Monday, October 26, 2009

5 Prospecting Mistakes That Make a Network Marketer Look Like the Village Idiot

I was reading some information that caught my eye and I thought this may be helpful for some of you in the network marketing business. Larry Beacham is a very successful entrepreneur and I would like to share some of his wisdom with you. CLICK HERE:


Lead generation is the lifeblood of every business in the world, and without this activity your business will dry up faster than a drop of water hitting a hot skillet.

Network marketing is one of those businesses in which generating leads is not a matter of skilled marketing training, but of randomly pursuing a warm market of friends, family and associates.

 

This practice has been the ONLY approach that 99% of network marketers implement, and although its results have not proven to be "duplicatable," it is still the dominant strategy being imposed on the masses.

 

Now, I've come to realize that even though there are more efficient ways to get the job done, there are those that like the "classic" or "traditional" approach. Fine, have at it. But before you wander out into the street to do this, be careful to use the following as a guideline to avoid problems.

 

STOP USING THE "CURIOSITY" APPROACH: When someone asks you, "what is it?" prepare a professional answer and be prepared to follow up with quality information. Nothing burns me up more than to hear someone tell me, "You'll have to see it to understand it," or "It's a visual presentation." If you like rejection, then keep doing this foolishness.

 

DON'T PAWN PEOPLE OFF ON YOUR UPLINE: I really hate this one. If you are representing yourself as a business owner, then get educated enough to stand confidently before someone and speak about your business. Also, don't "double team" someone by calling them with your upline already on the line. GET PERMISSION FIRST. Be honest and tell them that you have someone on standby with superior knowledge and experience that you'd like to call on, and ask them if it will be o.k. to call them. Once they give the o.k., then you call. No one likes to be "ambushed."

 

DON'T MANUFACTURE A NEED THAT DOESN'T EXIST: I've heard network marketers asked the question, "do you look at ways to generate additional income?" and when prospect replies in the negative, the network marketer want to probe to find out why. MOVE ON! Stop trying to find a way to force the spoon in their mouth. If they are not hungry, it doesn't make sense to try and figure out why. Go find someone who's hungry.

 

AVOID LYING ABOUT YOUR INTENTIONS: I got an email from a network marketer that said they weren't trying to recruit me or sell anything, but only to help me with some free information. Lie! Unless they are operating a non-profit organization, everything they do is supposed to lead up to either a product sale or enrollment - and that's perfectly fine. Nobody is denying you the right to make money, but don't try to insult my intelligence with this non-sense. Just give your value and when I'm interested, I'll let you know.

NEVER EVER OVER-PURSUE: It's a big mistake to over-pursue someone for your business. How do you know when you're over-pursuing? When you're too involved in getting them to participate by calling, emailing, and texting constant reminders or "checking in." If you did a good enough job of identifying an existing problem that your product/opportunity can solve, you've been given permission to provide education, and they've confirmed a follow up, leave it at that. If they don't keep their commitment, that's not someone you really want to work with anyway, right? Don't ever look "needy" to someone; they won't respect you.

 

Make the most of your prospecting opportunities by raising the bar on your process.

http://www.easymlmleadsforboomers.com/

1 comment:

  1. Wow thanks for that info and I have done all of those. What is worse is that people are being taught to do that.
    If someone is looking for something you can find it out in a normal conversation.
    Then tell them up front maybe you have some ideas they might want to look at. Like one of your points says if they say NO do push them nobody likes that.
    Great information.

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