flexible in their presentation.
3) Be prepared.
You should invest a significant amount of time planning and writing your
30-Second Commercial.
Through our ongoing research with the Sales Career Training Institute,
we have found that the majority of salespeople spend too little time in
researching, crafting, practicing, using and rewriting sales collaterals like
sales letters, sales scripts and 30-Second Commercials. (The FEAR
Selling System provides you with the formulae for each step in the sales
process, so you no longer have any excuse not to be prepared.)
Of the low percentage of salespeople who actually write out their 30-
Second Commercial over 70% are saying the wrong things from the very
beginning of the sales process.
When you are in a networking situation or making a cold call, you are
looking for prospects and/or people who may be able to refer you to
prospects. Your Commercial might be the only opportunity you have to
grab their attention and create interest in your product or service.
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The Main Goal of the 30-Second
Commercial
Now, let’s go step by step through putting together your 30-Second
Commercial. It is important that we walk you through the process slowly
and explain not only what to say, but also why each step works.
You many not be completely comfortable using the exact words and
phrases that we present here, but if you understand the purpose behind
each step, you’ll be able to craft your own effective 30-Second
Commercial.
Each step, each thing you say, is moving you toward your main goal of
capturing your prospects’ attention so that they’ll want to engage in
further conversations with you and hopefully invite you in for a face-to-
face meeting.
You must first give a Brief Introduction that leaves them curious.
This does not keep your prospect curious for long. Too many
salespeople launch into their pitch without permission. You’re not going
to do this. When you don’t pause to ask for your prospect’s permission,
their defenses will probably go up immediately.
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You will invoke fears in them, but they will not be the type of fears you
want to generate. You’ll create the fears that are usually associated with
salespeople:
• The fear that you are going to waste their precious time with a sales
pitch.
• The fear that you are going to be pushy and try to get them to buy
something or get an appointment with them.
• The fear that you are going to put them in the awkward position of
having to reject your offer.
You want them to get curious. You want them to fear hanging up on you
because you might have something that could help them and they don’t
want to miss out on the opportunity to better themselves.
What if it was their boss or a friend who suggested that you call them?
They wouldn’t want to be rude to you. So they’ll want to find out who
you are before telling you that they don’t have time for you. Keep them
in suspense for a bit regarding exactly who you are.
And don’t just fly into your pitch. Don’t label yourself as a salesman
right off the bat.
So instead…
You want to say, “Hi Tom, this is …” and then say your full name but
nothing more.
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Resist the urge to even say, “Hi Tom, this is Bob Smith with XYZ
Company.”
Think of yourself as just one human being talking to another. You don’t
know what kind of relationship you will have with the person. Don’t
label yourself as a salesperson right off the bat.
If they do ask you what company you are with, then tell them, but at
least you will have engaged them in an initial back-and-forth
conversation. This is better than just rolling into your pitch.
Right after your Brief Introduction, the second step is for you to…
This is the first of many times in the sales process that you will be asking
for your prospect’s permission. You ask for permission to give your
prospect the sense that they are in control of the process. This will make
them more comfortable with you and thus more willing to accommodate
you.
The truth of the matter, as you will see later, is that the person asking the
questions is always the more powerful person in a dialogue because they
lead the direction of the discussion.
But by asking permission, you are giving your prospect the illusion of
control.
So, the next thing you want to do after your Brief Introduction is to get
their permission to engage in a conversation.
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explore the importance of eliciting decision-making strategies in the third
step of the FEAR Selling System, the Ask Step.
• Ask them if it’s the right time for you to introduce your product or
service.
You should be asking for permission throughout the whole sales process.
Your prospect will feel in control. They will feel more comfortable with
you because they will not group you with the typical salesperson who
just bursts right into presenting their product without asking permission.
They’ll think that they have a choice, and they will.
“Maybe you can help me? Did I catch you at a bad time?”
Then wait for their answer. If it is a bad time, ask them when you can put
down in your schedule to call them back.
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If your prospect gives you permission to proceed, ask:
“I don’t know if you are the right person to talk to, but maybe you can
help me find the right person in your organization who might be
interested in speaking with me?”
