Friday, July 28, 2006

Prospect Follow-Up: 3 Common Mistakes

This is excerpted from an article by Craig Proctor (http://www.brokeragentnews.com/news/residential/2006_7/7_21_2006_wm_1153540009.html), from the Broker Agent News website. Are you making any of these mistakes? It could be costing you business. - Kim


Mistake # 1: Expecting a prospect to call back

I had a guy on the line who was ready to list his house, and I was trying to nail him down for an appointment. He was putting me off for some reason—either he had to check his daytimer, or he had to check with his wife to see what time was good for her. Whatever his reason was, I didn't push it. I told him to call me back with a good time to meet.

Well, he didn't call me back and I guess I forgot about it. In my mind, I guess, I'd already converted him and we were simply down to the formality of when to meet. But when I checked the hot sheets about a week later, I saw that he had listed with another agent before I had a chance to call him back.

My big mistake was leaving the whole thing in his hands. I should not have let him off the phone without setting a meeting time. What I should have done was set a tentative date with him so the onus on call back was now on his shoulders. If I'd said "Okay, why don't we tentatively say Thursday at 3 pm, and if that turns out to be a problem for you, give me a call back. Otherwise I'll be there Thursday at 3 pm", now suddenly it's his responsibility to firm that up. I don't have to call him back. He knows that unless he calls me back, I'm going to show up at his house Thursday at 3 pm.

You should do the same in your business. If you find that a prospect is putting you off for some reason, arrange a tentative time so that the onus is now on them.

Mistake # 2: Delaying a prospect who is ready to list

The second mistake I made was putting off a lady who was ready to list. I had called this lady on a Wednesday night to follow up on a special report request she had made. She admitted that she was ready to list her house and wondered if I were free that evening. I can't remember why I wasn't—it wasn't convenient or I just didn't feel like going out at that time. Whatever it was, I set up a meeting with her the following Monday.

Well, Monday morning I got an email from her to cancel the appointment because she'd listed with another agent on Sunday night. So my big mistake this time was putting off someone too long who was ready to list. If your prospect is good, make your appointment as close to "now" as possible—a half hour after your telephone conversation would be good. The more time that elapses, the more things that can go wrong.

Mistake # 3: Lacking Clarity when Communicating

I have modified a line in my call back script that used to say: "Would you prefer to buy first or sell first?". What I found is that my prospects didn't really understand this. They'd answer that they supposed they really wanted to do both at the same time—they didn't really understand what I was asking them. I thought this was just me, but I was listening to some tapes of some of my coaching members the other day (as I reviewed and critiqued their call backs) and I found that their prospects were saying the same thing.

The new wording attempts to clarify the issue by saying it this way: "Would you prefer to make an offer on your next home before you list your present home for sale, or do you want to sell the home you're in before you make an offer on your next home?" Clearly, what you're trying to establish is whether you should be treating them as a buyer or a seller.

When asking this question, make this distinction clear to them. Ask them whether they think they'd like to list their present home first, before they start looking for their next home (i.e. get a sense of outside interest in their home before they commit to moving), or whether they want to start looking for their next home first before they actually take the step of listing their current home (i.e. get a sense of their interest in what is out there before they commit to moving.) Their answer to this question is important as it will help you understand which offer to communicate first. Making the correct offer to prospects should not be guesswork. If you ask them, they'll tell you.