'It's a numbers game!'
Seasoned veterans and credentialed gurus alike mouth these words over and over and over. They are right. And, we all know it.
But, how do you deal with it? Just how much can you play cold-call cowboy without getting saddle sores on your bottom or cracked callouses on your hands that put you in the bunkhouse for a week or more?
According to Lone Survivor author and decorated Navy Seal, Marcus Luttrell, the US Navy Seals have one simple concept that drives the majority of their achievement: “The human body can take damn near anything the head tells it to.”
That, my selling friends, is exactly how it works in cold calling.
So, what do we do? 'Make it a game.' 'Set a goal for this hour, today only...' 'Establish short-term goals with specific rewards, things you like.' How many times have you a) said, b) heard, c) thought these words and used these tools? Did they work? Maybe, probably, depending on if you made it work.
Did your head tell you to cold-call and do it with style and skill? If so, you prepared for that event and you completed your objective. Plain and simple. And, maybe you won the big prize – landing a large account, finding six new prospects in an afternoon, whatever was important to you.
I've done them all, tried them all. Some with more enthusiasm than others. Some worked well as long as I kept my head in the game.
But, nothing has ever impacted my cold-calling experience like calculus. Yes, calculus. The science of establishing numerical values/algorithms that represent intangible entities in order to enable the user to project an event and proceed to a goal. (that's just my working definition – save your emails – stay with me here)
I'm talking about SW³/N.
It's simple. It's easy. It makes sense. And, it works. Each time, every time. It's a constant.
Some will.
Some won't.
So what?
Next!
In cold calling, you know no one beforehand. You have no idea of their personality, dreams, family or any other uniquely individual attribute that defines them. You have targeted them for a contact, to suggest an idea, concept, service or product. Somebody's going to buy your widget. In the long run, do you really care who?
Often many of our best clients/customers turn out to be no one we would have projected at the outset, right? Why get worked up over this call? What if he is not interested? So what if she bought last August? NEXT! I'm moving here, I'm not hanging around to cry over missing the sale at Acme Production, Inc., because I've got 45 more companies on my list and I know somebody is going to buy. I just don't know who, not yet anyway.
SW³/N. It keeps me moving, rolling along. It leads me forward, enticing me, daring me to make that next call, because the next call is what right now is all about.
Put the power of calculus to work for you.
Chris
Next post: Quantum positioning metrics
Chris Cooper has been cold calling friend and foe alike for over 25 years. His experience runs from the financial industry to manufacturing to high-end consulting services, entry-level sales to VP and beyond. Somebody's going to hire him this week for another great project – he just doesn't know who yet.
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