You’re right if you are thinking that this flurry of questions might be
confusing to your prospect. We have found that typically when someone
is a bit confused, they’ll give you permission to proceed.
Now, let’s take a second and explore why asking for help is a good
strategy for gaining their approval to move forward.
To ease their own discomfort, people will usually try to reach out and
help a person who is struggling. And not only does seeing others in
uncomfortable situations make us uncomfortable, but helping them
makes us feel better about ourselves.
When you ask for someone’s help, you are basically saying, in one form
or another, that that person is “better” than you – at least at that point in
time. You are acknowledging that they are more powerful than you, that
they have more information, or more ability than you do.
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By asking for a prospect’s help after you briefly introduce yourself, you are
flattering them. By asking others for advice, you are showing them respect.
You are saying: “You are wiser than I am…please help me.” And typically,
people will offer their help to those in need.
“I don’t know if you are the right person to talk to, but maybe you can help
me find the right person in your organization who might be interested in
speaking to me?”
Here is what they are probably thinking when you ask this question: “To
help this person, all I’ll probably have to do is transfer them to the proper
person in my organization. If I do that, I’ll feel good about myself.”
Remember, you are presupposing that they are not the right person to talk
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to. This will lower their defenses. Even if they think you are a salesperson
from the get-go, they’ll assume that all they have to do is pass you off to
someone else.
“I don’t know if you are the right person to talk to – I’ve been transferred
around to so many people in your organization. Maybe you can help me?”
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3) The Prospect Fear and Hope List:
Getting Your Prospect
Comfortable… And Uncomfortable
With You
After gently getting their permission – which is a type of pacing because
you are starting to get them to be comfortable by interacting with you, you
must then lead. They have given you permission to lead – at least for the
moment.
In the next several seconds, you must make them comfortable and
uncomfortable at the same time.
What you are going to do is talk to them about the personal fears that you
gathered when conducting market research as we discussed at the very
beginning of this section.
First, it may show your prospect that you understand their common fears
and problems. It may get them more comfortable with you because you
understand their situation. Maybe.
They want to mingle with others who are in their same industry. They want
to find out what problems others are having, and they want to find out
solutions as to how others are solving those problems. Their hope is that
they’ll find out how to solve the problems others are having before they
even happen to them. They want to allay their fears and prevent future
pain.
So what is the substitute for going to a conference? You can always read a
book on the topic or magazines or search for articles about your problems
online. But typically, these are one-way information flows. You read the
book or the article, but you can’t ask about your specific situation.
The Sales Career Training Institute conducts a wide variety of surveys but
not only of salespeople. They also ask buyers questions to find out what
motivates them in their buying strategies.
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One senior vice president at a large bank told us that one of the main
reasons he agrees to listen to cold-calling salespeople or to invite them in is
to “pick their brains” about industry trends.
Once we heard this story, we conducted several surveys around this issue,
and were surprised to find that many potential buyers carve out time for
salespeople, not with the expectation of buying anything from them but
rather simply to stay current on industry problems and solutions.
Think about it…the prospects you are pitching to can’t go over to their
competitor and share war stories too easily. People in the same industry
sometimes resist sharing competitive information due to the fear that it
might be used against them.
But here you are, someone who talks to their competitors every day. If they
are smart, they’ll want to pick your brain. You just have to give them the
opportunity to do so.
And remember, you’ll be even more credible if you have created some
intellectual property – a book, magazine articles or even just survey results
- on issues that may be important to your prospects. All you have to do is
get them to think that you know even just one thing that they don’t know
that might help them.
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Curiosity May Have Killed The Cat,
But It Opens The Door In Sales
Remember when you were a kid - did one of your brothers, sisters or
maybe a friend taunt you by saying repeatedly: “I know something you
don’t know…I know something you don’t know”?
Maybe it drove you crazy – you wanted to know what they knew.
Why? Maybe because it was something that could give you an advantage
that you didn’t want to miss out on. You were motivated to find out
because of your curiosity – because of your fear that they knew something
about the situation that could help you or maybe even hurt you.
