Five Effective Ways to Master Your Follow Up Call
44% of salespeople give up after the first follow-up. Just to put things into perspective, 80% of successful deals require at least five follow-ups and multiple calls to close.
The fortune is in the follow-up…quite literally. Of the million things sales reps have to deal with, following up is such a key aspect of the job. You’re jumping from one call to the next, talking to new prospects, filling out your CRM and trying to stay on top of new leads. Inevitably, deals and follow-ups will fall through the cracks. Here are five ways you can master the follow-up after each call and close more deals.
1- Set the right follow-up expectations during the call – At the end of each call, ask your prospects what they think would be the best next steps. Use this to gauge their interest and then suggest your own action items. Of the several thousand calls we analyzes every month, most allocate around seven minutes to clarify next steps. It has been analyzed that over 80% of calls will run over time so allocating just enough time for next steps prepares you well for the next interaction
If you next steps, outline how you will be reaching back out to them. If the goal is to book another meeting, try to have them open their calendar in front of you and confirm a time before the end of the call.
2- Remember to email before and after the call – You’ve got a calendar full of appointments. That’s a good sign, but many of these calls are not going to happen because the prospect will get busy and forget. Reminders are important at least 24 hours before an upcoming meeting and within 24 hours after a meeting. There have seen 16% increase in the number of prospects that showed up due to sending these time sensitive emails. At the end of the day, you are asking prospects for their time. It’s our responsibility to keep them in the loop. It also helps build momentum because the worst feeling is waiting on that call and not seeing anyone join the meeting.
Post meeting follow-ups should briefly summarize what was discussed as well as the key next steps. You don’t have to write a page long email. Something short and courteous works better but make sure to put the ball in their court as well as owning up to what you will do after the call.
3- Track follow-up tasks vigorously inside your CRM – The first thing you should go through every morning is your CRM, to see who you need to touch base with and which folks have not opened their emails yet. An easy to use CRM is a huge advantage when you can have your follow-up emails automatically logged. This helps you continue the conversation and gives you all the info you need to see in one place like who is opening their emails and what sort of follow-up templates are working.
4- Make sure the call to action is clear – Don’t ask for too much in follow-up emails. Even if you are doing everything right, response rates are naturally going to be low. This is especially true if they are coming after cold calls. The best thing you can do is keep your requests simple. Don’t send 10 different links asking them to take multiple steps. If you are trying to get a follow-up meeting, keep the context to just that. Not all follow-up emails are about scheduling a meeting., sometimes it’s waiting on them to send something back or pay an invoice.
It can get pretty frustrating when you start feeling like you’re repeating yourself. When this happens, space out your cadences. Don’t assume that they are ignoring you on purpose. If you have that attitude, it’s going to be tougher than ever to follow-up. As long as you are not pestering them and they haven’t explicitly said no, continue following up with the best intentions.
5- Have a specific reason for touching base – As stated in number 4, while it is important to keep your call to actions simple, you also don’t want to be following up for the sake of following up. During every interaction, try to give back a little bit of value. If the prospect’s company was in the news or there are important developments happening, bring that up. This is where it is so important to actually pay attention during your previous interactions. You may want to skim your previous calls to be certain of key topics and phrases from previous calls. This will help you remember the subtle details and build their follow-up conversations on those small facts that the prospect mentioned on the call. It’s the subtle details that help you send personalized follow-ups and show that you were paying attention. Treat each follow-up as an opportunity to provide incremental value. Eventually, it will pay off and you will get the response you were looking for.
There are many ways to follow-up. Templates will only get you so far. The key to good follow-ups is personalization and persistence. Be proactive and have all the information in front of you. Half the battle is retrieving past conversations and interactions and knowing when to follow up.