Another sales (thread)
Since March I've been in business for myself (again) and have landed 17 contracts. These have ranged from $250 (1) to $1,500 (2) but most of my work has been in the $500-$750 range. I can name 6 individual contracts that have taken hustle, uncomfortableness, and persistence to get - the other 11 have been purely referrals or being in the right place at the right time. My work speaks for itself.
In saying all of this, you can't run a business based solely on referrals. If you are, it's not a business, it's a hobby (Claude might have said this somewhere around here, or someone else).
So I've been prospecting - mostly through calls. And out of roughly 600 dials, I've landed 5 meetings. And out of 5 meetings, I've closed 0 sales. And I think I'm starting to figure out why...
Right now, I'm selling a commodity. And as such, that's how I'm being treated. There's no urgency for my prospects to buy, there's no reason for them to act today, and there's no reason why they can't shoo me away but protect my feelings with a "call me in a week." Which I know is bullshit... but nonetheless.
When I get a referral, I know it's a sale. I walk in, ask about previous experience, ask what they want, and give a solution. They ask to see work, I prove myself, and there's the sale. Truth be told, they're sold on me before I walk in. Cold prospects, not so much.
My sales process now follows roughly the same path. I introduce myself and what I can do, determine interest, then proceed by asking questions to find out what they want. Once I've figured out what's needed (not always what they want), I display why I'm the best man for the job (sample work, references), give a price, and ask for the sale. This is obviously the Cliff-notes version of the sales process, but you get the picture.
But no checks are being written. No commitments are being made, and even though my prospects believe (or at least, tell me they believe) I'm the best man for the job, they're not ready to commit.
... I hear things like, "How many pages should my website have" or "How much would you charge for a website" or "I just need a basic website... like a one page thing... can you do that for ____" or "I need to think about what I want on my website before we go further... it could be weeks or months, but I'll call you definitely" or "Hey, I like you. I believe what you're telling me. Hell, I even believe I NEED what you're offering, like yesterday. But you ain't getting a check today son."
...and the problem is, I'm not selling websites. I'm selling online real estate that attracts real local visitors and turns them into leads (an email form submit, a phone call, an online purchase).
And yes, the sites I offer do those things. And do them well. I have a track record of clients to prove it.
But throughout all of my conversations, I keep getting marginalized into the 'web designer' who is just supposed to throw up something pretty. And we can wait on that, right? There's no urgent need to have a pretty looking website. Business owners can wait all year long for that.
So I'm 'cooked in the squat' (JD) time and time again.
Tell me all you want that I need to make more dials... and I'll believe it. I'll actually admit it right now to save you the trouble. I need to make more dials, and I can guarantee that will happen.
But I can't help but think my positioning is waaaaayyyy off. I'm not having the kinds of conversation I need to be having, and my prospects don't see me that way I need them to see me.
So what's the remedy? How can I present solutions to them without selling them a commodity? Whenever the word 'website' comes up on a cold call, I want to break my phone... how can I break this line and shift the conversation to what they actually want (visitors, leads, and sales)?
I guess the big question is... as a one man team, at a very young age (which isn't always a problem), with nothing but my expertise and services to offer, how can I stop getting marginalized in every damn meeting and portray some level - any level - of urgency and necessity to my prospect?
âDo not seek to follow in the footsteps of the wise; seek what they sought.â - Matsuo Basho
>> For Agency Founders: The Fast Shortcut To Selling SEO, Leadgen, Webdesign & Other Services
âDo not seek to follow in the footsteps of the wise; seek what they sought.â - Matsuo Basho
>> For Agency Founders: The Fast Shortcut To Selling SEO, Leadgen, Webdesign & Other Services