It’s the same concept in cold calling. You want the person on the other end
of the line to think: it might be better for me to stop what I’m doing right
now even for just one minute to find out what this person might want
because it might be in my best interest to do so.
Also, dropping names helps in this process – especially if you drop the
name of a superior of theirs. If they hear the name of an authority figure in
their minds, they might be thinking – I should listen to what this person has
to say because they might have access to someone who can make my life
miserable for me.
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Using the Prospect Fear and Hope
List to Fish for Your Prospect’s Needs
Remember, all the market research information that we taught you how to
gather at the beginning of this process? Before sitting down to write your
30-Second Commercial, you must have a powerful Prospect Fear and Hope
List.
We are going to put that inside information to good use in getting your
prospects interested in continuing the dialogue with you – or perhaps even
inviting you in to see them.
Think of yourself as fishing right now. You are casting out personal fears
that you know from your market research that others like your current
prospect have. You are hoping that they bite on one of them – that they
either are currently experiencing one of those fears or are in a position to
experience one of those fears in the future. If your prospect can identify
with one of the fears that you mention – one of the frustrations, pains or
annoyances – that someone else has, then that fear can be transferred to
them.
“I don’t suppose you are facing any of these challenges then, are you?”
By asking this question, you are hoping that they start telling you about
their problems so that you can use this information about them to guide the
rest of the conversation.
But, if they don’t key off of one of the Prospect Fear and Hope Statements
that you mentioned, you want to try to get them to talk about their
particular personal fears so that you can keep the conversation going about
something that is near and dear to them right now – one of their current
fears.
Or you might say: “Maybe you can give me some advice, do you see any
problems coming down the road for you or others like you in the
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industry?”
Again, at this point, they might blow you off, in which case, you should ask
them for referrals. Remember, always ask for referrals.
Ask: “Is there anyone else in your organization who might be having these
concerns?”
You want to be ready to fire off the names of current or former clients to
allay the prospect’s fears by ensuring them that you are experienced in your
field. You want to get comfortable rattling off the names of current clients
in rapid succession, like machine-gun fire. By doing so, you will project an
image of confident competence in your field. Again, people are typically
like sheep. If they hear that you’ve worked with other well-known
companies in their industry, they are more likely to hear you out.
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6) Ask For The Meeting
Once you find a prospect who has a need – a fear – that you can latch on
to, you want to try to get a face-to-face meeting with them. You want a
face-to-face meeting because it will be easier to build rapport with the
person that way, and it will be easier to explore their needs if you have
them as a captive audience right in front of you.
In our experience, too many salespeople try to sell over the phone. Instead,
most of you should be using the phone to prospect and set up face-to-face
meetings. Now, you might be selling a small-ticket item, which doesn’t
warrant a face-to-face meeting, but if you are selling a more complex,
bigger-ticket item, chances are that your prospect will want to meet you
before buying anyway.
You can phrase this any way you feel comfortable. The one strict
suggestion that we have is that you ask to be invited in. By being invited in,
you will be setting up the dynamic of that first meeting such that your
prospect is the host and you are the guest at the meeting. This is a subtle
yet powerful way of building rapport with your prospect since, if you are
their guest, they will feel some obligation to treat you more courteously
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than they would a typical salesperson who might have forced his way into
getting a meeting with them.
Remember, this formula for your 30-Second Commercial is only a model
for you. You do not have to follow it exactly. Use it as a guide, but realize
that our clients across industries have used this formula to achieve
significant success.
a) Try saying: “I probably don’t have all the right answers, but I’m pretty
sure I have most of the questions.”
By the way, that’s what a good consultant knows how to do – ask the right
questions. And in the Ask Step of the FEAR Selling System, we’ll provide
you with the right questions to ask in order to understand your prospects’
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problems and then get them to pay you for the solution.
b) You might try this statement: “We might not have the solution for you,
but I can share with you non-confidential information that we’ve found in
our industry research.”
c) Or: “If you invite me in, I can offer you some of my time as a free
consultation.”
In both of these cases, you are trying to get them curious enough to invite
you in. You want to imply that you know something that might help them.
