Despite how you might feel
personally about telesales or
'cold calling' it is still one
of the best ways to generate new
interest from leads and secure
sales. A telesales campaign
might be exactly the right tool
to engage with your target
audience and gain valuable
information. Of course, just
starting a telesales campaign is
not enough.
There are key things you should
have in place and be monitoring
consistently to get the best you
can out of it!
We have outlined our ten killer
telesales tips for success so
that whether you start your
telesales campaign alone or are
engaging an external company you
know the right things to ask,
and what you should be looking
for.
Good, clean data
In order for any campaign to be
successful the most important
starting point is good, clean
data. There is no point in
paying someone (or a company) to
be making calls using old data
or to people who will have no
interest in the product or
service you are selling. Your
data must be up to date,
relevant and cleaned regularly.
Know your goals!
You have to know exactly what
you want from this telesales
campaign. For example is it an
increase in sales, and increase
in enquiries or increased
knowledge about your customer
base? You also need to know what
targets you have set and how you
are going to measure and
evaluate the telesales results.
Scripted / Unscripted
Your telesales callers should
always sound unscripted. Your
telesales callers should get
plenty of time to rehearse and
understand fully what they are
calling about, and what they are
hoping to gain from the call!
There should always be room to
deviate and improvise from the
basic outline of the
conversation, your operatives
need the flexibility to react to
what's happening in the moment
and not get hung up following a
strict script.
Follow Up On Time
If you tell someone that you are
going to follow up on his or her
call within a certain time, make
sure that you do! Whether you
have promised to call again,
send information or make an
appointment, it is very
important that you deliver. It
is especially important that if
another department does the
calling there should be strong
communication and relaying of
information to make sure this is
picked up quickly and
efficiently.
Know Who You Are Talking To
If you need to speak with a
particular person or a
particular department then you
need to make sure that you do!
Of course the first step of this
in making sure your data is up
to date! The second is being
persistent and making any
gatekeepers your friend so that
you can build a rapport and
eventually get through to the
person you need.
Don't Be Afraid Of Voicemail
One thing people really dislike
about cold calls is their
impersonal nature and
inconvenient timing. If you do
find that you are calling at
awkward times, leave a
voicemail. People would rather
know who was calling than hear
you hang up. It also prepares
them for you calling again. (And
you should say when that would
be!)
Positive Focus
To try and keep the call
positive, pleasant and 'soft',
you should make sure you are
focusing on the features and
benefits of the service or
product you are offering. Making
the call predominantly about
this rather than a hard sell
while ensure that you can
encourage another call, a visit
or a request for supplementary
information to be sent out.
Ask Questions
Asking questions will get the
person you are speaking to
engaged in the conversation. You
can usually tell a sales call
because the person at the other
end is sitting patiently,
waiting for a break in the
monologue so that they can
politely hang up. By asking
questions and engaging the
caller you will learn more about
them, keep them talking for
longer and encourage them to ask
questions too. The more
conversational it is, the more
likely the call is to succeed
against your criteria.
Evaluate
You should always evaluate the
effectiveness of any campaign.
If it isn't working in its
current format there is no point
in continuing. Make some simple
strategic changes and make your
campaign work for you. It could
be as simple as changing your
goals slightly or asking
different questions. You should
make sure that your evaluation
methods are set up before your
campaign begins so you evaluate
what you need to - and not just
what you'd like to!
Listen...
Monitor and record a large
selection of calls that are
made. This works well in 2 ways.
The first is that the people
making the calls will know there
is a chance that their call is
being recorded and so will make
sure they are giving the best
service that they possibly can!
The second is that by listening
to a selection of past calls you
can hear what works, what
doesn't, whether the tone is
correct and whether the focus is
weighted correctly. This is a
key tool for your evaluation and
shouldn't be overlooked.
When you are thinking about your
next telesales campaign I would
strongly suggest you keep these
points in mind. They are not
difficult to grasp but they are
essential for constructing a
meaningful and effective
campaign. You wouldn't approach
any other part of your marketing
or sales strategy without having
clear goals, strong evaluation
tools and excellent methods to
work with so don't make
exceptions here.
Just because it is an
undervalued tool doesn't mean
that it has to be for you! In
fact you can make a real impact
by embarking on a telesales
campaign that is customer
focused, conversational and
engaging. Set yourself out from
the crowd and get good at being
the best!
Source: Andy Dickens link