7 Ways to Convert Online Contacts Into Sales
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Here are seven secrets for successfully converting online contacts into sales.
- Focus on generosity: Share your knowledge and expertise willingly online. Avoid the attitude that people are out to get you, instead think of it as people are out to do business with you. The more you are generous with your expertise and resources, the faster people will connect with you online and want to do business with you (because they’ve already had a sneak peek at what you offer).
- Use the 3/3 Rule: The opposite side of the generosity coin is this; you have to set some boundaries online so as not to give too much away. When you are directly e-mailed or approached for advice, offer your services no more and no less than three times to that contact before you ask for the business. Don’t spend more than three minutes responding or chatting per person or group. After the third such activity (on the same network, of course), just ask. This is the one thing that separates the broke from the prosperous–asking.
- Don’t act desperate: There is a big difference between desperate and sincere. Make sure that you really want the relationship and their business specifically and that you’re not just asking for the sake of getting another deal (or because it’s the third action and you’re “supposed” to). Consumers are smart, they can tell the difference between the two.
- Do a SPAM check: Before you even ask for the business when you’re beginning to build a relationship you need to do a SPAM check. Whether it be online or off, make sure that your conversation does not involve constant:
Sales
Pitching
After
Meeting.If you start a sales pitch before you’ve even established a rapport then you are spamming, something that consumers do not tolerate very well. This can instantly shut down a relationship. Make the conversation about the consumer, not you. [link to Green]. Start by listening and end conversations by asking what you can do to help them with a goal or problem. By doing this, your services and offerings will become a natural part of the conversation, rather than a forced sales pitch.
- Have a communication plan in place: Once you start to engage with people make sure that you have an ongoing plan to stay in touch. A great way to do that is to get their e-mail address and send them periodic updates, resources and tips.
- Build your social proof: Do you have testimonials or recommendations on your social sites and your main website or blog? Social proof is basically proving to your target market and community that you are worth doing business with. Testimonials show potentials how great you are, you don’t have to say a thing. LinkedIn is a great place to house some of those testimonials.
- Just be yourself: Do not try to be someone that you are not because you think that you will get more contacts, leads and business. Consumers want to feel like they are doing business with someone real, not someone that’s insincere.
Above all, don’t hold yourself back from reaching out to new people, groups or industries. The internet is full of millions of new contacts for you, just engage with them sincerely and leave out the sales pitching. You never know if that invite or accepted request will be your next big customer.
Starr Hall is an international speaker and the author of Get Connected: The Social Networking Toolkit for Business. For more information, visit www.smartyva.com.
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