And, by offering it free, you are lowering their defenses. We have found
that salespeople who have taken the time to conduct market research to
find out their prospects’ fears will often be invited in to share their
knowledge.
Later, we’ll show you how to run that first face-to-face meeting to qualify
and maybe sell your prospect.
Sometimes, your prospects will not want to meet with you, but will ask you
to send them information. Instead of just sending your product brochure,
consider sending them a list of the types of problems that you are
experienced in solving. In other words, send your Prospect Fear and Hope
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List.
Remember, you want to focus on your prospect, not your product. You
have a greater chance of keeping the conversation going with a prospect
who believes that you understand their pains, fears and hopes.
Here’s how to present your Prospect Fear and Hope List to a prospect in
written form.
Position your Prospect Fear and Hope List as “survey results”, which, of
course they are. You should be constantly surveying your prospects and
customers, either with written surveys that they can respond to or by
gathering Prospect Fear and Hope Statements in your face-to-face meetings
with them.
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You may title your handout like this:
You then can list the Prospect Fear and Hope Statements. You may want to
make your “survey results” more interactive to get your prospect more
involved. We suggest putting a check box in front of each statement, and
then asking prospects to check off those problems that are relevant.
You may also want to leave some blank spaces under your list, and then
ask your prospect to fill in the blanks with their own problems and
frustrations.
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Here is what your “survey results” sheet might look like:
The following list has been compiled from ongoing interviews with senior marketing executives in a
wide array of financial services firms, including banks, insurance companies and mutual fund companies.
These executives report that they are:
• Frustrated with graphic design vendors who give them inconsistent quality and service. They
always have to be looking for new vendors to replace the ones that aren’t giving them the
attention they need. They would like to find one good, reliable firm to work with.
• Concerned about competing with organizations that have bigger budgets than they do. It makes
them look bad in front of their bosses when they compare their brochures to those of their
competitors. They’re looking for graphic design firms that can give them bigger bang for their
buck.
• Annoyed with graphic designers who don’t turn around projects quickly enough. They often
have to stay late at work or work on weekends to meet deadlines because of mistakes that
their designers make.
• Etc.
Please help us with our ongoing survey by sharing with us the top three challenges that you and your
company are facing:
1) ____________________________________________________________________________
2) ____________________________________________________________________________
3) ____________________________________________________________________________
Thank You
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Using Your 30-Second Commercial in
Networking Situations
As we noted earlier, once you put together your 30-Second Commercial,
you can use it for a variety of different prospecting tactics, including: cold
calls, voicemails, letters, faxes, emails and networking. Just like TV
advertisements, you want to get your Commercial heard by as many people
as possible.
It’s the same in networking. By letting the other guy go first, you can find
out key information about what they do, and therefore you’ll be able to
refine your 30-Second Commercial to make it more relevant to their
situation.
Now that you know what to say when talking to a prospect, let’s talk about
how to target prospects.
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Targeting Prospects: Finding The
Right People To Pitch Your 30-Second
Commercial To
As we mentioned earlier, your prospecting strategy is about two main
issues:
If you’ve followed our guidance, you already have a pretty good sense of
what to say to a prospect. We started with and spent much more time on
positioning because that is where most salespeople have problems.
The truth of the matter though is that targeting is more important than
positioning. Years of research in direct mail have shown that nearly 70% of
the effectiveness of any mail campaign is determined by targeting the right
prospects, while only 30% depends on the positioning, or what you say in
your mail piece.
Basically, you can have the best 30-Second Commercial in the world, but if
you don’t deliver it to the right people then you will not succeed in
prospecting.
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Many of the top salespeople that we have interviewed regarding sales
prospecting divide the targeting aspect of prospecting into three distinct
tasks:
We have found that many new salespeople are much too anxious to get out
and make their pitch to anyone who will listen. This strategy might be okay
if you just want to practice your pitch, but don’t fool yourself. Think of
who your target audience is. Visualize the type of person who has the fears
and hopes that your product/service can address and focus your limited
time on them.
Are your most likely prospects married women who are 25 to 35 years old
with children?
Or perhaps you are looking for retired men who like to golf?
Start with your inner circle of friends and family members. They might not
be prospects themselves but could refer you to others who might be
prospects.
