I'm sticking around the cold calling topic some more, on how NOT to set up a meeting.
It's verified that, in business-to-business, consultative sales, closing deals is a numbers game that starts with picking up the phone for setting up meetings.
So here is a list of mistakes I did when I started calling to schedule meetings, without any prior training:
findings, facts, experience and questions on internationalization and localization
as seen from both sides of the story: subsidiary and headquarters
Showing posts with label cold calling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cold calling. Show all posts
May 4, 2013
Sep 6, 2012
yes, outsource
But choose the right provider. I didn't.
This is a short, measurable story about call centers. One of my most solid presumptions was shattered: that English will take you anywhere.
When planning campaigns / events abroad and approaching companies, you might have the illusion that English works everywhere. It doesn't. You might even think that, if you're calling medium & large companies, English is sufficient.
But if you imagine this will not affect your success rate, you are wrong.
I've measured the difference.
I've worked with an English-speaking call center for a project addressing companies in a German-speaking country, calling multinationals. In the database qualification phase, their success rate was 35%. Most of the rejections sounded like:
- we're not interested
- we can't provide any information over the phone
- we don't speak English
- they hung up / transfer failed.
Taking the same project to a native call center made the difference. 96% completion rate. Where the companies were previously rejecting any form of collaboration, now they provided the requested data.
So there you have my conclusion, in measurable form: use native speakers when cold calling the companies.
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