Subscribe by Email

Your email:

About

Mike DamphousseMike
Damphousse

Green Leads' Founder, CEO and CMO, Mike Damphouse, writes frequently about b2b marketing, demand generation, appointment setting, lead gen, and marketing in general.

Follow Us

Alltop, confirmation that I kick ass

B2B Marketing

Lead Gen ROI Calculator

Appointment Setting Quality vs Quantity

Got Demand Gen?

 

Smashmouth B2B Blog: Sales & Marketing Demand Gen

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Introductory Appointments: Your Goal is Meeting Number Two

Submit to Digg digg it | Submit to Reddit reddit | Add to delicious delicious | Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon | Share on Facebook Facebook | Share on Twitter Twitter | Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 

Which of the following is a good sales outcome for introductory appointments?

  • Proposal: The prospect let you pitch him for 30 minutes, told you to send a proposal and CC his director, who handles these types of projects.
  • 2nd Meeting: The prospect discussed her business issues with you, you asked good questions, you shared some anecdotal stories about how some of your clients have similar issues, and she asked for a second meeting.
I know a ton of salespeople that would put the first outcome in the success category.  You got a pipeline opportunity, right?  A proposal?

Introductory Appointments
WRONG!  You got a brushoff, a more sophisticated variation of saying "send me a datasheet."  He was just letting you down easy.  What he really said was, "Here's enough hope to keep you busy for a week or two and then you can go away."  You may have pitched them, but did they hear anything?  Was any of it relevant or bring value to them?

The second scenario is far more successful.  The next stage in the sales cycle has started.  She shared her real issues with you.  You shared some value.  She wants to continue the conversation.  That's how prospects buy today.
 
Make the goal of introductory appointments threefold:
  • Show professionalism and value by having a conversation and asking questions
  • Educate the prospect just enough to get a second meeting
  • Make the second meeting follow your agenda and then satisfy theirs
It's all about the second meeting.

Comments

Currently, there are no comments. Be the first to post one!
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics

Receive email when someone replies.