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Welcome to this week's
NeverColdCall.com Newsletter
by #1 Bestselling Author
Frank Rumbauskas
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FROM:
Frank Rumbauskas
Not too long ago, someone emailed me to let me know about a
heated debate over my book that was taking place on one of the sales
discussion forums online. Because I get such a kick out of all the
old-school "You must cold call or die!" fanatics still lingering out
there, I immediately signed on to have a look. Sure enough,
salespeople who are still out there working every day, fighting it
out in the trenches to make a living, were agreeing with me. On the
other hand, some coach who charges corporations thousands of dollars
to train salespeople posted a lengthy message about how we live and
die by cold calling. There's no other way, this high-paid trainer
said.
(Interestingly, I took a look at this person's site. I went to the
articles archive. The very first line of the very first article
said, "Salespeople don't succeed because they don't make enough
phone calls." Needless to say, I clicked my back button and got out
of there! No wonder why so many companies I work with are furious at
some of these coaches they've paid $5,000 or more to. Could you
imagine paying someone $5,000 to have them come in for one day of
training, only to have them stand there and say, "Make more phone
calls!" We already have managers reciting that mindless chant all
day long!)
What I really noticed in all of this is the same thing I always
notice. The salespeople who are out there, making a living NOW, seem
to understand the truth about cold calling. They know the score.
Then you have a bunch of managers, trainers, and coaches who have
been out of the field, and therefore out of touch with reality, for
ten years, twenty years, or even longer, and yet they still insist
that cold calling is the only way. Period. Plain and simple. Don't
even try to argue with them, because they'll fly off into a rant
about how anyone who disagrees is just plain wrong, lazy, or - get
this - is mentally insane. Yes, one of these coaches' sites I looked
at is based on some quack theory that salespeople who don't like to
cold call have a variety of mental disorders that can be effectively
cured through psychotherapy. So, according to this person, exactly
100% of us are wacko! Sorry, but in my opinion, this goes way beyond
silly. It's downright insulting and offensive to those of us who
have to get up every day and make a living in sales. One must wonder
if anyone who touts these quack theories has ever sold in the first
place. After all, most of my managers had never sold and they
claimed to know all they keys to success!
(Ok, just for fun, as if paying someone $5,000 to have them tell you
to make more calls wasn't enough, imagine paying someone $5,000 to
tell you you're crazy!)
The point I'm trying to make here is that the "cold call or die"
people are generally those who have been out of the field for an
extended period of time, or have never sold in the first place. The
people who have the "cold calling isn't working anymore, what else
can I do" attitude are those who are out there today. These old-time
coaches apparently haven't realized that times have changed and we
live in a new reality now. Seth Godin explained in great detail
exactly how and why Interruption Marketing is dead and has almost
zero chance of working in our new economy, and how Permission
Marketing is the way to go. Guess what, folks - cold calling is the
most blatant form of Interruption Marketing ever known to mankind!
Selling is Selling
Another point I'd like to touch on is something I faced when I was
in sales, trying to get out of one industry that had stagnated and
into another. Every time I went and interviewed for a position in a
different industry, I got the knee-jerk "You apparently have a
proven track record, but if you haven't sold in our industry, we
can't hire you."
This drove me nuts because I knew that selling is selling, much like
what I explained to a reader in a previous mailbag about
cross-cultural differences. Just as people are people and human
nature doesn't change from one nation to another, it doesn't change
from one product or service or industry to another. I know people
who have been highly successful in a variety of totally unrelated
fields, and I also know people who have been miserable failures in a
variety of fields. It doesn't matter. One of the mistakes I made
early on in selling was to assume that something that had been
highly effective for someone in another industry wouldn't work for
me. Not so. The only thing that really changes from one industry to
the next is product knowledge, and that's a whole lot easier to
learn than how to sell.
I've previously mentioned the fact that our students are in a wide
variety of industries - it's safe to assume all industries at this
point. I want you to realize this so you don't go and make the same
mistake I did early on of saying, "Well, that may work for you, but
it wouldn't work for my product." Spend time talking to salespeople
you know who are in completely different industries. Unrelated
industries. (By the way, they make great referral partners. A lot of
sales reps only network with people in related industries. By
restricting yourself like this, you're closing yourself off from a
potentially huge number of referrals.)
