Don't hang up immediately after booking a meeting. Invites from new contacts often require manual acceptance to appear on a calendar. To prevent no-shows caused by a missed invite, stay on the line and ask the prospect to confirm they've received and accepted it.
After addressing a prospect's concern, don't assume you've solved it. Explicitly ask if your explanation was sufficient by asking, "Was that enough to satisfy your concern?" This simple check ensures the issue is truly resolved and prevents it from resurfacing later to kill your deal. Most reps answer and move on, which is a critical mistake.
When a prospect goes silent on your primary channels (email, work phone), they may be subconsciously filtering you out. Break this pattern by using a novel channel like WhatsApp or a different phone number. This can bypass their filters and elicit a response.
Sellers often avoid scheduling a live proposal review because they fear creating friction. However, this avoidance is what causes prospects to ghost. A live walkthrough is essential to eliminate ambiguity, handle objections, and secure commitment, preventing the deal from stalling.
If a prospect says "no" to your permission-based opener but doesn't immediately hang up, use that brief moment to provide context. State a relevant trigger (like hiring) and social proof to pique their curiosity and potentially salvage the call.
When a prospect doesn't respond, don't default to thinking they're ignoring you. Instead, assume they are extremely busy and your message was lost in the noise. This mindset encourages persistent, multi-channel follow-up rather than premature disqualification.
Avoid "dead phone time" and maintain momentum during a dial blitz. While waiting to leave a voicemail or wrapping up a call, pull up the next contact. This allows you to quickly orient yourself for the next dial without losing precious time to over-preparation.
To combat no-shows, don't end a call after booking a meeting. Ask the prospect to find and accept the calendar invitation while you are still on the line. This simple step ensures the event is actually on their calendar and bypasses issues where invites get lost in email.
Reframe voicemails not as a request for a callback, but as a strategic preview for your next action, like an email or text. This guides the prospect to an easier response channel and makes the multi-touch sequence feel more cohesive and intentional.
Prospects rarely return calls from voicemails. The goal is to increase email reply rates. Leave a voicemail referencing your context, state you're sending an email to avoid phone tag, and ask them to reply there. This leverages one channel to boost another.
To confirm a meeting with a busy prospect, use a direct, binary question in the email subject line (e.g., "Confirming appointment, yes or no?"). This minimizes cognitive load, allowing them to understand the request and reply without even opening the email.