Even though we suggest that you carefully target your prospects in order to
save time and energy, we still suggest that you tell everyone you know
about what you are selling. You never know who knows whom. Your
friends and family more than anyone else should be open to hearing your
sales pitch and helping you to get started.
Business Associates
Secondly, try those with whom you’ve done business before. Talk to your
doctor, dentist, barber, your kids’ teachers. In effect, you are giving them
business – putting money in their pockets – so ask them to help you as
well.
Current Customers
Check out your company’s current customer list. Many times, salespeople
leave money on the table by not tapping their current clients for referrals
into other divisions of their companies. Or maybe you have a new or
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updated version of your product that you can upsell your current customers
on.
The Internet
The Internet is one of the most incredible prospecting tools ever created. It
is amazing how many potential new prospects you can find by using the
Internet wisely as a sales prospecting tool. (For more on how to use the
Internet to find customers, check out the book, FEAR Marketing Online.)
Also, once you have your list of prospects, you can use the Internet to do
more in-depth research on the company to find out about decision-makers,
current strategies and thus the potential needs of these prospective
customers.
Your goal is to find out as much as possible about the company before you
call into it so that you can focus your questions appropriately. You might
only get a certain amount of time on the phone to ask qualifying questions,
so make sure you know all the basics first so that you don’t waste precious
time asking your prospect about things you could have researched on your
own.
Just as your prospects’ time is limited, so is yours. You must use the
telephone to qualify – or rather disqualify – prospects. How your prospect
reacts to your 30-Second Commercial will help you determine if they are a
qualified prospect or not. The biggest waste of your time is taking a trip on
a plane or a long drive to have a face-to-face meeting with a person who is
not really ready or able to buy from you.
So use the telephone to make the initial contact when appropriate. This
way you can ask key questions that will help you to decide whether it is
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worth it or not to visit the person – or spend your time finding more
qualified prospects.
For time management reasons, many of our successful students rely on the
telephone for prospecting because it is time- and cost-effective. The
downside of using the phone, however is that you have little control over
the situation. The prospect can cut you off abruptly or even refuse to take
your call. All too often, you’ll get caught in Voicemail Limbo – always
getting the prospect’s voicemail and never getting a return call.
If you’ve tried repeatedly and can’t get through to a prospect, leave your
30-Second Commercial on their voicemail and move on. Don’t get fixated
on any one prospect. Keep hunting for new ones all the time.
Direct mail and email are very cost-effective, but because it is so cheap and
easy to send a letter or an email – your competitors are flooding your
prospects’ inboxes just as you are.
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Because of the prevalence of mail and email, many sales pros that we have
interviewed send faxes to break through to decision-makers. You might
want to try faxes as well.
Whatever you do, test all of these methods and keep track of what works
best. If after a while, you find that you are getting better responses through
certain methods and not from others, shift the time you spend to the better-
response methods.
All too often, when it comes to sales prospecting, salespeople only rely on
one method. They get comfortable just making calls or knocking on doors
or sending out fliers. It is important to find out what has worked for others
in the past – and keep testing to see what keeps working and what doesn’t.
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these new technologies, it is taking even longer to engage a prospect. So be
patient, but persistent.
This is not something that needs to be planned but rather something that
is present throughout the day. Networking should be a reflex – a mindset
that you are in all the time. Remember, everyone is a potential prospect
or perhaps one step away from a potential prospect.
Every opportunity is a good one to approach someone who can turn into
a prospect or someone who can give you a lead or a referral.
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Regardless of the situation, networking should be cordial and a little
informal. Do not try too hard to make a sales pitch. Networking is all
about learning about a person and discovering ways in which they can
become prospects.
You should be trying to network with everyone you meet. And, while
quality matters more than quantity, a salesperson will probably have to
meet several dozen people before finding a quality prospect.
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Taking Advantage of Referrals
No matter what anyone says, sales is a numbers game. You’ll have to
talk to a lot of people just to find the few who are potential prospects.
This is why we suggest that you always ask for referrals in order to
increase the number of potential prospects you can get in front of. When
it comes to sales prospecting techniques, no technique is more powerful
than asking for referrals.