Some of the industries I've had the pleasure of working with are:
Steel frame sales. Custom tailors. Life insurance.
Investments. Telecom. IT and internet. Funeral
sales. Door-to-door vacuum cleaners. Thermal coatings
for buildings. Legal services. Dentists. Shipping.
Educational products. Accounting services. Copiers.
Software. Business credit lines. And the list goes on
and on.
These people are all reporting great success.
And they're all using the EXACT same techniques and principles.
So don't pigeonhole yourself because you think what works for
someone else won't apply to you. Try it! The worst that can happen
is nothing. (Did you hear that? I didn't say the worst that can
happen is you fail or you lose the sale. I said the worst that can
happen is nothing. So why be afraid of something that isn't there?)
Just watch out for that one coach or you're likely to be labeled as
psychotic for doing something other than cold calling.
Selling is Stupid
Okay, before you get offended, realize that I'm in sales too! I'm
not making fun of selling. I'm saying that it's stupid when you use
my definition of the word. For a refresher, here are my definitions
of the words "buying" and "selling:"
Buying: The act of willingly acquiring for money something that you
want or need. The buyer generally leaves the transaction feeling
happy and satisfied.
Selling: Attempting to convince another that they want or need your
product or service despite the fact that they may not. The purchaser
typically leaves the transaction with a strong feeling of buyer's
remorse.
Think back to what you've been taught in training about doing an
excellent follow-up to alleviate buyer's remorse and minimize
cancellations. Now you know why.
With that in mind, does it makes sense to sell to someone? Or does
it make sense to get them to buy from you? Think about it. Think
about whether the things you're doing on a day-to-day basis are
selling, or if they're setting people up to buy from you. This is
very powerful when properly applied.
Speaking of definitions, when I came up with these, I looked up the
standard dictionary definitions to find out what they said.
Naturally, I also looked up the definition of cold calling, and was
quite surprised and shocked to find this:
Cold calling: The ethically questionable practice
of making unsolicited calls to people one does not
know in order to solicit new business.
Wow. That doesn't speak very highly of cold calling. It's a
reflection on how cold calling is perceived today. It proves that
cold calling immediately triggers a lack of trust and a credibility
issue.
Maybe some of these know-it-all dictator managers and old-school
coaches and trainers should look at this.
Try something different!
Don't keep doing something that isn't cutting it!
Don't put too much trust in managers and coaches who have been out
of sales for decades!
And whatever you do, don't get yourself committed to the
psychopathic hospital because you don't like cold calling!
Remember, the worst that can happen is nothing. Since nothing is the
usual result of a cold call anyway, you've got nothing to lose and
everything to gain. So get out there and try something new and
different. Besides, doing something different is fun. And that alone
will make your job a lot easier!
If you're ready for fresh, powerful ideas that work, order my
program right now:
Order 'Cold Calling Is A Waste Of Time' right
now
Do it right now. You'll have the e-book in just a
few minutes, and can start putting my system to use immediately.
(To order by phone please call (602)231-6711, 24
hours a day, 7 days a week.)
Be sure to send in any questions you'd like to see
answered in a future mailbag. The email address is:
newsletter@nevercoldcall.com
And keep the success stories
coming. Include "Success Story" as the subject
line and send to:
successstories@nevercoldcall.com
I read those first!
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Thanks once again for your time and thank you for
reading. Good luck and happy selling!
To your success,

Frank J. Rumbauskas, Jr.
PS: Imagine what it would be like if you never
had to make a cold call - ever again. You'll be able to do exactly
that with "Cold Calling Is A Waste Of Time: Sales Success In The
Information Age" - get it right now:
Order 'Cold Calling Is A Waste Of Time' right
now
Copyright 2008 Frank J. Rumbauskas, Jr. and FJR
Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. "Cold Calling
Is A Waste Of Time: Sales Success In The Information
Age" and "Never Cold Call Again" are registered
trademarks of FJR Advisors, LLC.
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