By Brooks Fenno CMC Published in The Independent Consultant - January 2007 Unless your practice is so strong that you can’t even imagine taking on any new business, you’re probably like many actuaries and finance consultants who are continually seeking effective ways to keep adding both new projects and new customers. Sure, you can promote your business through word-of-mouth referrals, perhaps even advertise here and there, or use search engines to find your website. But at some point you need to do more… you need to get out and sell. The concept of selling means different things to different people: it’s fun for some, a dread for others, but certainly a necessity for any service business. To be effective, try breaking down your “sales service process” analytically and view it as a series of sequential elements. When pieced back together, these steps will produce a finished and integrated process capable of propelling revenue opportunities forward, culminating in frequent successful sales. In combined form, these elements form what marketing/selling experts call a “pipeline.” At the beginning the selling spectrum is the “suspect,” at the end is the “order.” Your pipeline connects the two, also offering two ancillary benefits: 1. An ability to forecast your forthcoming revenue stream. This becomes possible because you can now observe and quantify your number of prospects, presentations and proposals currently in play. Knowing this potentially advances your selling process right up to the order, i.e., the sale, by keeping things moving along. 2. An ability to spot weak links in the chain. If your pipeline is running a danger of breaking, you’ll now be able to work on it before it does. And what will typically be your most common weak link? Quite simply, an insufficient number of “hot” prospects, one of the most crucial selling elements in the entire pipeline. Specifically, there are six sequential pipeline elements in all. They are:
In the end, what’s key is linking these six elements into a productive chain so that the result will be a continuous flow of revenues. The activities required that comprise each link of this pipeline order-chain may vary depending on your precise type of services but an illustrative ratio might look something like this:
The pipeline process can also be shortened in that a “lead” may originate through some marketing or promotional source, perhaps an article you have published or a speaking engagement you have delivered. Depending on the potency of the lead emanating from this source, you might classify it as a “prospect” or even a “hot prospect.” If either is possible, this lead has jumped ahead a few of the elements in your pipeline. By routinely monitoring your numbers at each point in the pipeline, you can note weak links in the selling spectrum, fix them where necessary, and begin predicting growth in terms of new business. In this way, your service pipeline reaps you rewards on a continual basis both now and in the future. Brooks Fenno, CMC, Principal of SALESMARK, is a longstanding Massachusetts-based management consultant with expertise in diversification into new products and new markets. To learn more, visit www.brooksfenno.com or (617) 536-0197
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