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Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

November 6th, 2009 @ 5:30 am

7 Comments

Categories: Cold Calls, Pitches, Sales Skills, Sales Tips

Tags: Voice, Gatekeepers, Sales Strategy, Sales Force Management, Telecommunications, Sales, Geoffrey James

Gatekeepers are a persistent and annoying reality in Sales.  Unfortunately, many sales pros make their interactions with gatekeepers more difficult by using their voice ineffectively.  To get a gatekeeper to open the gate, you’ve got to sound as important as the person you’re trying to reach.

Here are four simple rules to follow:

  • Rule #1: Express authority in every word. You are not trying to wheedle, cajole, or convince.  You’re calling on important business, so you need to sound as if you’re the boss’s social equal.
  • Rule #2: Speak from your chest. Many sales professionals  talk so that the sound resonates in the throat or (worse) whines in the nose.  Powerful people always speak from the center.
  • Rule #3: Use statements not questions. “Please put me through to Warbucks” is more likely to motivate a gatekeeper than “Can I please speak with Ms. Warbucks?”
  • Rule #4: Never up-tilt your sentence endings. If you end a sentence — even a statement — with a rise in your voice, it ends up sounding wimpy and weak.

Needless to say, you also need a a good reason for the gatekeeper to put you through.  But if you’ve got the right tonality in your voice, you’re halfway there.  On the other hand, if you sound like a supplicant, well…, you’re probably not going to get through, no matter what words come out of your mouth.

The above advice is adapted from a conversation with Wendy Weiss, aka “The Queen of Cold Calling”.

This Blog's Best Post: The Ultimate Cold Calling Tool

 
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  •  
    1

    United Systems

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    Ha!! My GK's won't fall for these tactics. I feel sorry for some of the legitimately feasable sales callers that actually have something of value. The ones that aren't the real deal get rooted out quick.

    However, they are taught to make sure they ask good questions of the person sounds professional. We don't want to miss great business opportunities either... wink

  •  
    2

    david_room@...

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    Hi in IT many gatekeepers are the dreaded vmail, which of course are never answered and the contact has a mobile and is very guarded as to who gets that number!

    Any thoughts?

  •  
    3

    Mike Maisel

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    Sometimes when calling a gatekeeper, you are not seeking to speak/meet with their boss but, rather, information. You can get the names/contact information of the key influences/decision makers for your product/service by contacting a C-Level gatekeeper. When doing that, it is better to approach the gatekeeper from not quite as high a position of authority, but one a little closer to their level. That way, when you ask "I hope you can help me. I'm trying to determine who is the person who decides how you purchase widgets..." they more more likely to do just that.

    This has worked for me and my reps not only to generate internal referrals, but also to gain appointments with the c-level people the gatekeepers are guarding!

  •  
    4

    Bob Wileman

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    I can only speak from experience in the UK where the best bet is to secure the cooperation of gatekeepers by recruiting them to your cause.
    In that case the authoritarian, "professional" and dare I say, pushy approach, will simply raise the barriers even further.
    Gatekeepers like to be recognised as someone capable of knowing what's good for the boss and his interests, so my advice is to adapt and make the pitch confidently, and if it fails you can be pretty sure it would fail on the boss too. There are always incompetent exceptions, but I like to start by assuming equality and not perceive gatekeepers as persistent and annoying. When you do, it must transmit itself in the voice and language. "Just put me through to him dammit!"

  •  
    5

    payroll4sb

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    In response to Mike Maisel's comment.
    Before you call the GK, you should know who this person is, who the person you need to talk with. To learn who I need to talk with, you can use your favorite library sites, under ?Business Community?, ?Reference USA?. From this site, you can find out who you will need to talk with. I have found that if you call a GK trying to ?fish? for the right person you will usually get shot down unless you run across a very helpful GK.

  •  
    6

    Mike Maisel

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    Hi payroll4sb, I can understand why you feel that way. I've had reps from time to time have the same experience. What I found yields best results (and I probably should have indicated this, but shortened my comment for brevity's sake) is to only go to the C-level GK after you have made several attempts at lower levels in different departments. That way, you can drop some names (or departments) and show the GK that you have been getting "lost" in their hierarchy. Most GKs have been quite willing to help at that point. Hope this clarifies for you.

  •  
    7

    joannesblack

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Talk to Gatekeepers with Authority

    No need for sales people to talk to the gatekeeper. When you receive a referral, the gatekeeper disappears and you go directly to the decision-maker with a referral introduction. You close the sale and seal the deal. http://www.nomorecoldcalling.com/blog/get-the-meeting/bypass-the-gatekeeper/

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