Welcome to "The Pipeline" ¡ª a weekly column from 51³Ô¹Ï, featuring actionable advice and insight from real sales leaders.
A while back, I was at the park, and my phone rang. I rarely get phone calls, and I usually ignore them. This time, something felt different. I decided to pick up. Bad move ¡ª it was a salesperson.
Him: Hi this is Sean calling from Bulletproof Lead Gen. Do you have a min¡ª
Me: Hey, I¡¯m not interested. Have a great day. *hangs up*
My response is what we as salespeople face every single day. In fact, when my team and I talk to sales teams, one of the challenges we hear most about is prospecting. Finding qualified prospects is hard enough ¡ª but your work isn¡¯t done once you find qualified prospects who match your buyer persona.
You still need to keep them interested enough to listen and buy from you and not a competitor. Here are five soundbites that we¡¯ve found top sales reps use to develop interest in prospects and keep the conversation moving toward the close.
5 Phrases Top Salespeople Say on Prospecting Calls
1. An introduction baked with credibility.
There was nothing offensive about Sean¡¯s introduction. He was polite and sounded well-meaning. But the moment he asked for a minute of my time, my instinctive answer was no. He didn¡¯t explain why he called or why I should give him my time. I was relaxing in the park ¡ª not waiting for a sales pitch.
Here¡¯s what Sean could have said instead to get my attention.
¡°Hi, this is Sean calling from Bulletproof Lead Gen. I¡¯m calling because I saw that you downloaded an ebook about generating more leads earlier today. I¡¯ve helped dozens of companies grow their leads and revenue. Would you be interested in having a conversation about how I can help your business?¡±
With this type of introduction, the rep immediately explains what made him call and how he hopes to help me. I¡¯d be open to learning how I could improve my business even if I had no intentions of buying anything.
2. A business-oriented value proposition.
Value propositions often take the following form: ¡°My product will help you achieve X, Y, and Z. Here are its 147 features.¡±
This approach sucks. Translate that monologue into a narrative about exactly how those features will make your prospect¡¯s life better. By offering tangible outcomes, you make it more clear that your product or service is valuable and worth your prospect¡¯s time.
Here¡¯s an example of an effective value proposition written by sales expert :
¡°We help large companies reduce the cost of their employee benefits programs without impacting benefit levels. With the spiraling costs of healthcare today, this is a critical issue for most businesses. One of our recent clients, a large manufacturing company similar to yours, was struggling with how to reduce spending in this area. We saved them over $800,000 in just six months. Plus, they didn¡¯t cut any services to their employees, nor did their employees have to pay more.¡±
3. A rapport-builder.
Research shows only 3% of buyers think salespeople are trustworthy. Building rapport is an essential part of building trust with your prospect. If a prospect doesn¡¯t trust you, they won¡¯t buy.
Proper rapport-building requires research to find talking points with your prospect. That could mean finding their LinkedIn or Twitter profiles, their website, or other content and information they¡¯ve shared.
Here are three examples of questions that can help you build rapport:
- ¡°I see that your company is located in [NAME OF CITY]. I went there on a trip last month. Is your office located right in the city? Have you ever been to [NAME OF RESTAURANT / OTHER LOCATION]?¡±
- ¡°I saw on your LinkedIn that you previously held a role as [ROLE] and now you¡¯re doing [CURRENT ROLE]. How did you make that transition?¡±
- ¡°I saw on Twitter that you just visited [COUNTRY]. What was the highlight of your trip?¡±
4. The second-level questions.
Listening doesn¡¯t just mean being quiet and letting the prospect speak. You have to demonstrate that you¡¯re listening. This means asking second-level questions ¡ª questions that build on the ones you¡¯ve asked before and require inferences on your part.
Below are two phrases you can use to show that you¡¯re open and eager to hear what your prospect¡¯s challenges are and demonstrate that you¡¯re listening to them by reiterating and diving deeper:
- ¡°You¡¯ve spoken about [X challenge]. When I encounter prospects with this problem, they¡¯re often also facing Y and Z. How are you thinking about those areas?¡±
- ¡°So what you¡¯re telling me is¡ [summary of what they told you]. Will you tell me more about [specific point]?¡±
5. The positioning statement.
Positioning statements are a sales rep¡¯s secret weapon. They capture the purpose of a product and how it¡¯s used ¡ª and they help shape a line of questioning and value proposition that¡¯ll make the prospect say, ¡°Yes! That¡¯s me!¡±
They have two goals:
- Make yourself more credible
- Qualify the prospect to make sure it makes sense to continue the conversation
Say something like: ¡°When I talk to businesses like yours, they often face [challenges]. Are you facing these as well?¡±
Prospecting at scale is difficult, but with the phrases above or even a sales script, you can ensure you¡¯re making the best use of your time.