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Can CSRs become
sellers?
by Dave Kahle
Distributors
often want inside salespeople to do some proactive sales activities
each day. They want customer service representatives to use some of
their time to shift into the proactive mode to make outbound phone
contact to existing and new business.
They
often ask, how do you get inside sales to be proactive? Answer: You don’t.
It
is far easier to refloat the Titanic than it is to get a group of
essentially reactive customer service-type
personalities to change their mode of operation to make proactive
phone calls. That’s because of the personality
of the typical inside/customer service person.
Generally,
the people who fill these positions are very reactively oriented. If a
customer calls them with a
problem, they will knock down walls to fix the problem and help the
customer. They are great helpers and
problem-solvers. That personality characteristic is one
of their strengths, and one of the reasons they are good
in that job.
However,
if you ask them to make 10 phone calls to people who are not expecting
the call — proactive
calls, in other words — the typical customer service
representative will lose sleep the night before worrying about it. And
tomorrow, when they are supposed to do this proactive calling, they
will discover that the amount of other work they have to do has
swollen and crowded out the time they had dedicated to proactive phone
calls. They rarely get to it because “other stuff” gets in the
way.
So,
the first answer to the question of how you get inside sales to become
proactive is, “Don’t bother trying.” You will be swimming against the current, expending great
quantities of time and energy trying to make
something work that is probably not going to work. You’ll find
yourself and your inside salespeople becoming increasingly frustrated.
This frustration can spill over into other portions of the job,
poisoning an otherwise positive work atmosphere.
Instead,
hire someone who can be totally dedicated to proactive work. Keep
their job description pure: no
reactive work, only proactive calls.
There
is a rule here: When a person has responsibility for both reactive and
proactive calls, the reactive
will always swell disproportionately, crowding out
the proactive.
As
an alternative, it is possible that you have one
customer service person who is a bit different from the rest, whose
personality leads you to believe that he/she might actually enjoy
proactive calling. If that’s the case, then consider creating a new
job for this person and
having him/her do all the proactive work for
the department.
Follow
these guidelines
Now,
it may be that the circumstances of your
situation will not allow you to hire a new person or
create a new position for an existing employee. If that is the case,
then be guided by these guidelines:
1)
Make the proactive task extremely specific.
Your
directions should not be, “Call 10 people and see if they need
anything.” Instead, the
task should be, “From 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. every Tuesday, call the 10
people on the list I give you, and make this 50-word presentation
which I have written out for you, word for word.”
The
more specific the task, the more likely it is to
happen. The more general your direction to them,
the more likely that they will find it difficult to follow.
2)
Train them in the task.
Don’t
expect that they automatically know how to do what you want them to
do. Hold a two-hour training session. Have everyone role-play the
phone call several times. Identify all the possible responses. Create
strategies for each. Get them to memorize the script.
By
doing this kind of training, you are accomplishing two things. First,
you are improving their skills in the specific tasks you’ve assigned
to them, making it more likely they will accomplish it effectively.
Second, and maybe even more important, you will have enhanced their
confidence in their ability to do this, and altered their self-image
in a positive way. If they see themselves as being competent at this,
if they really believe they
can do this successfully, they will be much more likely
to attempt it.
In
our “Sales Power for Non-Salespeople” training seminars, for
example, we spend much time just working on their self-image,
understanding that if they harbor a negative image of their ability to
do proactive work, no amount of management intervention will help.
3)
Measure and publish their progress.
Keep
track of how many calls each person makes, and how successful each
call is. Share those numbers with everyone in the group. This adds to
the perception that they can, indeed, do this thing that you want them
to do, because they see their colleagues doing so successfully.
4)
Reward all success.
When
someone has a successful call, praise that person in front of
everyone. Lavishly reward them for doing what you asked them to do.
Success begets success. Make a big deal of every person’s success so
they all feel more capable of doing this part of their job.
Transforming
essentially reactive customer service
people into proactive salespeople is a task that is harder than almost
anyone anticipates, and is, in many cases, next to impossible.
Typically, managers who want to make this transformation are sales
managers who have years of sales experience. To them, making some
proactive phone calls is no big deal. Everyone can do it.
That
may be true from their perspective, but it is not true from the
point-of-view of the customer service
representatives who may be asked to do something
difficult and threatening for them.
Dave
Kahle, called the guru of distributor sales, will lead a presentation
entitled “What
is the future of the distributor sales force” at
10 a.m. and again at 1 p.m. at the I.D.A./ISMA Fall Convention Nov.
23.
For more information, or to contact the author, e-mail info@davekahle.com,
phone
(800) 331-1287 or visit www.davekahle.com.
This article originally appeared in
the I.D.A./ISMA Fall Convention 2002 issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright
2002. back
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