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The 20 Worst Prospecting Voicemail Mistakes Salespeople Make

Guest post by: Kendra Lee

Article Overview: Among salespeople who make sales prospecting calls, there’s a hot debate about whether or not you should leave a voicemail message. For a voicemail to have any impact, however, you have to avoid the common blunders.

Free Download - Put an end to Sales Prospecting Procrastination: Part Two of a series on Things Sellers Avoid By Kendra Lee
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The 20 Worst Prospecting Voicemail Mistakes Salespeople Make

Among salespeople who make sales prospecting calls, there’s a hot debate about whether or not you should leave a voicemail message.

I’m of the opinion that you definitely should - but only once every three days.

For a voicemail to have any impact, however, you have to avoid the common blunders... and many of them are easy to make.

During one of these hot debates, I asked our followers which are the worst voicemail mistakes you can make in prospecting.

Here are their top 20.

  1. Not leaving one so your prospect doesn’t have the chance to return your call.
  2. Pretending you have called when you haven’t.
  3. Not having planned what you want to talk about in advance.
  4. Talking about your products, instead of things that matter to your prospect.
  5. Speaking for more than 20 or 30 seconds without letting the prospect say anything.
  6. Leaving a message that’s too short and doesn’t give your prospect a compelling reason to call you back.
  7. Not showing that you have researched your prospect, and his or her situation, in your voicemail message.
  8. Speaking so quickly that you can’t be heard. Or worse, mumbling.
  9. Leaving a voicemail with lots of verbal pauses (like "ums" and "ahs") that make you sound less confident, and less credible.
  10. Leaving a message and then passively waiting for a call back, instead of continuing to try to reach the prospect.
  11. Not leaving your name and contact information at the end of the message. Better yet, leave it at the beginning when the prospect is poised to take notes.
  12. Sounding too "canned" or "salesy" to catch your prospect’s attention.
  13. Not mentioning your company’s website, if it’s your strongest sales tool.
  14. Using a tone of voice that suggests you don’t expect a call back.
  15. Not following up via other means, like email or handwritten note.
  16. Giving up too soon, when most prospects won’t return your call until you have tried them more than nine times.
  17. Not mentioning another company you have helped with a similar problem that the prospect is likely to have.
  18. Failing to stick to one topic per voicemail message.
  19. Not verifying that you have the right contact before leaving multiple messages.
  20. Forgetting to mention a common colleague or someone who has referred you.

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Article Tags: generate leads, inside sales, prospecting, sales customer, sales opportunity, sales prospect, sales prospecting, sales skills, sales tips, selling techniques, telephone sales, voicemail, voicemail message

About the Author: Kendra Lee
RSS for Kendra's articles - Visit Kendra's website

Kendra Lee is a top IT Seller, Prospect Attraction Expert author of the award winning book "Selling Against the Goal" and president of KLA Group. Specializing in the IT industry, KLA Group works with companies to break in and exceed revenue objectives in the Small and Midmarket Business (SMB) segment. Ms. Lee is a frequent speaker at national sales meetings and association events. Visit www.klagroup.com to download your free copy of the PowerProspecting Sales Kit valued at $216 and to subscribe to her newsletter. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/KendraLeeKLA, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/KLAGroup, on LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/kendralee.



Click here to visit Kendra's website
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More from Kendra Lee
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Related Forum Posts
Prime Means of Selling Prime Means of Selling - Prospecting and Selling aren't the same. Prospecting is finding the few within a target group who are prime candidates for your service. I don't think everyone will agree on what "prime" means but I'd say if the prospects actively want what you're offering and have the ability to pay for what you're offering then they qualify as "prime".
Re: What is your worst / best month? Re: What is your worst / best month? - Best: October, November, April Worst: January, February, July
Re: What is your worst / best month? Re: What is your worst / best month? - Best = January, February and March. Worst = April (tac season) July and August (vacations).
Re: Quote of the Day - "The only people witho Re: Quote of the Day - "The only people witho - Thanks for sharing this Evan, there are some very powerful quotes in there, I particularly like this one:- You are now at a crossroads. This is your opportunity to make the most important decision you will ever make. Forget your past. Who are you now? Who have you decided you really are now? Don't think about who you have been. Who are you now? Who have you decided to become? Make this decision consciously. Make it carefully. Make it powerfully. regards, Mal.
Re: 365 Foolish Mistakes Smart Managers Make Re: 365 Foolish Mistakes Smart Managers Make - [quote="litekepr":2v18lglp]This morning's Google Alert held a pleasant surprise. WORTH MENTIONING A List of New Books Compiled by The Management and Government Information Center (MAGIC) Chinn Park Regional Library 703-792-4880Summer 2007 Indicates titles relating to the FISH Philosophy 365 Foolish Mistakes Smart Managers Make Every Day: How and Why to Avoid Them by Shri L. Henkel, 2006 interesting. Is anyone else here familiar with the FISH philosphy? i[/quote:2v18lglp] Congrats on the mention of your book! Hopefully it will drive up sales! For myself, I don't really care for their acronym... MAGIC. Gives people the subtle impression that good things happen at the snap of a finger instead of lots of hard work!


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