
What Surprises Salespeople the Most When They Pick Up the Phone (Money Monday)
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
00:00
Neglect Causes Customer Loss
Jeb details how neglect—not price or product—causes nearly 70% of customer losses and describes the emotional fallout.
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I've been intrigued by all of the LinkedIn posts lately from sales professionals, leaders, and experts proclaiming the phone is back! Even the “phone-is-dead” evangelists seem to have had a change of heart and are encouraging salespeople to “phone a customer.”
My favorite posts are from salespeople who took this advice, called a customer, and were surprised—even stunned—to discover that their customer actually wanted to talk. It’s more proof that buyers are starving for real, authentic, human-to-human conversations with their sales reps and account managers.
When Sellers Make Their First Call in Years
I saw one post yesterday from an account manager who said that, for the first time in years, he had picked up the phone and called a customer. In his post, he described how rewarding it was to have a real, live conversation—as if this was some new revelation. He said that even though the phone was “old school,” he had given it a try because his customers weren’t responding to his emails anymore.
Although I'm super pleased to see that salespeople are rediscovering the power of the humble phone, I was bothered by this particular post because it is an indictment of just how far the sales profession has fallen over the past few years.
It also exposes the malpractice of this guy’s leadership team. Seriously, how is it possible that his leaders and company allowed him to avoid having actual conversations with his customers for years?
Pick Up the Phone and Talk to Your Customers
Account managers who are not talking with their customers, the ones who keep their customers at digital arm's length and send random “just checking in emails,” are swinging the door open and inviting competitors in.
When you fail to proactively manage relationships—when you don’t talk with your customers—those customers end up talking to your competitors and considering other options.
Nearly 70 percent of customers are lost due to neglect. Not prices, not products, not the economy, not aggressive competitors.
Neglect! They feel the sting of being taken for granted. If you've ever been taken for granted (and I bet you have), you know that it makes you feel unimportant, small, and resentful, which can lead to the feeling of contempt.
Resentment and contempt are the two most powerful negative emotions in the pantheon of human emotions. They are the gangrene of relationships, festering below the surface, slowly rotting away the connections that bind people together until the relationship is destroyed.
The good news is the secret to defending accounts is completely in your control. It’s simple. Pay attention to your customers.
And guess what? A simple, regular phone call can make all the difference. Just pick up the phone, dial their number, and ask or say:
How are you doing?
What can I do to help you?
I have an idea for you.
Have a great weekend.
Thank you for your business.
Regular telephone contact ensures that you are top of mind with customers. Hearing your voice lets them know that you care. It doesn’t need to be anything particularly special. You don’t need to schedule it on their calendar. You don’t need a reason to tell your customers that you appreciate them.
Pick up the phone and say “hello” because it doesn’t cost a thing to pay attention to your customers.
A “How AI Will Replace You” Reality Check
But it’s not just that account manager and his company. Rather than picking up the phone and talking with people, sales professionals everywhere have replaced this beautiful, synchronous sales communication tool with email.
This aversion to talking with people by phone has become so acute that at least half of Sales Gravy’s training and consulting engagements have focused on one thing: Teaching and compelling salespeople to pick up the damn phone and just have real-time human conversations.
So, let’s start with a reality check:
The telephone is not old school.
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