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Booklet Tips From Paulette

Writing, producing, and promoting tips booklets for marketing, motivating, and making money.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Following Up with Follow Up

Robert MIddleton in his recent ezine said it all about doing follow-up. See for yourself:
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CROSSING THE GRAND CANYON
 For Independent Professionals, marketing often converges into 
one crucial action step: The Follow-Up Call.
 
You can follow up at any stage of the marketing process: 
 
If you meet someone through networking and they show some 
interest, you can give them a call to explore that interest.
 
If you forward some information to a prospect, such as an article 
or a link to a web page, you can follow up to get their reaction 
and then discuss their need for your service.
 
Or if a prospect has attended a presentation or teleclass, you can 
follow up to see if they're interested in taking the next step. 
 
OK, we all understand this... but if this is so simple (and it really 
is) then why is the average Independent Professional so awful at 
actually doing it? Admit it, you've let a lot of business slip 
through the cracks because you haven't made that follow-up call.
 
I call that crack the "Grand Canyon" because it feels like a mile 
wide and a mile deep!
 
Today, I'm going to give you some badly needed perspective on 
making those calls. 
 
Seven Pointers for Crossing the Grand Canyon
 
   1. If you don't call, it won't happen. Period. The chance of them 
   calling you back from any of the scenarios above is minuscule. If 
   they call, great, that means they are very qualified. But if you 
   don't follow-up, the chances are high that you will never turn 
   them into a client. Never, ever.
 
   2. Remember, the purpose of a follow-up call is not to sell them 
   your services, but to continue a conversation or to set up an 
   appointment. Take it one step at a time. You're playing 
   Marketing Ball, remember? You're moving towards second base 
   where they are willing to explore working with you. Take it easy.
 
   3. If you make a follow-up call, bad things won't happen. They 
   won't send a hit man to take you out. They won't even hang up 
   on you or say bad things or yell at you. Won't happen. Relax. 
   About the worst thing that can happen is they won't be 
   interested right now. You can survive that. 
 
   4. If they don't return your call, it doesn't mean they are not 
   interested. It just means you are not a priority right now. Or 
   they are out of town or their cat just died. You are not at the 
   top of their list and, like you do when someone leaves a 
   message, you think to yourself, "Gee I can't get back to them 
   today, I guess they'll call back if they're serious." Be serious and 
   call back.
 
   5. You can leave messages, but never leave the ball in their 
   court. Don't expect them to call you back. Instead, let them 
   know you'll be calling again later in the day or tomorrow. This 
   way you can call several times, because you're not expecting 
   them to return you call. Ever. It's not their job. It's your job.
 
   6. When you finally reach them, be prepared. You always need 
   to start from square one and use the language of marketing 
   (problem followed by solution): "When we talked you said you 
   weren't happy with ABC and wanted more of XYZ. I just wanted 
   to lean more about your situation. Is this a good time to talk?"    
   It just might be.
 
   7. You know a follow-up call is going well if your prospect is  
   doing most of the talking (about their problems and desired 
   outcomes). You are in trouble if you're getting too deeply into 
   the features and benefits of your service. Don't go there now. 
   See if there's a need and an interest and then ASK for and GET 
   an appointment. 
 
That's all you need to know to get started. Any prospects needing 
follow-up calls? There's the phone!

By Robert Middleton of Action Plan Marketing. Please visit
Robert's web site at www.actionplan.com for additional 
marketing articles and resources on marketing for professional 
service businesses.

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Until next time,

Paulette -- taking Robert's words to heart

www,tipsbooklets.com

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