LiveseySolar Cataract & Laser Eye Surgery Marketing

Following up with prospects – Part 1 of 3: Who should you follow up with?

Following up with prospects – Part 1 of 3: Who should you follow up with?

If you have all the appointments you need – don’t read my next three posts – because they will focus entirely on following up with prospects to increase telephone conversion rates and don’t have enough appointments.

At a recent healthcare telephone training workshop, a participant asked me: “How can I know who to follow up and who to let go? How often should I follow up? How long should I follow up?”

Those are great questions! I’ll answer them one by one for you, as I answered them for her.

If you had 1-hour a day to follow up with prospects, which ones would you call?

A good follow up prospect will have the following characteristics:

 

It’s tempting to follow-up only with nice people and ignore the people you don’t like

You’ll notice that my criteria leaves out the prospect’s personality. I often hear someone I’m training tell me a prospect was “nice”. “Nice?” I ask while I think to myself: “Are they nice enough to book an appointment with you today?”

Importantly, the key to knowing who to follow up, and who to leave to their own devices, is answered on the first phone call, not after the consultation, and certainly not from your gut feel.

This is one of the reasons I love automated email follow-up marketingit isn’t coloured by emotion!

I don’t mean to sound flippant, but a prospect’s personality or declared intention of fidelity is seldom any indication as to whether the prospect will sign where the line is dotted.

We’ve all had nice people lie to us, and we’ve all had people we didn’t like, buy from us

At the healthcare telephone training workshops I deliver, I offer loads of qualifying questions that participants can use on the phone and at the consultation, to determine which of their prospects are serious and which ones are not.

Knowing objective information about prospects saves salespeople uncountable hours of wasted effort that they could be applying to higher opportunity prospects.

If you can answer the above questions in a way that would lead you to think that the prospect is qualified to follow up with, then the prospect should be tagged as “hot” in your database and serious follow-up should ensue. If not, stop hoping your ship will come in and move on.