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Chapter 9. Developing and Qualifying a Prospect Base. Prospecting. identifying potential customers prospect--someone who meets the qualification criteria established by you or your company prospect base--current and potential customers. Customer Attrition.
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Chapter 9 Developing and Qualifying a Prospect Base
Prospecting • identifying potential customers • prospect--someone who meets the qualification criteria established by you or your company • prospect base--current and potential customers
Customer Attrition • The inevitable loss of customers over a period of time • The average company loses 15-20% of its customers every year
Reasons for Customer Attrition • The customer may have a one-time need or there is an extended period of time between purchases • The customer may move to a new location outside the salesperson’s territory • A firm may go out of business or merge with another company • A loyal buyer or purchasing agent may leave the position because of promotion, retirement, resignation or serious illness • Sales are lost to the competition
“Ferris Wheel” Concept • Developed by Joe Girard--once recognized by the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s greatest salesperson • Illustrates the relationship between prospecting and loss of customers due to attrition (see page 182)
How to Improve the Quality of Prospecting • Increase the number of people who board the Ferris wheel • Improve the quality of the prospects who board the Ferris wheel • Shorten the sales cycle by quickly determining which of the new prospects are qualified prospects (need, ability and authority)
Sources of Prospects • Referrals--a prospect that is recommended by a current customer or by someone who is familiar with the product • Centers of influence, friends, and family members • Directories • Trade publications
Sources of Prospects (con’t) • Trade shows and special events • Telemarketing and e-mail • Direct-response advertising and sales letters • Web site • Computerized database
Sources of Prospects (con’t) • Cold calling--group of people who may or may not be actual prospects • Networking--people meeting people and profiting from the connections • Educational seminars • Prospecting by nonsales employees
Qualifying the Prospect • Does the prospect have a need for my product? • Does the prospect have the authority to buy my product? • Does the prospect have the financial resources to buy my product? • Does the prospect have the willingness to buy my product?
Sales Data • Includes prospect’s personal information such as name, title, address, phone, e-mail, etc.
Sales Intelligence • Gives insights into the prospect’s marketplace, their firm, their competitors, even about the prospects themselves
Managing the Prospect Base • Account analysis is to estimate the sales potential for each prospect • Sales process model is the total set of prospects being pursued at any given time • A balanced funnel enables salespeople to know how many prospects and how much revenue is needed at each stage in the sales process to meet sales projections and quotas
Pipeline Management • The process of managing all the prospects in the salesperson’s sales funnel to ensure that sales objectives are being met • Pipeline analytics is the ability to conduct sophisticated data analysis and modeling • Pipeline dashboards are at-a-glance visualizations that define, monitor, and analyze the relationships existing in the pipeline or sales funnel