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Please help me with giving advice on cold calling

Thread title: Please help me with giving advice on cold calling
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08-14-2011, 07:37 AM
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  Old  Please help me with giving advice on cold calling

I am just wondering if the users of this forum, would be kind enough to give me advice, on what to say when cold calling potential clients. Please help I am not good with cold calling and I am a freelance Web Designer. Thanks in advance.

Sorry I have just realised that I have posted this in the wrong forum, can someone please move it to the best forum?

08-14-2011, 12:49 PM
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It seems to me that the current trend is toward something called "warm calling" rather than cold calling. In the US, comprehensive (if toothless) consumer legislation against unsolicited sales calls and concern about resources wasted by unsolicited bulk mail has trickled down into businesses. If you can demonstrate to the people you contact that you are not wasting their time you're half-way there. (Well, maybe a third of the way.)

If you have a large list of cold-calling prospects, you might want to start by ordering them by. . .something that relates positively to you. Specialize in working with large corporations? Rank your list by income. Want to work with people who have lousy websites? Rank your list old-to-new by date the existing site went live. See yourself as the kind of specialist who can jump into a design department and fill in at the last minute? Start by looking for firms that have a design department.


You can make your prospecting more successful by:

1. recognizing that it is self-defeating to call people you don't know and convince them to hire you as the answer to their problems...whatever those problems are. (Though a first call as a needs-assessment rather than a hire me call is not a bad idea.) If the purpose of your call is to sell your services then you need to be able to articulate specifically what you do and why the client should hire you.

2. spending more time doing research up front. A list of telephone numbers for businesses that would purchase your services is just the start. Spend the time learning about the business.
  • Do they have an in-house design department?
  • Who is its head?
  • If there is none, who oversees design duties (or brand management, or marcom in general)?
  • How sophisticated is their own web page?
  • Who are their clients?
  • Are they in a position--realistically--to recommend you to work for their clients?

When you've identified a person with whom you can speak about your services, find out about her or him. How long has s/he been at this job? What are her/his specialties? It there a point at which you can make a personal as well as a professional connection?

There is more of course.

The result of good preliminary research is that you don't waste time calling the people who will never ever hire you, and you have a better sense of where your services fit into the bigger picture of those who might.

3. taking a page from the Big Book of Networking and consider the sales call a 2-way street. What--in addition to the money-for-work exchange--can you offer each other? Taking the time to get to know prospects can make all the difference. In particular, it will keep your use of the research you do from making you seem like a creepy stalker.

4. thinking about how you present yourself in your calls (phone, in-person, virtual, other). A very famous newspaperman of my parents' generation tells a wonderful story about his first job as a door-to-door magazine subscription salesperson. His opening line, he said, was "You wouldn't be interested in a subscription to [Magazine], would you? He learned, eventually, that this was not a great way to open a sales call.

But it's more than that, too. Make sure you are clear in your mind what you have to offer and why this firm or person should hire you before you dial the number or walk in the door. If people will see you make sure you're dressed appropriately, your teeth brushed and hair combed recently. (You may think "I look messy because I'm busy." Potential clients may see "this person can't keep him- or herself in order. How can I expect them to give me a well-organized web design?")

5. not taking rejection personally. When someone says "thanks but no thanks"--or even "no, go away"--the secret meaning is not "you're a horrible person and I hope something terrible happens to you soon."

So, that's a start. Others here will no doubt have more to say.

08-14-2011, 09:55 PM
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Thanks for that, Lowengard.

I work in Australia as a freelance Web Designer, and am aware that there is a Do Not Call Register for residential land lines, not for businesses.

Here is what I am going to say to prospective clients, whilst speaking to the appropriate person in charge of the business:
Hello, my name is xxx xxx. I am a local Website Designer, and am calling to see if I can help you with building a website for your business. I believe that your business would benefit from having a website. I have built successful websites for xxx, xxx and many other local businesses within the last 6 years.

With the above, I am wanting advice on whether that is going work.

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08-15-2011, 11:56 AM
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I know nothing about you or your business or business norms and standards where you work, so it would be difficult to tell you whether it would or wouldn't "work."

You could try it to see what kind of response you get.

It's a reasonably classic psychological sales gambit to lead the person on the other line to agree to something with/from you. You want to start discussion--"May I send you some information about my company?".

I assume you're going after clients who have no website, otherwise you might say something like "I'd like to offer you a free assessment of your website. If there are at least 3 points on which I believe I can help you improve the site to meet your goals, I'll call back to schedule an appt."

And, if you are going for firms that have no website, be sure to be prepared to explain why this might be important for their business.

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