Check their pulse
Once the conversation picks back up, whether it’s on the same call or a follow-up phone call or meeting, be ready to listen. Ask if they have any concerns or see any red flags. The information you gather at this stage of the process will be hugely valuable as you move to close the deal and deliver great insight to inform conversations with future prospects.
Create a schedule
It’s said that timing is everything—and that’s especially true in sales. It’s important to space out your follow-up communications to maximize impact and results. There is plenty of research out there around the best time of day to call or send emails. However, the ideal time will depend on the individual deal and the personalities involved. Use your best judgment, and determine a schedule that will work best for the deal at hand.
Once you settle on a follow-up schedule, it’s important to document it. In a detailed diagram or chart, outline when each call and email follow-up should happen.
During a Sales Hacker webinar, Ryan Guptill, Enterprise Sales Manager at SurveyMonkey, explained how his sales team has used Lucidchart to coordinate account-based strategies:
“We’ve actually developed in Lucidchart a whole account plan that hordes the information from Salesforce from everyone we’ve worked with… so we can easily share the information back and forth.”
From negotiation to signing: How to project manage your next deal
Let’s say you’ve made it past the early introductions and you’re having real, substantive conversations about the value your product can bring to the table. The customer is excited—they see the vision and recognize it as a true solution. That’s a huge win.
However, a lot can happen between getting buy-in and getting that final signature. Follow these tips to get you to the finish line.
The negotiation stage: Show your value, then show patience
When you’ve got a quota to meet, it can be tempting to do whatever it takes to close the deal. However, it’s important to remember that you’re a salesperson, not an order taker. You’re selling value, not a commodity. And it’s your job to assess your prospect’s needs, address their objections, and deliver solutions to meet their specific needs.
So, whether you’re selling into an SMB business or an enterprise organization, resist offering a discount right out of the gate. Make the connection, show the value—then pause. Give your prospect time to process the information you’ve told them. This gives you, the sales rep, time to process the situation, too.
- Don’t discount out of the gate.
- Don’t be an order taker. You’re selling value, not french fries.
- Whenever possible, connect in person.
- Make verbal agreements over the phone.
- Document the process on paper.
- Be prepared to walk away.
- Show your ROI.