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Home Page › Business & Companies › Sales
 

Take the Contract with You

 

Author: Wendy Weiss

I learned something very interesting this week. Thankfully, what I learned was really at no ones expense. What I learned is that when you are on a sales call and you believe there is a possibility (even a remote one) that you may close, always take your contract or letter of agreement with you! This does not apply if your contracts are so complex that it takes a team of attorneys to sort through it. If, however, your contract or letter of agreement is one or two pages long take it with you.

The above rule is something Ive known for a long time. I have to admit I havent always followed it. Many times Ive met with prospects and sometimes, being lazy and having forgotten to bring along the letter of agreement, I would tell them that I would email or snail mail or fax the agreement later. Invariably it would take a long time to come back with a signature.

Two weeks ago I had a meeting with the President of a Speakers Bureau. He was eager to represent me and I am always looking for new opportunity. This Bureau has good credentials and they represent good speakers. I liked Mike, the President of the company, with whom I would be working. Its an absolute win-win, no-risk opportunity for me. Speakers Bureaus only get paid when they book speaking engagements. No engagementsno fee.

Had Mike had his letter of agreement with him I would have read it and, if there were no issues, signed it on the spot. He did not, however, have the agreement with him, but he promised to email it to me later on. A few days later he did. I printed it out. I put it in a folder. That was three weeks ago.

Its not that I dont want to work with MikeI do. I simply have not yet had a chance to read over the letter of agreement. Im busy. Ill get to it eventually. I do want to do itits simply not my most pressing concern.

This made me think. How much time have I wasted by waiting to send my letter of agreement? How much time have I wasted waiting for those signed letters of agreement? How much time have you wasted? We should never forget that while waiting the prospects situation could change along with the opportunity!

When you are in front of your prospect, you are the most pressing concernat that moment in time. You cannot sustain that position over time, because other things come along to grab your prospects attention. Get the contract signed while you are there, in front of your prospect, the prospects most immediate, pressing concern.

If you find that you must send the contract at a later date, because the contract is complex, or must be reviewed or it must be written or rewritten, set up a time to meet again with that prospect. This might feel like more work; its actually insurance.

Always have your calendar or palm pilot with you and easily available. When you agree to send your letter of agreement, part of your conversation must be about how and when you will deliver it. Once you have established the time frame for delivery, take out your calendar and say, Lets pencil in a time for me to come by with it and well have a chance to talk as well. Keeping in mind the parameters and time frame that you just discussed offer some choices, Is early next week good for your or is later in the week better? This way you are having a conversation about when you will meet not if you will meet! I also like the word pencil.  It implies that the time can be erased or changed, so the prospect does not feel trapped.

Control the sales process from start to finish. Dont do a terrific job of selling yourself, selling your company, selling your product or service only to have to wait by the mailbox tapping your toes and checking your watch.


2004 Wendy Weiss

Author Bio:

Wendy Weiss

Wendy Weiss, The Queen of Cold Calling & Selling Success, is a sales trainer, sales coach and author. She helps entrepreneurs, business owners and sales professionals gain confidence, reach more prospects, close more sales and make more money. Her clients include Avon Products, ADP, Sprint and thousands of entrepreneurs throughout the country.

Wendy has been featured in BusinessWeek, Entrepreneur Magazine, Selling Power, Sales & Marketing Management and various other business and sales publications. Wendy’s e-mail newsletter, Opening Doors & Closing Sales has an international readership and her columns are syndicated to 168 different print and Internet publications.

Wendy is the author of the recently released, self-study program, Cold Calling College, and the book, Cold Calling for Women.

She is also a former ballet dancer who believes that everything she knows in life she learned in ballet class.

You can also reach this article by using: business sales, small business sales, sales leads for business, sales business plans, sales business
 
 
 

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