The Lead
Jun 29, 2015 |
By Anthony Iannarino
You’ve probably heard about social
selling by now. But how you use social tools can affect their value.
The proponents
of social selling are right about its benefits and wrong in their criticism of
other methods of prospecting. And the critics of social
selling are right about the far greater benefits of what I call “traditional
selling” and wrong in some of their criticism of social selling. The key to
good prospecting is, was and always will be an integrated approach.
Proponents of
social selling suggest that cold calling is dead, that selling is
only serving (providing information) and that the way buyers buy has changed so
radically that you can no longer ask for a sale without alienating your
prospect. Their criticism of traditional selling is both wrong and
self-serving.
Cold calling
still works, as do all the other methods of prospecting (such as asking for
referrals, for example). Providing the right information at the right time has
always been helpful to buyers and a good strategy for salespeople. But if that
is all the value you bring, you are already being beat out by Google and
YouTube.
The social selling
proponent’s worst and most harmful critique is that asking for any kind of
commitment is too aggressive—too “sales-y”—and will irreparably damage your
relationship with your prospect. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Selling is conversations and commitments.
This criticism
is self-serving. It’s easy to sell struggling salespeople the hope that they
can acquire the prospects they need without picking up the phone. And it’s easy
to sell them your solution if they believe that cold calling doesn’t work.
Furthermore, a lot of salespeople (especially young ones) would love to believe
they can create and win new opportunities without asking for the commitments
they need.
Some of the
criticism of social selling is that it doesn’t work, that it is really just
salespeople wasting time online and that it doesn’t have a place in a
struggling sales organization. The way social selling proponents talk about
selling, you can understand the criticism. They talk about an accepted
connection request on LinkedIn as if it is as valuable as a booked
appointment.
The right
answer when it comes to prospecting is an approach that integrates the best
methodologies for what you sell, how you sell, what your buyers buy, where they
are and how you best engage with them. This is most likely some combination of
new tools for research, connecting, and nurturing relationship combined with
the old tools and methods for getting face-to-face appointments.
Use social
tools in the most effective way — by combining them with traditional
approaches.
http://www.lifehealthpro.com/2015/06/29/on-integrating-social-tools?eNL=558f110e140ba0b53f2d0484&utm_source=TheLead&utm_medium=eNL&utm_campaign=LifeHealthPro_eNLs&_LID=97648255
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