Tag Archives: sales follow up

Victim of Email

youve got mail

A few years ago, I was meeting with a client.   This was not my first time meeting the client and we had a developed a strong business relationship.  We had met several times before including meetings before I earned his business, and then on a fairly regular basis when he became my client.  Each time I met with him, I always amazed by his calm demeanor and the attention he gave to our meeting.  I was impressed because most of my other clients in similar roles to his were always somewhat preoccupied, rushed for time, and were almost always looking at their phones.  It is not that they did not see our meeting as important, they were just busy and they had lots of fires going on around them.

So during this one particular meeting with my client, we started talking about productivity and his secret to getting things done and not being reactionary to things that were happening throughout the day.  His secret…he only checked his email twice a day.  He checked his email in the morning and again at the end of the day.  He turned off the notifications and alerts and went about his day looking at his list of things to do.  At first, my question was “what if you miss an important question or request”.  He quickly told me that if someone really needed information he could be reached on his phone.  Most of the time emails that come through are quick questions that will only take a minute to answer, and many times the question could wait for an answer. When you stop to answer those quick questions you pull yourself away from the tasks you are currently involved in, and then you begin the quick cycle of losing attention and time.

Here is what I learned to help stop being a victim of email.

Check Email Twice a Day.  Start your day going through email.  Answer questions, file responses, and for things that need more attention add those to your list.  At the end of the day check for new emails and do the same as the morning.  You will be able to answer and file quickly as opposed to starting and stopping other tasks.

Teach people how to communicate with you!  When you are meeting with prospects, clients, and partners explain to them that you do not check your email on an hourly basis.  Explain to them that you do respond to email at the end of the day, and if they need immediate attention to call or text you.  Set an automated response, thank the sender for the email and advise them that you check email at the end of the day. You are informing senders that email is a great way to get you information, however if they need immediate attention they need to call you directly.  Most things can wait.

Use Email to Recap Information.  This does not mean that the end of each phone call or meeting you immediately send an email.  Take notes during the call or meeting and send a follow up email during your scheduled email time.  Take time to focus on what needs to get done and make use of email recaps during your email time.  You will be surprised how much gets done when you use email only at the designated times.

Things Get Resolved On Their Own. Have you ever been a part of email chain that creates 10 to 20 other emails?  Imagine coming on the back end of the email.   You miss the 20 emails that are exchanged and can skim through the emails to see what else if anything needs to be done.  Most of the time you are copied on the email to keep you in the loop or minimal input.  You will be amazed at how many things are taken care of and you didn’t spend an hour reading all the responses as they swarmed your inbox.

Email is a a great way to communicate.  It helps to put information and thoughts in writing.  You are able to go back and find conversations that took place in the past.  Email is a great forum to give updates and to transfer information within a group and share documents.   My problem with email is that it has the potential to completely take over my day if I allow it to.  You will be amazed when you stop a simple distraction such as email and make it a task of it’s own.

 

Never Run Out of Prospects

lead generation

 

One of the most interesting questions I have heard asked many times in my life as a sales person and sales manager is “what do you do when you run out of people to call”.  That questions shocks me every time.  At first I stop and think they are not serious and then I realize they are serious.  Every sales person depends on finding new leads and opportunities to put in their pipeline.  How do you find those leads?  Here are a few tips that have always worked for me….and trust me I have never ran out of people to call on.

First, start thinking outside the box!

There really is no wrong way to find leads there are just better ways.  Go to where you customers are.  Join the associations your customers are members of, and get involved.   Go to events even when you think its optional.  I have dragged myself to countless events that I could have not attended and every time I go I end up thanking myself for the new leads or connections I gained.  Become a peer to your prospects and clients.  Show them you care about their business needs by supporting what they support.  Do things your competitors do not make time to do.  Offer solutions to your prospects.

Second, pay attention!

Read your local business publications.  Listen to the radio.  It sounds simple and it is all you have to do is pay attention to what is going on around you.  Also, when you are driving look out for billboards or signs for potential clients.  When you go to an office building pay attention to other potential clients that have businesses in that building or near.  Listen to your current clients.  You will be surprised what information and new leads can be generated just from listening to your current clients.  Perhaps they have a need for a service or product you sell that is not what you originally intended on offering.  Have conversations with people even if you think they do not have a need for your service.  It’s amazing how many new prospects come out of situation when you least expect them to.

Third, rework old leads!

Call back old leads and try a new approach.  Perhaps you called them in July and the person who took your call had a bad day, and now when you called back in December they are in great spirits.  Ask yourself a few key questions about prospects.  Why should this prospect meet with me over the other 20 people who called today?  Why do they need my service or product?  Is it important for them to meet me and if its not why am I  calling them?  Do I have a solution for them that I didn’t have 6 months ago.  Create follow up task while prospecting and make sure you go back to those actions items.   Never give up on your leads.  Business changes, people change, trends change, competitors change, and industries change.

Apply these 3 basic principles in your search for new leads and you should always have unlimited possibilities and a very busy schedule for prospecting!