Let me start with a statistic. Market research company, Forrester Research, have found that 47% of B2B firms say they either close fewer than 4% of all marketing-generated leads, or they don't even know this metric at all.
While your marketing efforts are always going to need scrutinising in this scenario, it is just as important for the sales team to look at their own efforts too. This reflective process for the sales team needs to start with the exploratory call they have with leads.
As you will know, every exploratory call has the same objective - learn how you can best help your prospect with your products or services. To do this effectively, I've worked with Andrew in our sales team here at Katapult to list twelve imperative steps your sales call agenda must include to ensure you're learning everything you need to about your prospect.
How many of these do you do already?
Going straight into 'presentation mode' isn't what building rapport is all about. Through your marketing processes, the prospect would have already flagged a challenge that they would like solving. Instead of going straight into the sales pitch, listen, and become the prospect's problem-solver instead.
You're not going to introduce yourself, build a rapport, and start selling solutions to your prospect in the same call - so pace yourself and schedule another call at another time. Use this time to see what solutions really fit what the prospect wants. Once it comes to the follow-up call, remember to go back over what you learned from your first call to give perspective and show an understanding.
Just like proactive face-to-face meetings, scheduled phone calls can really benefit from an agenda. Whether this agenda is given over the phone or on a separate email, this will help steer the conversation, giving you the information you need in a short time frame.
People generally don't make changes unless they have a challenge that impedes their progress. It's important to listen to the prospect, make sure you understand exactly what their challenge is, and empathise with their position.
You now understand the challenge that is stopping your prospect doing their job, now is the time to ask about their goals. While many B2B firms will simply say they want to "make more money", "save money", or "avoid risk", it's important to drill down and find out exactly what numerical values these goals have.
Prospects come to you for advice and expertise. Be confident in questioning their existing plans, and why they believed that this approach would work. Understanding their plans in detail allows you greater insight into how your company fairs against potential competitors, for example.
I'm sure many prospects will want to achieve their goals "as soon as possible" but without a realistic time frame set-up, it's going to be hard for you to work with them. Ask about a clear timeline and don't be afraid to comment on whether it is simply not achievable.
Remember, you're here to offer solutions, some may work, some may not. It's important to not leave the prospect thinking that your solution is 100% bulletproof. Also, some sellers confuse challenges with consequences, such as "I could be out of a job if this doesn't work". It's important to differentiate these.
Don't focus on the negative too long though. Highlight the 'next steps' if this solution you've suggested works. This not only offers optimism for your prospect, but gives you insight into how you can help in the future.
Once you understand goals, challenges, plans, timelines, consequences and implications, you can then begin to ask about who the key decision maker is in the business. Question whether the senior management team need to be involved, making it easier to get sign-off on your solution.
Look at the budget from their point of view, not yours. From this figure, work out what solution would work best - including any execution costs you would need to be charged. Already you should have had the conversation as to what their goal is, so working out a basic ROI figure can help confirm a budget with them.
The final step is getting commitment. Whether you need an email confirmation, or a contract signing to make this happen, this is the key part of getting that prospect over the line.
We'll be presenting on how you can transform your sales process to align with how today's prospects research and buy. Join us at the UK's first ever HUG marketing and sales conference, taking place next week.