Lost Password? Register
Dealing with Unreturned Phone Calls Print E-mail
Written by Ford Harding   

Last week my contact management software reminded me to call Lois.  She is the logical point of contact at a firm where I would like to do business.  I have known Lois for five years and her boss for six.  Over those years I have made 25 calls to one or the other of them, and exactly five have been returned.  The last time I spoke with Lois, she informed me that they were working with a competitor.  That was almost three years ago.  Since then all efforts to contact Lois and her boss by phone have gone into a void.  A few e-mails lobbed in for variety have also received no response.

What should I do?  What would you do?

Dealing With Unreturned Phone Calls The answer, of course, depends on the reason my calls have gone unreturned.  A little voice inside me says that Lois and her boss want nothing to do with me.  But I have learned through many years of experience that it is the voice of my own insecurities.  More probably, they find us too expensive and are uncomfortable saying so.  Or they realize that my calls are not urgent and treat them as such.  Or they are just busy.  Still, three years is a long time.  Whatever the reason, I have little enthusiasm for making the call.  Another little voice inside me says that this is a waste of time, that nothing will ever come of calling these people.  Once again, experience responds, cautioning me that one more call will cost me little, to which the first little voice says that a time comes to give up and refocus one’s energies elsewhere.

My deliberations were interrupted, and I put off deciding what to do.

This is a true story about a client I have been pursuing, except Lois’s name came up on my tickler file a couple of months ago, not last week.  I did call and this time Lois called me back to invite me to pitch on some work.  There was only one competitor and our chances of winning were good.  Today she called to give us the go ahead.

I have many such stories after 30 years of business development.  Over the years I have learned that an unreturned phone call means that someone did not return my call and little more.  Others reinforce this belief.  Christy Williams, a friend of mine, ran into a contact she had been trying to reach for months, leaving many messages.  All her calls went unreturned.  When she met the man at a conference, he greeted her enthusiastically saying that he had recently referred her to a prospective client.  She thanked him and said, “Let’s stay in touch.” “What do you mean?”  he responded, “We’ve been in touch.”  He equated her unreturned phone calls with their being in touch.

A big part of rain making is persistence.  Still, several times a week a name comes up on my tickler system of someone who has not responded to previous calls.  And still, after all these years, the little voice inside me says to give up, that it is not worth the effort, that the person doesn’t like me and doesn’t want to talk with me.  It is by learning to override that voice that I have become successful.




top 10 - nominatedwidgetseptember-3.jpg








 

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)add comment

Write a comment
smaller | bigger
password
 

busy

Ford Harding
About the author:

Ford Harding is president and founder of Harding & Company.  He is the author of Rain Making 2nd Edition - Attract New Clients No Matter What Your Field (Adams Media). His firm, Harding & Company , consults to professional firms on sales. You can enjoy his blog at www.hardingco.com/blog . He can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Read More >>
 
< Prev   Next >
 

Welcome to Salesopedia

Sales Poll

When did you last invest in your personal development?
 
 

Free Newsletter

 

Quote of the day

A leader is most successful when people barely know he exists. When his work is done, his aim fulfilled, his troops will feel they did it themselves.
-Lao-Tzu

Tell a friend about Salesopedia

Latest Comments

The #1 Secret to Closing More Sales
that's pretty general information give examples or scenarios that fit the information. for example what are some of the obstacles or objections
Moving Sales Out of the Dark Ages
You'd think with the evangelizing of CRM systems since the early 2000s that this problem would have evaporated, but it's still surprising to me how many people in sales still do not and have not defin...