Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Should You Choose Cold Calls, Cold Emails or Both?


Two tried and tested ways to get in touch with potential customers exist in sales: the cold call and the cold email.
Some salespeople favor calls. Some reps swear by emails. But is one method of contacting a prospect better than the other? Read on to learn more about the benefits and drawbacks of both.

The control of the cold call

The very mention of the cold call is enough to turn off some prospects, and even some reps. Who likes being interrupted in the middle of their workday to hear a sales pitch? Yet the sales cold call has historically been one of the most effective tools for sales reps.
One of the biggest strengths of cold calling is the control a phone call gives the sales rep, according to author and trainer John Chepyha.
“The No. 1 rule that people miss out on is: The person that’s asking questions is always the person who’s in control of that conversation,” he said. “One of the things with email is you have no control over that conversation.”
Chepyha advises his clients to avoid the sales pitch at the beginning of the call, and to keep their introductions short and sweet before asking their primary question. (For example, his own question is “Out of curiosity, can you tell me how important cold calling is to your new business development process?”)
And then Chepyha tells reps to listen to what the prospect says. An open-ended question like his will result in one of three possible answers — yes, no or maybe —  and an experienced cold caller will be ready for each of those answers.
“One of the biggest benefits of cold calling is the fact that it’s 100% predictable,” he said. “You have to understand what the answer is going to be to the questions that you’re asking. When I ask my primary question, I know what the possible answers are, and I know how to respond to each and every one of them.”
Cold call expert Kraig Kleeman loves cold calling for its yield.
“I have one client that calls the chief level executives, literally people with the word chief in their title, for an average size company of $40 billion,” he said. “We get a 26% conversion rate, meaning we do 100 outreaches. I’m not talking response; I’m talking 100 outreaches produces 26 meetings.”
The problem with traditional cold calls, he said, is that people usually don’t want to be on the receiving end of one.
“No-one — no-one — wants an unsolicited sales call. They run for the hills from that sort of thing,” he said.
His cold calling methodology? Kleeman and his clients research the issues that are important to their target buyers, put together information that will interest those buyers, and call buyers to invite them to a 15-minute research briefing on those issues. The goal of his calls: Get prospects into a meeting so that reps can talk to the buyers and learn more about those buyers’ needs.
“What sellers need to do is learn to lead with fact-based research that is highly relevant and highly germane to the professional mandates and the personal values, the core values, of their targets,” Kleeman said.
Despite cold calling’s benefits, there are many reps who don’t like making calls; they fear failure and rejection.
“That’s a self-sabotaging form of protecting ourselves from failure,” Chepyha said. “Even though cold calling is something that we do all the time, we don’t understand the process of making it work effectively, and that’s where the problem comes in for people.”
He’s not a huge fan of email because email lacks the same control.
“You don’t know whether it was read or not. You don’t know what the reaction to it is,” he said.

The incredible, scalable cold email

While a cold email doesn’t allow a rep to control a conversation the way they can when they’re on the phone with a prospect, the cold email has a major advantage over the cold call —  reps can send out a lot of email in a short span of time.
The scalability of cold emailing is great for sales teams that don’t have the resources to make a lot of cold calls.
“You can mail merge out 1,000 emails a lot faster than you can make 1,000 cold calls,” Heather R Morgan, CEO of Salesfolk, a company that produces cold emails, said, “and once you nail the right email template for your audience, there’s no difference between sending one, 100, 1,000, or 10,000 emails, assuming you have a good quality list with proper targeting.”
The trick is to do your research, not to be spammy. The important thing to remember, Morgan said, is that you’re trying to start a conversation.
“Emails should NEVER be self-focused monologues that ramble on about the sales rep’s company,” she said. “They need to make it seem like the rep actually cares about the prospect and their business, which doesn’t work well when you ramble on about yourself.”
Emails ought to feel personal and thoughtful, and they should be targeted, if not at a specific person, at a persona. (Morgan believes in building comprehensive buyer personas.)
“I like to take a sample of about 10 to 15 leads from a given persona or audience, such as ‘VP sales at SaaS companies of 100-500 employees’ and do thorough research on those 10-15 individuals,” she said. “I try to get as much information as I can for these individuals and then try to see where there’s overlap between them. Then I can create really targeted email templates that can scale to the hundreds or thousands, so long as the audience is still the same.”
Morgan said that most email campaigns should be aiming for a positive/neutral response rate of between 10-35%. If the response rate is less than 10%, something is wrong.
Asked what she thinks about cold calls, Morgan said there’s no downside to being good on the phone — most reps will have to get on the phone with their customers at some point. Still, as people become more reluctant to pick up the phone, many reps are less and less interested in cold calling.
“Some people might say ‘If you can’t cold call, then don’t be in sales,’ but as the world becomes increasingly digital, I think the salespeople who are not able to ‘sell digitally’ via email and social will be the ones that really fall behind,” she said.

