At Eureos, it happens more and more often that we receive inbound calls for Webmecanik. After 2 years of pivoting like crazy to finally distill the right offering with the right business model, it’s a bit like when Indiana Jones discovers the Holy Grail. A kind of apotheosis.
And yet, everything starts here. In particular with basics like knowing how to answer the phone properly.
When we are busy, answering the phone tends to become a lower priority and sometimes results in missed opportunities. There are simple ways to maximize our time. And it is easy potential that we must know how to seize.
Answering the phone
Even though we have set up a telephone answering service with our partner Lunyk, we try to take as many inbound calls as possible in order to capitalize on our caller’s momentum.
Be enthusiastic!
That may seem trivial, but after a long, hard day, it is sometimes difficult to get into the right frame of mind to take a call. While actors and singers are masters of getting themselves in the zone, I am not—not yet—a studio actor. We need to speak enthusiastically to our prospect, clearly state our questions and answers. We also need to choose our words carefully while trying to empathically visualize the issue raised. This is the ideal time to get to know our contact: they are available and willing! We just need to make sure we keep their interest on the phone and make it a wonderful welcome experience.
Qualify
- Demonstrate a need or want to buy our solutions
- Have the power to buy what we sell
- Have a budget to purchase our products and services
Gather information
- Who they are, including the correct spelling of names,
- How to contact them (phone, email),
- Details about current wants or needs,
- Timeline (choice, decision, implementation)
- Budgets (get an order of magnitude: one thousand, fifty thousand, 1 million?)
- How the caller discovered our company / solution,
- Solutions and services they are primarily interested in,
- Competitors consulted and their opinion of them.
Prepare a mental script
Ask follow-up questions
There is no point waiting for the caller to volunteer the reason for their call and the details of what they need. From the very start of the conversation, the person must feel professionally guided toward the solution to their explicit and, above all, implicit questions. I ask questions right from the start of the call to help them move forward smoothly and begin to build a relationship in which my interlocutor will determine whether we are the right people to work with them.
Empathy and memory
Describe the next steps
I often ask a colleague after a call that seems very promising what the next step is. If the question of budget often poses a problem for our Judeo-Christian brain (“money is bad”), the one that will commit our interlocutor also often causes difficulty.
Before ending each call, discussing what will happen next is an important step that makes you look professional by leaving no room for confusion. What’s more, I hate feeling that I have wasted time on the phone because of a lack of follow-up.
Summarize the call
Here again, summarizing the call is a key point.
- our interlocutor already has a good impression of how we can later manage their project methodically,
- I share my understanding in writing and give my caller the opportunity to react and add to it,
- we put our reports on Basecamp, so I share the information with my colleagues who will subsequently work on this project and with my partners whom I involve upstream.
In conclusion, with a bit of method, every call can be handled effectively. That is to say, we will provide the right information to our interlocutor and save everyone time. Whatever my role and whatever I am busy with at the time, I must be able to convert a hot prospect into a customer.
Call us now at +33 4 56 19 00 90 for France