The very first – and sometimes, most difficult – thing to do is to ask for
those referrals. Salespeople often forget or have a hard time asking a
prospect or client for a referral.
Your clients are the most obvious people to give you referrals. If they are
already benefiting from your product/service, then they most likely
know people in other businesses with the same needs.
Other people who can provide referrals are family members and friends.
Ask them if they know anyone who will benefit from your product or
service. Chances are someone knows one or two people who meet your
criteria.
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Ask your old prospects for referrals as well. If you pitch a product to
someone but didn’t make a sale, contact this former prospect.
Congratulate him for finally making a decision (despite the fact that they
didn’t choose you). Ask for feedback and also ask for contact
information of potential prospects. If this is not possible, offer to give
them extra business cards so that they can pass it along to referrals.
Once someone is willing to give you contact names make sure that you
follow some basic rules like:
2) Make sure you write the referral name and contact information
immediately in order to avoid spelling and other errors. Get as much
contact information as possible (address, phone numbers, fax, emails,
etc.)
3) Write a note to yourself that will explain who your referral is, who
referred them to you and how can you help them.
If you are obviously getting a “no” from someone you cold call, always
ask for referrals.
To do this, first you need what we call a Quick Label. Many salespeople
use what we would call a Quick Label to always explain what they or
their company does.
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They might say something like: “I am a graphic designer”, or “I sell
mutual funds for a bank.”
But it’s different with referrals. You probably don’t have time to play
out your typical 30-Second Commercial or you already have and the
person is not interested or not a good prospect for you for other reasons.
That’s when you quickly want to get them thinking about others who
might need your product or service.
Start by saying: “I couldn’t help you but maybe you can help me.”
Then say: “Who do you know who might be looking for a (insert your
Quick Label here)?”
For example:
That makes it too easy for someone to dismiss you with a quick “no”.
You want them to quickly go through their mental Rolodex for you. By
phrasing your question, “Who do you know who…?” you will lead
them to do this for you.
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Getting Past The Gatekeepers To
The Decision-Makers
When prospecting, you’ll often run into what are known as
gatekeepers: secretaries, assistants or subordinates who work for the
person you are trying to get to.
One of the most common questions we get from our students is: how do
I get past the gatekeeper to the decision-maker?
Gatekeepers are a necessary evil that all salespeople have to deal with.
Many of your prospects don’t have time to take calls throughout their
day and so they screen their calls through individuals like assistants and
receptionists. You may have to deal with such gatekeepers a few times
before you are finally granted access to your prospect.
The key is to get the gatekeeper comfortable with you. You must build
rapport with them quickly. You can use many of the rapport-building
techniques that we present in the next step, the Empathy Step, to gain
the trust of gatekeepers.
If you are doing cold calling, contact the receptionist and ask her for the
name of the person in charge of making decisions for your product/
service. Typically, receptionists will help if approached cordially and
professionally.
Make sure you are as cordial with gatekeepers as you are with your
prospects. Since these employees often decide who sees their boss and
who doesn’t, they will be instrumental in getting you in touch with your
prospects faster, easier and smoother.
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Whenever possible call early, at the very beginning of the day. Assistants
and receptionists are often at work before their bosses and even before
anybody else. Unlike in the middle of their day when they have lots of
interruptions, at these “off-hours” they might be able to give you a little
bit more of their time and even answer questions that could expedite
matters with your prospect.
The same technique works at the end of the working day. Many of these
employees are done or almost done with the bulk of their work close to
the end of the day, but they may still be in the office finalizing
paperwork. This is your time to tackle them and use their available time
to your advantage.
Relentless Follow Up
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As we’ve said, competition is getting fiercer, and busy prospects have
less and less time to meet with salespeople. That means that it’s getting
harder and harder to get through to your prospects, let alone sell them
something. And that means that it will take you several attempts to get
through.
There are plenty of excuses you can use to follow up – it’s just a matter
of finding the right one for each contact. You can call or email a contact
many times for different reasons or simply just to check in and see how
they are doing.
