Sales Prospecting - Increase Your Sales by Avoiding the
1 Prospecting Mistake
by Alan Rigg
Published on this site: December 28th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Recently I received a prospecting voice mail message from
a salesperson. The salesperson explained his company was "the
leader in Microsoft hosted Exchange solutions" and he
encouraged me to visit his company's website. That was it
- that was the "meat" of the voice mail message.
If you received that salespersons voice mail message,
what would go through your mind? Do you think it might it
be a question like, "What the heck is a Microsoft hosted
Exchange solution?" Do you think the voice mail message
would inspire you to call the salesperson back?
Why did the salesperson's voice mail message fail to accomplish
the desired end result? Because it focused on a solution rather
than a problem.
If your prospecting calls and related voice mail messages
talk about a solution, in effect you are assuming that your
prospects are already aware of the problems that your solution
can solve for them. If your prospects are not able to relate
your solution back to their own specific problems, your message
will probably just "bounce off".
If you use industry-specific jargon to describe your solution,
you are making the additional assumption that your prospects
are familiar with the jargon that you are using. If they aren't,
it further reduces your chances of attracting their attention!
How could this salesperson restructure his voice mail message
to be more effective? Instead of talking about his solution,
he could talk about one or more of the problems that can be
solved by using a hosted Exchange service. A revised voice
mail message might sound something like this:
"We help small companies look like big companies to
their prospects and customers; plus, we help companies of
all sizes focus more of their time and resources on their
core businesses, which accelerates growth and profitability.
If you'd like learn how we do this, please give me a call."
This salesperson could further enhance his message by including
a specific quntified impact that his company's services have
produced for customers. Here is what it might sound like if
we add a quantified impact to the previously revised voice
mail message:
"We help small companies look like big companies to
their prospects and customers; plus, we help companies of
all sizes focus more of their time and resources on their
core businesses. This has helped some of our customers reduce
their operating costs by as much as 30% in just six months.
If you'd like learn how they were able to achieve these results,
please give me a call."
Do you see the difference between the revised messages and,
"We are the leader in Microsoft hosted Exchange solutions;
please visit our website"? Do you agree that the revised
messages are likely to capture more prospects' attention and
produce more returned phone calls?
There are other advantages to focusing your prospecting messages
on problems rather than solutions. If you talk about a solution,
your message will have the most appeal for prospects that
are already actively looking for that specific solution. But,
do you think those (few) prospects are just sitting around
waiting for you to call? Or, do you think they might be doing
some proactive research? In fact, isn't it possible they might
already have some price quotes in hand? If they are that far
along in the buying process, how does it impact your chances
of winning their business? If you do manage to win their business,
how profitable is it likely to be? Wouldn't you agree that in this situation
your solution is more likely to be perceived as a commodity,
and the business is likely to go to a low bidder?
Contrast this scenario to a properly managed, problem-based
prospecting approach. If you are successful in attracting
a prospect's interest by talking about the business problems
that you can solve and the quantified impacts that your company
has delivered to customers, the natural next step is to ask
the prospect to identify which specific problems pertain to
their business. Once the prospect prioritizes their problems,
you can ask more questions to help them quantify the impact
of these problems on their business. If the quantified impacts
are substantial enough, it becomes quite easy to justify a very
profitable price for your solution.
If you want to improve your prospecting effectiveness, stop
leading with solutions in your prospecting calls and voice
mail messages. Instead, lead with the problems that you can
help prospects solve, and (ideally) one or more of the quantified
impacts that your company has produced for customers. This
type of problem-focused prospecting approach will attract the interest
of a larger percentage of your prospects, produce higher close
rates, and generate more profitable sales.

Sales performance expert Alan Rigg is the author of
How to Beat the 80/20 Rule in Selling: Why Most Salespeople
Don't Perform and What to Do About It. His company, 80/20
Sales Performance, helps business owners, executives, and
managers double sales by implementing The Right Formula
for building top-performing sales teams. For more information
and more free sales and sales management tips, visit http://www.8020salesperformance.com

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