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You have to promise that none of these things are true

Posted: Mon Jan 27, 2025 10:26 am
by rifat28dddd
You can see why they might pass. To make cold calling work, you have to ask for a meeting where your dream client receives the value.

Asking for big commitments early on causes resistance
If your “ask” is open-ended when it comes to time, you frighten your dream client off. They believe you may wear out your welcome by sitting in front of them for 90 or 120 minutes.

Even asking for an hour can be too much. A smaller commitment, like 20 or 30 minutes instead of an open-ended request, is more palatable. And your dream client can say “yes,” confident that they can bail out if you aren’t creating value.

Cold calling won’t work if you don’t ask for a meeting twice
You should expect a “no” to your request for a meeting on your first attempt. Your dream client says “no” to everyone who calls, not knowing how to tell who is worth meeting and who isn’t.

The first attempt elicits an objection, a test to see if you bahamas telegram data might be worth meeting. You must ask twice.

You can’t succeed at cold calling without resolving your prospect’s fears or concerns
They might say, “We are already working with someone.” OR “We are happy with the people we work with now.” You will also hear, “Just mail me information,” and “I don’t have time right now.”

None of these objections to a meeting is likely true
In fact, some of your competitors are meeting with people who gave them these objections.

Your prospect’s real concern is that you aren’t going to make a meeting worth their while, that you don’t have any real insight, that you can’t really help them, and that they are going to regret meeting with you.