The combined power of cold calls and cold emails

That said, why choose between calls and email? There is no need to eschew cold calling in favor of cold emails, or vice versa. Both calls and emails are usually used together in sales campaigns.
Asking which is better isn’t a fair question, Kleeman said.
“That question lacks intellectual skill. That question actually begs intellectual poverty,” he said. “The truth is that the best scenario is not either/or. It’s both/and.”
Morgan said that salespeople need to choose the method that works best for them, and especially for their prospective customers.
“Know your audience, and do what makes sense for them. See what works, and triple down on that,” she said.
In general, cold emails and cold calls share the same guiding principles:
Successful sales reps should be thoughtful. They should respect their prospects’ time and needs. Chepyha advises reps to acknowledge, upfront, the fact that a cold call is, essentially, an interruption.
“Every time you call somebody on the phone, whether it’s your mother or your best friend or your worst enemy or a complete stranger — it doesn’t matter who you’re calling — you’re always, always, interrupting them,” he said. “You want to establish rapport, especially with somebody you’ve never talked to before, so you’ve got to acknowledge that right at the beginning of the call.”
Sales calls and sales emails aren’t about the caller — they’re about the person you’re calling. Sales reps should try to get the prospects to talk about their needs, rather than rambling on about the product they’re selling.
You’ll need several touches before you get a response. Chepyha said that a rep can expect to call a prospect about seven or eight times. Morgan says that emailers should send out eight emails to get the maximum response rate.
If your pitch isn’t persuasive, it doesn’t matter what format you’re using to contact your prospects. If the script you’re using for your calls isn’t well thought-out, or if you’re just copy-pasting bad emails and blasting them out to everyone on your contact list, you’re not going to get a response.
“Everything gets ignored when it’s not compelling. The same goes for cold calls and everything else,” Morgan said. “People aren’t going to respond to you unless you’re interesting and add value that’s relevant to them. Solve their problems or help them be more efficient/make more money: then they’ll pay attention.”

Thursday, May 26, 2016


How to Create a High-Converting HTML Landing Page For Dental Labs

By David H. Khalili, 

There are few things easier than accessing all of the world’s information. All that's required is for you to click an ad, a link, or copy a web address in your browser and you're likely to find everything you were looking for and more.
It wasn’t always this easy, though.
The year was 1989. Tim Berners-Lee was working at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, where he proposed a global hypertext project — a project that came to be known as the World Wide Web.
For two years Tim worked on the design, a design that included the specifications of HTML, URIs, and HTTP. By October of 1990, the World Wide Web program was available at CERN and in the summer of 1991, it became available to everyone in the world.
The world’s first website went live on August 6, 1991, and its purpose was to provide information on how users could setup a web server and create their own web pages.
That website is still live and looks like this:
html-landing-page-first-webpage
By modern standards, the page isn’t flashy or engaging, has no navigation links, no multimedia, and no real structure. Plus, it required a lot of time and HTML coding to complete.
The world has inevitably changed because of it. What hasn’t changed is that it still takes a fair bit of time to create a web page, this includes landing pages, from scratch.
This presents a bit of a problem for marketers who don’t speak the languages of code.
Yes, that’s languages — plural.
To create landing pages, by yourself, from scratch, you need to know HTML and CSS.
Let’s dive deeper into what HTML and CSS are and what role they play in creating landing pages.

What is HTML?

HTML (Hyper Text Markup Language) is used to place copy, images and other elements on a web page — helping define the page layout.
HTML consists of markup tags, and these tags are keywords surrounded by angle brackets.
To demonstrate, the picture below is a very basic example how HTML tags determine how your page is going to look:
This picture shows some very basic HTML examples.
There are different HTML tags for deciding the layout of the headlines, brand logo, images, bullet points, numbered lists, etc. While creating an HTML landing page, you need to hand code:
  1. Where your headline will be
  2. The location of the copy
  3. How to list the benefits of your service
  4. What your CTA button copy should say and where the button should be placed
Here are some common html tags for page elements:
this picture shows the most common HTML tags used in web pages
Every single landing page element needs to be written with its respective HTML tag.
When you’re finished, your HTML handiwork will look something similar to this:
this picture shows what a page looks like with HTML tags on it
Looks like just a bunch of lines, words, and characters, doesn’t it? When in fact, it’s all part of a big puzzle that generates this web page:
this picture shows what a finished page looks like that has HTML coding on it
Your published landing page will look great only if you’ve gotten all the HTML tags correctly placed in their proper locations. HTML is currently used in its fifth version and is known as HTML5 — the last numbered version, there will not be a version 6.
HTML5 includes new elements such as:
  • Semantic elements, like header, footer, and section
  • Form control attributes, for example date and time
  • Graphic elements, svg and canvas
  • Multimedia elements, audio and video
To learn more, give Codeacademy and Treehouse courses a try if you’re interested in learning how to create a simple HTML landing page.

What is CSS?

CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) are the sheets describe how the HTML elements are displayed on the web page.
The “cascading” part of CSS allows changes made on a top-level stylesheet to cascadethroughout the web page. This saves you time and allows you to make major changes to the appearance of your page without going through every single stylesheet.
HTML was created to describe the content on a page. CSS, on the other hand, was created by the World Wide Web Consortium to define the style of the page, such as the font and color of the landing page copy.
This is how a CSS example of font and color can look like:
this image shows some common example of CSS stylesheets
For the “coded do-it-yourself” landing page option, you need to combine HTML and CSS to create a page that’s worthy of generating leads.
Let’s see how that’s done.

How to create a simple HTML landing page by yourself

Start by opening a text editor – use Notepad for Windows and TextEdit for Mac. Don’t use word processors like MS Office or OpenOffice because these programs produce files that a web browser can’t read.
For HTML and CSS coding you need to start with plain text files.
Type HTML code like this into a text editor:
this image shows the first step for creating an HTML web page
Now let’s add some colors to this text with the help of CSS. Go to the HTML file and add the code in red in the “head” part of the file:
this image shows how to add CSS to an HTML tag document
This style sheet determines the color of the body copy (purple) and the background color (greenish yellow). Remember to input the correct color codes in the style sheet, or your final page won’t turn out as you intended.
This is what your page will look like:
this image shows what the front end of the HTML and CSS coded web page looks like
Next, you need to add fonts. For this add the following lines in the HTML file:
this image shows the HTML and CSS codes added to select font type and color
This is what your page looks like after adding those sections of code:
this picture shows what the front end of the HTML and CSS coded web page looks like
Now, remember, the above examples are very basic and very short. An optimized landing page would be more detailed — with images, video, a CTA, form, and be longer as well. Imagine how long that would take to code all of those elements the traditional way...
For more information, please visit DentalLabSupport.com

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Never Give Up On Your Prospect: Reviving Cold Leads



The lead has been in your organization’s sales pipeline too long. You know it. Your manager knows it. Maybe it was a hot lead at one point, but something happened. The holidays, maybe. Or maybe it was another person’s lead and you inherited it. Maybe the prospect has been putting you off. Or maybe you just went a little too long without contacting them.
Leads go cold for a variety of reasons, but that doesn’t mean you ought to abandon them, according to David H. Khalili, Founder of LabCell Dental Lab Software: Turning Cold Prospects Into Hot Customers. David said 56% of the people who indicated they are looking to buy a product are typically still in the market within six months of contact; within one year, 35% of those potential buyers are still in the market.
“Leads do not go cold as much as it is not yet their time to buy in the one-year cycle,” David said. “A rep may approach them before they are ready.”

Don’t let it get cold in the first place

According to David, leads often go cold because a sales rep fails to follow up with a prospect early enough in the sales cycle, and the prospect doesn’t remember inquiring about the product in the first place.
"if the salesperson has a comprehensive email ‘drip campaign,’ where they first get permission to stay in touch with the prospect, and then in defined intervals continue to stay in touch with that prospect — by delivering value to them in the form of articles their prospects may find valuable, inviting them to different events, delivering value-based webinars (rather than a pitch) or updates within your company through a newsletter — they are not only the first to know when changes are happening within the prospect’s business, but they are also insulating their prospect from the competition, while maintaining the integrity of that relationship,” David said. “This way, the prospect doesn’t feel, ‘Well, the only time you call me is when you want something from me.’”
Of course, despite the best effort of salespeople, leads often do go cold. And that’s when reps have to spring into action.

How to talk to a cold lead

“You should definitely review every lead again in the future,” David H. Khalili, president of DentalLabSupport.com, said. “Think of it like a ‘cold case’ that gets reopened by a detective. With a fresh perspective plus new clues, new witnesses and new technology, there are often breakthroughs. The same is true with leads that were once cold.”
Not all cold leads are worth a second glance, however. If a lead wasn’t properly qualified in the first place, Art Sobczak of Business By Phone said, it’s not worth your time to follow it up. But if a lead was pre-qualified, you should definitely give it another look.
“I suggest the more time and the further you have gone into a process, the more emphasis should be placed on revisiting a lead,” he said. “You’ve already done a lot of heavy lifting, another attempt might break the logjam.”
David suggests that reps email a cold lead first, then call. That call should remind the prospect that the last time you spoke, they didn’t seem ready to buy, so you are following up now. If they still seem non-committal, ask them a simple question: “Should I close your file?”
“No one wants the rejection of a phone call,” he said. “But for a real lead that has contacted you in the past, the most courteous thing to do is call.”
It might not be easy, but not following up is the biggest mistake a rep can make. “Only 10% to 25% of all leads are followed up,”David said. “By following up, you stand a chance of standing out.”
Following up and being too aggressive is another common error. Reps should not follow up on a cold lead and immediately ask if that person’s ready to buy.
It should be a simple follow-up, reminding the prospect they contacted you first, and updating them on what’s changed since your last interaction — a new product, for example, or a price reduction, new terms, or new features.
You should always plan to discuss something with a lead, David said. It’s a mistake to say: “Uh, I’m checking back in with you.”
“Remind them of what they were interested in previously, and then bring some new possible value to the table to re-engage them,” he said.

For more information on Lead Management, Contact DentalLabSupport.com.