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Things to Avoid with Telephone Marketing
Marketing Know How
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Part 4 (4)
Things to Avoid with Telephone Marketing
Telephone marketing has a reputation for being ruthless, exploitive, and
inconsiderate, and yet telephone marketing actually works quite well. When does
it work and when doesn’t it? Your best chance of succeeding with a telephone
marketing campaign comes with being honest, hiring or training professional
callers who know how to handle any situation that might arise over the course of
the call, and taking good care of the customers who purchase your product or
service.
If your company is considering starting a telephone marketing campaign it is
important to do your homework beforehand. It is also important to make sure that
whoever is doing the telephone marketing is following the law and the normal
rules of civility. Sometimes it is easier to define a good telephone marketing
campaign by what it avoids than by what it does. Here is a countdown of the top
ten things to avoid when doing telephone marketing.
10. Zoning out. If your telephone marketing workers are “phoning it in” so to
speak, they may well miss out on some great opportunities. If a worker is so
focused on getting the script right that he or she doesn’t hear the caller
saying, “Good timing; my long distance plan is about to expire and I wanted to
explore my options,” you’re going to miss some real opportunities.
9. Using a robot to call people. Sure, it may be cheaper than having an actual
person doing the calling, but people are insulted to answer the phone, find a
machine talking, and then being asked to “please hold” or do something else to
get the privilege of talking to a real human being. Customers hate this.
8. Pretending to be someone you’re not or otherwise lying. “You were recommended
to receive one of our pre-approved credit card offers” skates on the thin ice of
not telling the whole truth when the customer was “recommended” by a computer
program.
7. Using inadequately or inappropriately trained staff to make telephone
marketing calls. Whether you use in-house or outsourced calling personnel, never
choose on low cost alone. You often get precisely what you pay for.
6. Giving the customer an ultimatum. “If you sign up right now you can get a
free three month extension, but unfortunately this offer expires in five
minutes.” They’ll either hate you for wasting their time or be scared into
buying something they don’t want or need, and coerced customers aren’t repeat
customers.
The prize of buying something they don’t need or want, even at a steep discount, is no prize at all.
5. Pretending that you’re doing a survey or that you’re not selling anything
when in fact you are. People are more likely to help out with a survey up front
than they would be if you called and said, “We want to sell you replacement
windows.” But that sense of being helpful quickly evaporates once your real aims
are known.
4. Telling people they’ve won a “prize” which in reality requires them to
purchase something or only “elevates” them to the next level of “play,” where
they can compete to get 40% off whatever it is. The prize of buying something
they don’t need or want, even at a steep discount, is no prize at all.
3. Making customers feel bad about their possessions even though there’s nothing
wrong with them. “Are you still using one of the old fashioned refrigerators
with the freezer on top? No wonder your cooking isn’t as good as they could be.”
It’s just mean, and if they don’t hate you immediately, they will after they
hang up.
2. Using aggressive, confrontational, and contemptuous sales tactics. Even if
you do manage to bully a certain number of people into buying your product or
service, you’ll get few to no new customer relationships, because they aren’t
going to be repeat customers after being browbeaten into buying something the
first time.
1. Using fear to sell products. Scaring people by saying that they’ll die and
their family will be in permanent financial straits if they don’t buy a life
insurance policy, or exaggerating crime statistics to get them to buy a security
system are two reprehensible ways of generating sales. If your product or
service can’t stand on its own merits, then your whole marketing strategy should
be rethought.
Undertaking a major telephone marketing campaign represents a large expenditure
of time, effort, and money. Don’t waste any of that time, effort, or money on
bad practices that are completely avoidable.
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John Sinit
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