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Managing Your Lead Qualification Process
Author: Sebastian Pistritto
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Lead generation is a simple process once you understand your marketplace and how your product adds value or solves a problem for your customers. Your company's web site, for example, can be a tremendous vehicle to generating leads quickly. Anyone can create a form to post on the web site to collect all the information you could want from your prospects: names, titles, phone numbers, budgets, buying habits, and customer needs.

In fact, if you place a direct self-gratifying "reward" to the prospect for providing the information (like $100 for everyone who fills out the form), you will get more names that you will know what to do with. If $100 seems like too much, analyze what a new lead is currently costing you to capture! Organizations must find unique approaches to managing the customer enterprise and utilize the Internet to share and manage leads and corporate information with their marketplace.

Lead Qualification

Lead qualification is critical to managing resources and meeting business objectives. Too many organizations do too little qualifying of leads and consequently pollute the sales funnel. Understand the 8-4-2-1 rule: 8 qualified leads turn into 4 sales presentations, which turn into 2 sales quotes that result in 1 sale. Take the time to evaluate your last quarter's leads-to-sold reports to determine exactly where sales are getting lost. Are you receiving too many qualified people or too little? Does everyone get a demo or presentation? Are 50% of your sales quotes closing?

8-4-2-1 Caveats

Qualifying too many leads or not enough: Most organizations call on every single prospect and spend an inordinate amount of time and money spinning their wheels. You need to understand that not everyone who contacts you is interested in your product and is certainly not ready to buy your product tomorrow. First, you need to have basic procedures on whom to call, to whom to send e-mails, and who to ask to go to your web site for more information. You need to ask clear questions up front and listen to what your prospect needs.

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Too many "canned" sales presentations: Most salespeople call on prospects with little or no qualification process via the phone. In other words, they automatically set up a face-to-face visit. They go to visit the prospect, open up their literature, and go into an automatic canned presentation. Afterwards, they ask the prospect what he or she thinks about the products and then ask if it’s okay to send a quote on the products in which he or she just expressed interest.

Instead, make contact with a prospect after you have pre-qualified him or her on the fact that he or she has a need, has provided a time frame, and how much money he or she has allocated for it. Now go visit the prospect.

Selling is all about relationships - the key word is trust. When you visit, introduce yourself and then ask about needs, not dwelling on what you offer. Now customize your solution to his or her needs. It’s only now that the prospect is listening. The greatest hunger of human nature is to be understood, so feed that need and you will build trust. Build trust and you will get the sale.

When you have too many quotes and 80% or more don't close: After every presentation, good salespeople follow up with a sales quote and then continue to make contact until the sale is closed, right? Wrong! When you do that, you get a lot of voice messages and no call-backs, and when you finally reach the prospect you find that he or she is not ready, money has not been allocated, or other people are involved in the sales process. The dialogue usually goes something like this: "I thought that you were going to buy. I didn't know someone else makes the purchasing decision. Should I call him or her?" The prospect replies, "No, I will be your contact, but it’s going to take us a few more weeks."

So what happened? The answer is that you did not listen to your prospect's needs and you did not get him or her involved as part of the process. You should have followed up after the meeting with a quick phone call telling the prospect that you were putting together a preliminary proposal and wanted him or her to review it before the final version was complete.

The preliminary proposal should include key words that were discussed during the meeting, such as the timeline and specific quantities and dates. Have the prospect review it and make comments. Integrate those comments into the final proposal. Overnight the final proposal and set up a meeting to verbally review the proposal together. Then close the sale at the end of reviewing the proposal.

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Article by Sebastian Pistritto, Vice-President of Marketing at RAVISENT Technologies, Inc.. Sebastian holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Delaware and a B.S. in Business Management from Wilmington College. In his role as the Vice-President of Marketing, Sebastian oversees all of the marketing efforts for the Digital Media business, and corporate marketing initiatives for the entire RAVISENT organization.





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Greetings InternetDay readers. Striking the balance between pursuing your sales contacts and going too far is the focus of today's article.

If you would like to see a certain topic addressed on InternetDay, please send us an email letting us know what issues are most important to you regarding web marketing. Enjoy!
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Comments on Women, The Web, and E-commerce.

Excellent article from a very talented writer. Please, more of the same.

Heather

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