Listen as a field sales rep shares his challenges of prospecting on the go, juggling meetings and proposals from his truck. The host offers insight on shifting focus from rigid time blocks to achieving daily activity goals, emphasizing the importance of micro-prospecting sessions throughout a hectic schedule. Tips abound on maximizing efficiency with scheduling techniques, logging calls, and using 'platinum hours' effectively. It's all about being persistent and adaptable in the fast-paced world of outside sales!
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volunteer_activism ADVICE
Prioritize Activity Over Time Blocks
Focus on daily activity targets, not time blocks, when you can't control your schedule.
Commit to a set number of outbound touches, like 30 calls a day, spread throughout your available time pockets.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Prepare and Track Calls Efficiently
Prepare your call list and notes in advance and keep it handy for micro prospecting sessions.
Use tools like Salesforce or spreadsheets to track calls and capture valuable information during your day.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Use Midday for List Building
Dedicate your 'platinum hour' during midday when activity is light for list building and administrative tasks.
Plan your week’s call lists on Sunday evening to maximize your weekday efficiency.
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How Ultra High Performers Leverage Sales-Specific Emotional Intelligence to Close the Complex Deal
Jeb Blount Jr.
In 'Sales EQ', Jeb Blount emphasizes the importance of emotional intelligence in sales, highlighting that emotions play a crucial role in decision-making rather than just rational logic. The book explains how top sales performers use four key pillars of Sales EQ: empathy, self-awareness, self-control, and sales drive. It also discusses the alignment of sales, buying, and decision processes, the use of micro-commitments, and the answering of critical questions that stakeholders ask themselves during the sales process. Blount provides practical advice on mastering the psychology of influence and managing emotions to achieve ultra-high sales performance.
Inked
The Ultimate Guide to Powerful Closing and Sales Negotiation Tactics that Unlock YES and Seal the Deal
Jeb Blount
INKED is a sales-specific negotiation primer that addresses the challenges faced by sales professionals in today's market. The book provides strategies, tactics, techniques, and human-influence frameworks to level the playing field against savvy buyers. It emphasizes the importance of emotional discipline, preparation, and understanding power, leverage, and motivation dynamics in negotiations. The book includes actionable advice and real-world examples to help sales professionals improve their closing rates and negotiate more effectively[1][2][5].
Fanatical Prospecting
The Ultimate Guide to Opening Sales Conversations and Filling the Pipeline by Leveraging Social Selling, Telephone, Email, Text, and Cold Calling
Jeb Blount Jr.
Fanatical Prospecting is a detailed guide that explains the importance and methods of prospecting in sales. The book outlines innovative approaches to prospecting, including the use of social media, telephone, email, text messaging, and cold calling. It emphasizes the need for a balanced prospecting methodology to avoid sales slumps and keep the pipeline full of qualified opportunities. Key concepts include the 30-Day Rule, the Law of Replacement, the Law of Familiarity, the 5 C’s of Social Selling, and various frameworks for effective prospecting. The book is designed to help salespeople, sales leaders, entrepreneurs, and executives improve their sales productivity and grow their income by consistently and effectively prospecting[1][3][5].
Kyle, a field sales rep from British Columbia, is struggling with a common prospecting challenge: how to consistently prospect when you're constantly on the move.
Kyle's situation likely resonates with many of you in outside sales. He described his typical day—starting at job sites at 7:30 AM, running between appointments, sending proposals from his truck, and working from Starbucks in between meetings. Sound familiar?
He had read my book, Fanatical Prospecting, where I advocate for dedicated time blocks for prospecting. But Kyle's reality made traditional time blocking nearly impossible. So what's a field rep to do?
What follows is the advice I gave Kyle, cleaned up and expanded so every field seller, territory manager, and outside sales road warrior can put it to work—right now.
Focus on Activity Count, Not Time Blocks
If you're in Kyle's shoes (or truck), here's my advice: Stop obsessing over time and start focusing on activity counts.
Instead of trying to carve out a rigid one- or two-hour block, set a daily activity goal. For someone in Kyle's position, committing to 30 quality outbound touches per day is likely sufficient. In my early days, I personally made 100 dials daily, no matter what—but you need to find your number.
It's amazing what you can accomplish in small pockets of time. Got 10 minutes between appointments? You can make 10 dials. These micro-prospecting sessions add up throughout your day.
Instead of asking, “How do I find two uninterrupted hours?” ask, “How many outbound touches do I need to hit my pipeline goal?”
Reverse-engineer your math. If 30 dials typically create two meetings—and two meetings a day keep your funnel fat—commit to 30 dials, period.
Activity over chronology. Whether you burn those calls in one block or in six five-minute bursts between site visits doesn’t matter. Hitting the activity target does.
Prospecting is like push-ups: the muscle only cares that you completed the reps, not whether you did them all at once.
Practical Fanatical Prospecting Implementation for Field Reps
Here's how to make this work in the field:
Set up your list the night before: Don't waste precious morning energy building your call list. Have everything ready to go when you start your day. A pre-built list eliminates the mental drag of figuring out who to call while you’re juggling mud, invoices, and traffic.
Use the gaps: Those small windows between appointments are prospecting gold. Five minutes here, ten minutes there—use them.
Capture information efficiently: Most calls will go to voicemail. For the ones who answer, quickly note any important information to input into your CRM later. Don't try to update your CRM in real-time between every call.
Be safe: Obviously, don't text and drive. Pull over if you need to take notes or send follow-up messages.
What Kyle is experiencing is common for outside sales professionals. You can't prospect the same way as an inside sales rep with a dedicated desk and phone. Your office is your vehicle. Your desk is wherever you can find a flat surface. Your schedule is dictated by customers and job sites.
Create a Mobile Prospecting Kit
Salesforce is great—when you have stable Wi-Fi and two hands on a keyboard. Field reps need something that works when the LTE bars dip to one.
Print or export your list with phone numbers and a skinny note column.
Hyperlink mobile numbers in a notes app so a single tap dials the next contact—no scrolling, no fumbling.
Use a hands-free auto-dial app (tons exist) if local regulations allow. Safety first; quotas second.
Capture notes on paper or dictate voice memos. At day’s end, batch-enter critical intel into your CRM. Perfect data hygiene is optional; capturing deal-moving facts is mandatory.
Rule of thumb: Log information, not activity. Managers love call-count metrics, but conversations and follow-up triggers win deals.