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Final Thoughts on Prospecting
The first step in the FEAR Selling System is to Find and Focus On Your
Prospects’ Fears and Hopes.
In the next step of the FEAR Selling System, which we call the
Empathy Step (covered in the Special Report, FEARLESS Relationship
Building), we will show you how to build rapport with your prospect
and thereby set the groundwork for the presentation of your product/
solution.
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About The Author
Paul Borgese is an author, speaker, consultant and the creator of two series
of business books, The Business of FEAR and The 7 Deadly Sins of
Business. In his marketing and sales books, Paul shows how proven
systems coupled with customer-centric emotional triggers lead to significant
growth in sales.
Paul has more than 16 years of experience as a business advisor on a wide
array of strategy, finance, business development, sales and marketing
challenges for emerging-growth companies, financial institutions, not-for-
profit organizations and global corporations.
He helps executives and small business owners:
• confront the challenges of the increasingly cluttered marketplace and the
demands of the new age of marketing accountability;
• execute integrated marketing plans that leverage new online and offline
techniques, including pay-per-click advertising, affiliate programs, and viral
marketing.
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Financial Professionals. He also worked as a bank examiner for the
Federal Reserve.
Paul has lectured and written books, articles and white papers on a wide
range of business topics, including: corporate strategy, sales
management, marketing, entrepreneurship, information technology, risk
management, business communications, banking relationships and
corporate finance. He has served as a Teaching Fellow at New York
University’s Stern School of Business and is the author of the best-
selling book, M&A From Planning to Integration: Executing
Acquisitions and Increasing Shareholder Value, which was published
by McGraw-Hill. This book was recently featured on CNBC’s
PowerLunch with Bill Griffeth and CNNfn’s The Money Gang.
As an author, he is most famous for his series of books, which include
FEAR Selling: How You Can Sell More and Sell Faster By Tapping
Into Your Prospects’ Deep-Seated Emotional Needs; The 7 Deadly
Sins of Marketing; and The 7 Deadly Sins of Marketing Online. For
more information, please visit www.FEARMarketing.com.
Paul was educated in the United States and Europe. He holds five
degrees, including: an MBA in finance and marketing from New York
University; a Master of Governmental Administration from the Fels
Institute of Government at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was
named a Samuel S. Fels Scholar; a Master of Arts in English from
Trinity College Cambridge University in England after being awarded
the prestigious British Marshall Scholarship; a Bachelor of Arts in
English from the University of Pennsylvania; and a Bachelor of Science
in economics from The Wharton School at the University of
Pennsylvania. Paul is proficient in Spanish and was awarded a
Certificate in Spanish from the University of Salamanca in Spain where
he was a Cambridge Scholar.
You may contact Paul at 201.533.9282 or via email at
paul@FEARMarketing.com.
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BOOKS THAT MEAN BUSINESS
BY THE FEAR MARKETING GROUP
In addition to our consulting work, the FEAR Marketing Group also conducts a
significant amount of research on sales and marketing effectiveness.
FEAR Selling: How You Can Sell More And Sell Faster
By Tapping Into Your Prospects’ Deep-Seated
Emotional Needs
Typically, before we worked with them, our clients were selling and marketing
based on traditional features and benefits. If you’re still using these outdated
tactics, you are in trouble.
Recent studies by the Sales Career Training Institute and the Performance
Marketing Institute have broken new ground when it comes to sales and
marketing effectiveness strategies. Studies conducted by these not-for-profit
Institutes have led to the development of the FEAR Selling System. One of
the key findings of both of these Institutes is that today’s marketers are using
hopelessly outdated selling strategies. Benefit selling (or what we call
HOPE Selling) is only one half of the powerful Persuasion Equation.
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To get people out of their Comfort Zones and take action by buying your
product/service, you must focus not only on the positive consequences of
buying but also on the negative consequences of not buying your product/
service.
Many of our clients sell complex products/services which require long sales
cycles and therefore demand superior relationship-building sales skills. FEAR
Selling shows how to overcome these challenges by finding and focusing on
your prospects’ personal pains and fears as well as their hopes and
dreams. By using both carrot AND stick persuasion techniques, you will
easily multiply your persuasion effectiveness exponentially.
