Telemarketing in Ireland
Sucessful Telemarketing to Irish Businesses.
Whether you start out by direct mailing your prospects
or not, you will need to follow up with a telephone call.
The following are a few tips on using the telephone to
gain quality appointments. The key to success is to generate
enough interest from a potential customer to be able to
get that appointment to sell your product or service.
1. There are four key factors of verbal communication
and you should consider them all - voice quality, choice
of words, attitude and organisation.
2. There are several stages you can go through in appointment
making to ensure you create the best selling opportunity:
a) Introduce yourself and your company.
Always use your full name and company name, and use your
customer’s full name until you have been invited to be
on first name terms.
b) Contact the M.A.N (the person with Money, Authority
and Need).
You will be supplied the name of the senior decision maker
in your data. However, you should ensure that this person
is the most appropriate decision maker for your product
- unless you clarify this up front)
c) Instil urgency.
You need to create urgency to try and encourage your potential
customers to buy from you. An offer closing date or incentive
may be useful.
d) Arouse interest.
At this early stage it will help if you can make a statement
which will disturb complacency and arouse interest. People
buy either from fear of loss or the opportunity of gain.
If you can appeal to both either of these motives then
an appointment should follow.
e) Signpost.
In business, it is essential to let your customer know
what format any meeting will take. This is called signposting,
and is also a helpful tool to apply to a telephone call
(e.g. What I would like to do is find out what type of
services your company requires, tell you about our company,
explain what we could do for you and how we have helped
other companies like yours. Then I will give you a suitable
quote and we can start ‘supplying’ if you are happy with
what we have discussed).
f) Mini need-find.
You may want to ask a few direct ‘open ended’ questions
– those which begin with Who? What? Why? Where? When?
or How? By asking these type of questions you will get
your potential customer talking openly about his or her
business needs. If you establish needs up front, this
will help you plan your sales call better to maximise
on the possible result.
g) Qualify and consolidate.
Check that you have secured a quality appointment, by
asking the customer to diarise your visit. You can ask
for directions and nearby parking which helps to build
a rapport. Remind the customer just how important and
valuable time is for both of you. Leave a contact number
in case the arrangements need to change in the meantime
and ask if there is anything in particular he or she would
like you to bring.
3. Make sure you personalise your information to ensure
that you don’t sound scripted; the customer’s phone rings
hundreds of times a day – why should he or she listen
to you? Sell your company with relevant features and benefits
and listen to your customer’s needs - approximately 45%
of our waking time is spent listening, so by practising
active listening, you will be able to increase your selling
potential.
4. 89% of your message on the telephone is conveyed through
your tone and only 12% through words, so SMILE as you
DIAL! Your potential customer can sense if you are relaxed
and positive.
5. Don’t get disheartened if someone appears rude. There
may be many reasons for their reaction or simply for saying
NO. Remember, it is not personal. Prospecting is a numbers
game so don’t let the bad experiences deter you.