Situation
Christine has been working through a tough month. Slow growth, few call backs and proposals out and waiting for answers. She gets a call from an old prospect that has always been a friendly voice and asks to see her. He explained that he is interested in making a change and always liked her. Can she come and talk to him. The prospect stall, no, they are excited to move forward!!
Christine sets a time, jumps in the car and goes! After some small talk, then she explains some of the differences in who they are now using and Christine’s company’s features and benefits since he’s last spoken to her. He listens carefully to all of Christine’s thoughts and ideas and even took notes. He had questions for her and she answered them all.
She left with the feeling that the two of them were on the same page and he certainly seemed to feel it was a good fit. Christine sends him the information he requested and said she’d call next week. After calling, texting, emailing…crickets. It was such a great prospect, they were so excited! Right? She doesn’t even see the prospect stall.
The Problem
Christine is in that familiar, albeit uncomfortable, position of having to chase a prospect who told her that they were interested. But, based on their failure to commit, it appears, not so much. Initially, they seemed very convincing in their interest regarding your product or service (as they nearly always are). Since then, Christine’s tactic has been to try to get their ear so that she can tell her story more convincingly, provide a comprehensive review of your features and benefits, and handle any objections that might be blocking the sale. To that end you’ve been persistent, called at least weekly, sometimes more. But that has yielded no tangible results and now she’s feeling like she is becoming a pest.