When approaching a neglected account, do not try to sell. Instead, start by acknowledging the lack of contact, apologizing for it, and asking for a fresh start. Then, your most important job is to listen to their frustrations without being defensive. This vulnerability builds trust more effectively than a sales pitch.
Systematically call every customer who has churned, not to win them back, but to thank them and understand why they left. This provides invaluable, unfiltered market research. By the 19th call, you'll have identified core product or service issues that data alone cannot reveal.
When a deal goes cold, send a message acknowledging their busy schedule and telling them not to worry about replying. This removes the pressure to respond while giving you permission to continue providing value through follow-ups. It reframes the interaction from pestering to supportive, keeping the door open.
When a prospect has a legitimate reason to end a call (e.g., in a subway heading to the airport), don't force a pitch. Acknowledge their situation and exit gracefully. This preserves goodwill, making them far more likely to accept a future call, as exemplified by the prospect suggesting a callback in January.
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.
Salespeople often worry about being annoying during follow-up because they frame it as a transactional attempt to close a deal. To overcome this, reframe follow-up as an opportunity to build and enhance the relationship. By consistently providing value—sharing insights, making introductions, or offering resources—the interaction becomes helpful rather than pestering.
Instead of randomly contacting a large list of neglected accounts, use modern tools to make an educated guess about where to start. AI can quickly summarize past interactions, identify former buyers who have moved to new companies, or flag potential champions within an organization. This allows for a more strategic and personalized re-engagement effort.
True urgency comes from implicating pain, not just identifying it. By asking the customer "who suffers and what suffers if you do nothing?", you tie the problem to their personal job measures and company revenue, giving you leverage to re-engage them.
Avoid list-cleaning automations with a small subscriber base (e.g., under 1,000). Instead of deleting inactive subscribers, personally email them to ask what they're struggling with. This approach turns a technical cleanup task into a valuable user research and re-engagement opportunity.
Effective follow-up isn't about nagging; it's about being a 'barnacle on a boat.' This means staying in contact persistently, not by asking for the sale, but by delivering value every time. This strategy keeps you top-of-mind, building trust so that when the customer is finally ready to buy, you are the logical choice.
When a proposal goes silent, avoid empty 'checking in' emails, which position you as a nuisance. Instead, every follow-up must deliver additional insights or value relevant to the prospect's business. This reframes you as a helpful peer and consultant, keeping the conversation alive without sounding desperate.