Sunday, May 31, 2020
A Step-by-Step Guide to Prospecting on LinkedIn
A Step-by-Step Guide to Prospecting on LinkedIn Whenever youre doing any kind of prospecting, you have to first go where your prospects are hanging out. I have not yet met a professional recently that hasnt at least heard of LinkedIn. And most of them are at least on it minimally, which means you can find them. Brynne Tillman is a LinkedIn and sales trainer at PeopleLinx (guided social selling / sales platform). I interviewed her to get the inside story on social selling using LinkedIn, and she gave us some awesome tips. I would say the number one pitfall is sending a non-personalized connection request. The number two pitfall is when someone connects with you, and you dont send a welcome note. You connect and forget. Number three pitfall actually is ignoring your first degree connections; the people youre already connected to. Have a listen to the podcast version on iTunes or SoundCloud, or read her guide below: Whats the step-by-step guide to LinkedIn prospecting? So the very first thing, when Im working with folks, is that we have to begin to identify the Boolean search, the search criteria of the types of people youre looking to have conversations with. And this could take a little while initially. I mean if you really understand your prospects and your potential buyers, it could be a 15, 20 minute process. If, you know, youre the kind of person right now that says, Everyone needs what I have, drilling down to those right people can take a little bit longer. But once youve got that, which are thelike for me, its vice president of sales, director of sales, vice president of marketing, the CMO, sales enablement. So I have my list, and Ive created it in a way that makes searching for these people on LinkedIn very simple. And so thats the number one step. Now, it depends on if youre account-based marketing or if the world is your oyster. If youre account-based marketing and you have been assigned 100 accounts, then thats where you would begin. Youd look up those companies, plug in your now new Boolean search, and see who in the organization is it that you need to be working with or talking with and then who can help you get there if possible. If youre not account-based, even geographically based, if you have Sales Navigator, its called Lead Builder. If you have regular linkedin.com, its called Advanced Search. But creating your advanced searches based on that Boolean search is the next place to go. See who comes up on that list and strategically reach out to your shared connections, whether its email, text, phone call, tweet, whatever your normal process would be. Just say, Hey, Joe, I notice youre connected to Fred at ABC Company. Try to get in touch with him. How well do you know him? Can we have a quick call? Can we talk about this? And so that becomes really the next step is going through your warm market. If you dont have anyone in common, it seems like its going to be a cold reach on LinkedIn. There are things that you can do prior to doing that. You can follow them. You can like or comment on their recent activity and start to build a rapport before you ask for a connection. Once youve done that Or maybe you comment on an article, and now you connect, Anne, great article that you posted. I really enjoyed it, she knows thats true because you liked it, and you commented already, Would love to connect with you and explore ways we might be able to work together. And so youre relating that back to them. The next process after that is now they connect. And this is where almost everyone drops the ball is you need a welcome message. I have two welcome messages, one that asks for a phone call and one that just provides more value. So if Im not necessarily looking for a phone call with that person now but theyre someone that I want to nurture over time possibly, Ill say, Thanks for connecting on LinkedIn. Not sure if youre using LinkedIn for sales, but heres some templates Ive put together that might be helpful. And its one of the most valuable pieces of content I have. So if they are using it for sales, which kind of qualifies them in for me, then they download these, which I have a gatekeeper, so I know whos actually downloading them. And I bring them incredible value from the very beginning. Now, if I want a phone call, I can still share that. But Ill also say, Id love to set up a brief conversation to explore ways we might be able to work together. Heres a link to my calendar. So you got to take it all the way through the process. Even when you get there to that welcome note, youre only going get 3 out of 10, 2 out of 10 conversations. So now, youre connected to a lot of the right people, but you havent had conversations, you need to consistently nurture them over time and provide value. And so when the timing is right, they know that youre the vendor to call. What type of technology should social sellers be using? So the sales stack, that is such an interesting question. Its really hard for me to say blanketly what everybody needs. I will tell you what I use to answer that question. Its not nearly as comprehensive as if I were in, you know, a Fortune 1000 company with some of the huge tool opportunities. So Im going to tell you the ones that I use and that I love. So lets start with the CRM. So as a company, we use Salesforce. I love Nimble, its a social CRM that lives inside of my email and feeds in real time social interactions based on the emails that Im getting. So I get an email from someone. It matches it up to their Twitter and their Facebook and their LinkedIn or Instagram. And I can see real time what that person is talking about, and I can engage. Its very powerful. Next piece that I absolutely cant live without is Calendly. And its a simple $10-a-month calendar sync. So I can give a link to anyone, and they can get on my calendar. I use that everywhere, and that transformed my business. I use a couple of Chrome extensions. I use Text Expander, which is a free Chrome extension, where all of my templates live, so I dont have to retype or even copy and paste from somewhere. Its just short codes. You can do that on your phone too in short codes. Any smartphone has it. I feel I cant work without it, absolutely vital. And I could go on. I have a ton of other little extensions that are really powerful. Theres SalesLoft, which is the email cadence tool. Theres Octave, which is sort of a presentation tool that can help you identify whos opening your stuff and forwarding your stuff, and its a trackable. ClearSlide also, some great stuff. So theres so many. I can go on and on and on about the tools that are out there. But it really depends on what youre looking to achieve. So the last tool that I use every single day, of course, I have to say is PeopleLinx. And thats where PeopleLinx really helps, because PeopleLinx will remind the sales rep every day what they should be doing either on linkedin.com or Sales Navigator, so you dont necessarily miss opportunities, and youre making the most. Its like someone literally driving to your house, picking you up, and dropping you off in front of the gym. So we cant make you do it, but we can get you there every single day.
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