|
|
Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! |
|
He’s in a Meeting – or is he? Working with Gatekeepers
|
| Guest post by: Sharon Drew Morgen |
Article Overview: When I make cold calls I ask the receptionist to direct me to the person's assistant as she'll redirect me to the appropriate person, get me an appointment to speak with the original person, or tell me how best to move forward. The PA of a high level person is always smart, savvy in the ways the corporation runs, and knows what's going on throughout the organization. Not to mention they know exactly who to bring in and who to leave out: that's their job.
![]() |
Free Download - Sales is a Flawed Model By Sharon Drew Morgen |
He’s in a Meeting – or is he? Working with Gatekeepers
I recently made a cold call. I actually make a few of them daily as a way to introduce people to the concept of decision facilitation and find new business partners to help me place my material into the Change Management/Buy-in arena. Now that Buying Facilitation® is becoming widely known in sales, it's time to expand the use of the model. And so I make cold calls. Basically, of course, it's a 'sales job.'
I recently wanted to speak with a very high level person (‘Jim') in a Fortune 500 company. I called the assistant and he's how the conversation went:
SDM: Hi. I'm wondering if you can help me. My name is Sharon Drew Morgen, and I'm the author of a few books on a decision facilitation model that would seem to sit on the front end of what you folks are already doing. I'm seeking a possible business partnership. This is a cold call, and I know I'm calling out of the blue. What would you recommend I do?
ASSISTANT: Well, sounds like Jim would like to speak with you. But he's in a meeting now. You can send him an email. Would you like his email address?
SDM: Sure. But let me ask you something. Do you folks ever partner with others or add new content to what you're already doing?
A: Yes. We do this all the time. It's not possible to have all of the material our clients would like.
SDM: Good. Then maybe it's worth a discussion. How would you or Jim know that working with a decision facilitation model would offer an additional set of skills and wouldn't compete with what you're already doing successfully?
A: We'd have to get to know your material, get to know you, and see if there is chemistry. What do you have that's different and new?
SDM: My model offers navigation skills to the sellers or influencers to help their customers recognize all of the internal decision issues they'll need to address before they'd be willing to buy or change. Much like I'm doing with you now - helping you determine if adding something new could be done in a way that would maintain your company integrity.
A: Ah. I get it. Sounds wonderful. Just a moment. Let me get Jim for you.
How many times do you get told "He's in a meeting"? Is he really? or are you being kept out?
What would you need to believe differently in order to have a different relationship with the gatekeeper? How could you trust that the gatekeeper would bring you in if s/he trusted that you had something to offer? What new skills would you need to accomplish this?
Think about it. Do you want to sell? Or have someone buy. They are two different activities and require two different skill sets.
Article Tags: assistant, decision facilitation, decision facilitation model, facilitation model, gatekeepers, pa
|
About the Author: Sharon Drew Morgen RSS for Sharon Drew's articles - Visit Sharon Drew's website Sharon Drew Morgen is a pioneer and thought leader, the bestselling author of NYTimes Business Bestsellers Selling with Integrity , Sales on the Line, and Buying Facilitation, the new way to sell that expands and influences decisions as well as 2 other books and 800 articles on her original collaborative decision-support model Buying Facilitation. As the architect of a wholly original sales model, Sharon Drew has provoked, inspired, and motivated thousands of sales professionals world-wide. With a history as a million-dollar producer and 30 years in sales, an entrepreneur of a successful start-up, and a sales consultant in many Fortune 100 companies, she brings field knowledge as well as innovation to her audiences. Based on supporting the buyer's internal (management) decisions, Sharon Drew is a trainer, consultant, keynote speaker, and designer of patents that help site visitors and sellers make the decisions necessary for success. Her model has been trained worldwide, in global corporations such as Coors, Wachovia, Intuit, KPMG, IBM, and retail corporations such as Clinique. Click here to visit Sharon Drew's website The Heart of Business What is a Sellers Priority Buying Facilitation and Sales the dynamic duo The Future of Sales Can a Techie Ever Understand a Customer |
Related Forum Posts
Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.
Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Angel Investors Where Are You?
What Aweber Can Do For Your Online Business
Having It All... With No Sleep
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.



