Thereâs always one very nice person in my seminars who shares his favorite opening line in telephone calls: âDo you have a minute?â or its cringing cousin, âHave I called at a bad time?â
I have to restrain myself from bellowing, âNever, ever ask that question, again!!!â
Why am I so adamant?
Itâs a loserâs line, designed to avoid rejection. It puts trying to sound gentle ahead of the true goal: to make a sale or an appointment, now.
Letâs examine the dynamics of this limp overture. In context, it is usually uttered this way:
âHello, Iâm Gary Goodman with Customersatisfaction.com. Do you have a minute?â
What kind of reply can I expect to get?
âSure, I have a minute. In fact, I have all day, because I have nothing better to do than to talk to an insecure bozo like you!â
This line is a showstopper. If the listener says yes, heâs going to kick himself for green-lighting what could turn out to be a talk-a-thon.
If he gives you a qualified yes, âWell, I guess so, but just a minute,â then youâre racing against the clock, to catch his interest. Why put yourself at such a disadvantage?
In seminars, I offer this example. If I walk up to 100 strangers and ask, âWould you like a twenty-dollar bill?â Iâll bet at least half will reflexively say no. Thatâs human nature. Given a chance to resist something new, most people will find resisting, well, irresistible.
Whatâs the alternative?
Simply leave this line out, or if you must get a signal that itâs okay to continue, ask the person, âHow are you?â
Better yet, after announcing your name, the name of your company, use a credibility statement. It says, hereâs what we do, our claim to fame, why Iâve earned the right to talk with you, today.
That should make the person want to listen, while signaling that thereâs even more valuable information to come as the conversation progresses.
I know, a lot of attention has been paid lately to so-called permission marketing, opt-in lists, and other devices that supposedly help us to sell only to the already qualified and interested.
Let me tell you that âpermission sellingâ is a contradiction in terms. Selling is always an interruption. The best we can hope to do is to make it a successful one.
Dr. Gary S. Goodman, President of Customersatisfaction.com, is a popular keynote speaker, management consultant, and seminar leader and the best-selling author of 12 books, including Reach Out & Sell Someone® and Monitoring, Measuring & Managing Customer Service. A frequent guest on radio and television, worldwide, Garyâs programs are offered by UCLA Extension and by numerous universities, trade associations, and other organizations in the United States and abroad. Gary is headquartered in Glendale, California. He can be reached at (818) 243-7338 or at: gary@customersatisfaction.com.
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