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Home Business Sales Teleselling How to Maximize Your Time on the Phone

How to Maximize Your Time on the Phone

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A very effective phone sales technique I've used with great success is maximizing every call for future business. What do I mean? Every time you pick up the phone, either an incoming or out going call, think about asking for more business.

Think of the number of people you speak to during the day who you could ask for business. When I was in the mortgage business I spoke to real estate agents, attorneys, title companies, creditors, banks, insurance agents, clients, tax assessors, appraisers, etc. on a daily basis. Many of these people I spoke to more than once and many I developed long term relationships with. Some of them became referral sources for me.

However, If I didn't learn to ask, I wouldn't have received as much business from them. Many of the people you speak to on the phone every day have friends or relatives who may need your product or service. You may never find out unless you use this phone sales technique and ask who they know that might be interested in your product or service.

I'm talking about everyone you talk to every day, even if you only speak to them once. I know your thinking, I can't ask someone for business who I just met. Why not? "Timid sales people have skinny kids". What's the worst that can happen; they don't know any one. Don't wait for someone to give you a name, ask for it first.

This phone sales technique has worked for me time after time. I finish a phone conversation and say oh, by the way, who do you know? I get names, phone numbers and sell business from routine contacts.

If you take the time to answer the phone or make the call out, why not maximize your time and take a few extra seconds to ask for business. If you're courteous and professional with people, you'll be surprised at how much extra business will come your way using this simple sales prospecting technique.

Jim Klein helps sales people make sales "from the heart" not "from the hip". Get free sales training by subscribing to our free weekly newsletter, "The Sales Advisor".

 

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This image depicts a vast canyon of dust and gas in the Orion Nebula from a 3-D computer model based on observations by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and created by science visualization specialists at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Md. A 3-D visualization of this model takes viewers on an amazing four-minute voyage through the 15-light-year-wide canyon. The model takes viewers through an exhilarating ride through the Orion Nebula, a vast star-making factory 1,500 light-years away. This virtual space journey isn't the latest video game but one of several groundbreaking astronomy visualizations created by specialists at STScI, the science operations center for NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The cinematic space odysseys are part of the new Imax film Hubble 3D, which opens today at select IMAX theaters worldwide. The 43-minute movie chronicles the 20-year life of Hubble and includes highlights from the May 2009 servicing mission to the Earth-orbiting observatory, with footage taken by the astronauts. The giant-screen film showcases some of Hubble's breathtaking iconic pictures, such as the Eagle Nebula's "Pillars of Creation," as well as stunning views taken by the newly installed Wide Field Camera 3. While Hubble pictures of celestial objects are awe-inspiring, they are flat 2-D photographs. For this film, those 2-D images have been converted into 3-D environments, giving the audience the impression they are space travelers taking a tour of Hubble's most popular targets. Based on a Hubble image of Orion released in 2006, the visualization was a collaborative effort between science visualization specialists at STScI, including Greg Bacon, who sculpted the Orion Nebula digital model, with input from STScI astronomer Massimo Roberto; the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. For some of the sequences, STScI imaging specialists developed new techniques for transforming the 2-D Hubble images into 3-D. STScI image processing specialists Lisa Frattare and Zolt Levay, for example, created methods of splitting a giant gaseous pillar in the Carina Nebula into multiple layers to produce a 3-D effect, giving the structure depth. Image Credit: NASA, G. Bacon, L. Frattare, Z. Levay, and F. Summers (STScI/AURA)...
18 Mar 2010
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