It covers everything you need to know to sell more and sell faster. Find out how
to: cold call with confidence, position yourself effectively through your 30-
Second Commercial, get your prospects curious enough to invite you in to sell
them more, bond quickly through proven trust-building techniques, ask the
right questions at the right times to the right people, and present through
powerful strategies that get your prospects to buy now.
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FEAR Selling For Financial Advisors
Top financial advisors earn big bucks and so have the luxury of hiring staff and
investing in sales and marketing systems that keep them winning clients with
little effort. But you know if you are starting up as a financial advisor that the
going can be rough at first. Recent turnover statistics show that up to 68% of
new financial advisors fail within their first year. Why do they fail?
Well, whether you are working for a large financial institution or if you are an
independent advisor, you basically are running your own small business. You
have to brand yourself, market yourself, and sell yourself. Unfortunately, many
financial advisors whom we train don’t understand that they are in business for
themselves. They have little formal sales training and limited marketing
knowledge. They don’t know how to set up their own sales and marketing
systems – but that’s exactly what they have to do if they want to survive in
today’s cut-throat financial services arena.
This version of FEAR Selling includes all the information from the original 5-
Day Boot Camp plus newly developed strategies, tactics and techniques
specially designed for Financial Advisors.
FEAR Selling For Financial Advisors covers everything you need to know to
be a top producer. Keep a steady stream of prospects calling you. Find out how
to: target wealthy investor segments, set up a highly leveragable referral
system, cold call with confidence, position yourself effectively through your 30-
Second Commercial, get your prospects curious enough to invite you in to sell
them more, bond quickly through proven trust-building techniques, ask the
right questions at the right times to the right people, and tailor your offerings
to your prospects so that they buy now.
Note: This second edition of FEAR Marketing does address the new online
marketing technologies that many corporations and small businesses are now
using to capture new clients at the lowest cost possible, but for a more
comprehensive coverage of interactive, performance-based strategies, check
out FEAR Marketing Online.
With the recent success of companies such as Google, Yahoo and E-Bay,
marketers are waking up to the fact that the Internet is here to stay. But
recent research by the Performance Marketing Institute shows that too
many marketers and business owners do not realize that these hyper-growth
Internet companies are basically marketing services companies that can help
you catapult your own business to success. The Internet is not a business
model in and of itself like the 1999 bubble-investors hoped it was. Rather it is a
highly leveragable marketing tool that you must incorporate into your
integrated marketing strategies if you want to survive today.
In addition to showing you how to lead, this book also will show you how not to
lead. This version of FEAR Leadership also includes excerpts from the
previously published book, The 7 Deadly Sins of Leadership.
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The Financial Services Marketing Handbook: Tactics
and Techniques That Produce Results
By Evelyn Ehrlich, Ph.D. and Duke Fanelli
Everyone in the financial industry can benefit from The Financial Services
Marketing Handbook (Bloomberg Press, 2004), from senior corporate
management to independent financial advisors. Case studies illuminate both
the innovations practiced by industry leaders—companies like Merrill Lynch,
American Express, and Citibank—and perhaps more tellingly, marketing
initiatives that failed.
The 21st Century has already seen a major stock market collapse, unrolling
scandals involving commercial banks, investment banks, hedge funds and
mutual funds, and industry-shaking changes in the regulatory environment.
The Financial Services Marketing Handbook gives financial marketers and sales
professionals the tools they need to survive—and thrive.
All books are available through www.FEARMarketing.com or by calling
201.533.9282.
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M&A From Planning To Integration
Mergers and acquisitions are designed to build market leadership and create
long-term value - in theory, anyway. M&A from Planning to Integration
provides complete guidelines for ensuring these optimistic theories become
reality, and outlines a systematic plan for developing, implementing, and
monitoring a successful M&A deal.
Examples from companies including Cisco Systems, GE, Microsoft, and others
reveal M&A strategies that have worked in the real world, illustrate the book’s
concepts in action, and help you apply those concepts and strategies to your
own company.
All books are available through www.FEARMarketing.com or by calling
201.533.9282.
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