Calling on Prospects: How Much is Too Much?

Sales calls & RolaidsThe other day as I left yet another voicemail for a prospect who hadn’t returned my previous few calls or emails, I wondered how many unreturned “touches” most people leave before giving up, so I quickly tweeted my question.

I was surprised that the answers that came back were almost invariably one or two, although Marty Hamre’s magic number was 7 and VirtualGalt invoked Brian Tracy’s name in suggesting that 5 was the right answer. It was actually listening to Brian Tracy sales tapes back in my previous life that convinced me to make more attempts than the competition.

Intrigued, I asked “What’s the max number of unreturned calls/emails/touches you would give a prospect before giving up?” on LinkedIn. There were 24 answers (and counting) to the question, and the people on LinkedIn (or at least those who answered the question) seemed to have a lot more tenacity than my tweeps.

Some of my favorite quotes…

If the prospect was important, unique, not just another prospect who could be supplanted by another…I would not give up. I’d continue until I reached the person intended, either leading to a “no” or a new business relationship.

Persistence is the only way to make great things happen, and to reach those special people who others give up pursuing.

Dave Cynkin

I have been selling for years. I tend to not give up till I am told to get lost….Also in your emails and voices Tell them it’s OK to say NO. Chances are you will get a NO back in an email rather than a return phone call to answer back with a NO!

Merrit von Seggern

For each marketing tool: Choose a guideline for how often you will reach out. e.g. how often you’ll call prospects.

For each calling, in particular: Also choose a guideline for how many voicemails you’ll leave before you put the prospect on a back burner.

Most people find a guideline of 3 to 5 tries works best.

After choosing your guidelines, apply them to all prospects. This helps avoid placing judgment too soon, which helps prevent frustration.

In general, it’s best to continue to reach out to prospects forever. When you put prospects on a back burner, I just mean reach out less often. Or start using marketing tools for them that can happen more automatically; ie. enewletters.

Shawn Greene

Let me quote the speech Churchill once delivered, when asked to give his view on how to become succesfull.

He got up, walked to the microphone, and said:

Never, Never, Never, Never give up.

And then he sat down again.

The barrier you experience is just as high for your competition. So once you’re in, they’ll have a very difficult time to get you out!

Mark Wiertsema

There were a number of great (and conflicting) answers, so I recommend you check them out.

My own .02? While things like how busy I am, my interest in the project, the size of the project, whether we’ve already send a proposal, and the current economy all impact my answer, my real answer is at least 8 – 10 touches.

Most people give up after just one or two attempts. Personally, when a sales person calls me, I often don’t return the first or second call (especially on a cold call.) I need to see that the sales person is really interested in working with me before they get my full attention.

I assume that my prospects are busy running their own business and they have fires to put out. After 5 or 6 calls/emails/touches I’ll often leave messages along the lines of:

Still haven’t received the cease and desist letter from your lawyer, so I assume it’s safe to keep calling…

Hi, this is the tenacious Rich Brooks calling again. Just imagine how hard I’ll work for you when you’re paying me….

Or something along those lines.

What’s your .02? How often would you contact a prospect before giving up?

Rich Brooks
Tenacious D

Photo credit: Duchamp

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  • http://www.phillipsbusinesssolutions.com Dee Robertson

    Rich, this is a great article and I think a question that all small business owners ask themselves at one point or another. For me, it depends on two things; how badly I need/want the money and the project. Some projects are worth 10 call backs while those that are practically favors I don’t call back more than twice.

    Thanks for the informative post. It’s always nice to see what others in the business consider the norm.

  • http://www.phillipsbusinesssolutions.com Dee Robertson

    Rich, this is a great article and I think a question that all small business owners ask themselves at one point or another. For me, it depends on two things; how badly I need/want the money and the project. Some projects are worth 10 call backs while those that are practically favors I don’t call back more than twice.

    Thanks for the informative post. It’s always nice to see what others in the business consider the norm.

  • chris

    Want some advice from someone who gets a lot of cold calls? The magic number is two or three. The best way to get me to call you back is to make your first or second voicemail concise and compelling. After that you should wait a long time, maybe months. Pester me and I’ll remember you as someone will waste my time.

    If you do get my attention be fairly specific about what you can do for me, what the benefits will be, and what it will cost. Otherwise, you’ll end up in the “that guy was cool, I’ll have to get back to him next month” file. I never get to that file.

  • chris

    Want some advice from someone who gets a lot of cold calls? The magic number is two or three. The best way to get me to call you back is to make your first or second voicemail concise and compelling. After that you should wait a long time, maybe months. Pester me and I’ll remember you as someone will waste my time.

    If you do get my attention be fairly specific about what you can do for me, what the benefits will be, and what it will cost. Otherwise, you’ll end up in the “that guy was cool, I’ll have to get back to him next month” file. I never get to that file.

  • http://www.DropShipAccess.com Mike from Drop Ship

    This is a really motivating article as generally people give up after 1 or 2 attempts. The words one uses to hold the attention of the prospect does matter a lot.

  • http://www.DropShipAccess.com Mike from Drop Ship

    This is a really motivating article as generally people give up after 1 or 2 attempts. The words one uses to hold the attention of the prospect does matter a lot.

  • http://www.darrenchow.com Darren Chow

    I think 8 to 10 attempts would be a good number to shoot for. Too few tries, and we never know if we did enough. Too many attempts, and we put the other person off.

  • http://www.darrenchow.com Darren Chow

    I think 8 to 10 attempts would be a good number to shoot for. Too few tries, and we never know if we did enough. Too many attempts, and we put the other person off.

Related posts:

  1. The Power of Turning Prospects Off
  2. How to Lose the Interest of Your Prospects
  3. How to Respond When the Prospect Chooses Another Vendor
  4. Questions to Ask Inbound Marketing Prospects
  5. Pain Points: Motivating Prospects to Action

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