5 Voicemail Tactics That Will Get You More Callbacks

5 Voicemail Tactics That Will Get You More Callbacks

A ton of people ask me on a regular basis whether or not they should even leave voicemails any more since they almost never get a call back. My response is yes – as long as they are good ones. If you’re leaving ‘touching base’ and ‘checking in’ voicemails then don’t waste your time or the prospect’s. If your voicemails are targeted and state a reason for your call that includes some sort of relevant information or value then I would absolutely leave them.

Voicemails should be part of any overall contact strategy that mixes up calls, e-mails and other ways of getting your message in front of the right target prospect. If your contact strategy includes quality and relevant messaging each time then this increases the chances of someone responding. The prospect may not call you back from your voicemail but if they see (e-mail), hear (call/vm), and realize the different values of your solution then they may eventually reach back out. The question isn’t whether or not to leave voicemails, it’s how do you leave good voicemails?  Here are some things to think about:    

1. Don’t start with your name first

Every voicemail starts off exactly the same way: “Hi, this is John Barrows with XYZ company…”  The problem with this approach is that the majority of our voicemails get deleted right after this because the client either knows your company and therefore has a certain assumption about what you do or they don’t know your company and therefore probably don’t care. Start off your voicemails with “Hi Bill, the reason for my call today is…”  and then add in some sort of short value prop that focuses on getting their attention. The goal is to get them to pay attention to the value you bring instead of some preconceived notion of what you do. Then back it up at the end with “please call me back at 555-555-5555. This is John Barrows with XYZ company. 555-555-5555.” This is brutal to get used to but it works.

2. Keep them under 30 seconds

Anything over 30 seconds and it sounds like you’re trying to sell – and you fundamentally can’t sell your solutions in a voicemail. To practice, leave yourself a voicemail and time it to see how long it takes. Notice that by taking the approach outlined in point #1 you end up getting to the point a lot faster instead of wasting 5-10 seconds with your intro of who you are and where you are calling from.

3. Don’t sell

Again, you fundamentally can’t sell your solution in a voicemail so stop trying. Focus on getting someone’s attention with a compelling value statement about what you’ve been able to do for other clients like them. Prospecting is about getting someone’s attention and earning their interest. It’s about selling time or the next step, it’s not about selling your solutions. Aim for getting a response of “How do you do that?” as if it was a live conversation.

4. Don’t reference failed attempts

I hate when I hear reps leaving voicemails that start like this “Hi Sarah, this is John again from XYZ company. I’ve left you a few messages and am trying to reconnect to see if you’d be interested in…”  If I didn’t care the first few times, why should I care now?  By saying this you are automatically giving me the green light to delete your voicemail before I listen to the rest of it. You should always have a different reason for your call.

5. Be different

Almost every voicemail sounds exactly the same no matter what people are selling: “Hi Bill, this is John with XYZ company. We’re the leading provider of blah blah and I would like to set up a time to discuss your needs related to blah blah and see how we can help you achieve your goals…blah blah blah blah.”  No wonder people never call back. When cold calling, leaving voicemails, sending e-mails, you should always try to stand out in some way. A few ways to be different on voicemails include: By not starting with your name first; making people laugh (with business-appropriate humor); screwing up a voicemail and joking about it; being enthusiastic and positive; referencing some research you’ve done on their business that prompted the call. Whatever it is, just try to do something different and stand out. 

Good luck and happy selling.

Peter Kennelly, MBA

Manager, Product and Engieneering at T-Mobile

8 年

This advice is good for any voice mail you're leaving not just sales. Repeating your call back number is something I started doing a couple of years a go because I got tired of having to repeat the message to get the phone number.

回复
Andrew Barr

Cloud Security ?? ? | Enterprise Account Executive

8 年

Antoni Lauzer This guy has some pretty good stuff.

Russ York

Vice President - Commercial Lines Risk Advisor | Building risk management programs based on our clients' specific needs and goals.

9 年

I was just reviwing this myself.

回复
Afton Myers

HR Consulting & Recruiting Services

9 年

Joshua Corbin check this out. Some things we've talked about, some things we haven't, but all good tips!

回复
Josh Herrera

Owner at Joshua's Landscaping

9 年

Thanks for the advice !

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

John Barrows的更多文章

  • #MYPATH: How Getting Fired Was The Best Thing That Happened to Me in My Career

    #MYPATH: How Getting Fired Was The Best Thing That Happened to Me in My Career

    My introduction into a career in Sales was similar to a lot of people, I kind of just fell into it. I went to school…

    13 条评论
  • ChatGPT wrote this post for me about how Sales reps can leverage AI

    ChatGPT wrote this post for me about how Sales reps can leverage AI

    (this part was not generated by AI) I've been paying attention to AI ever since I got an e-mail in 2017 from a rep I…

    74 条评论
  • Would changing the word "privileged" to "advantaged" make a difference?

    Would changing the word "privileged" to "advantaged" make a difference?

    The power of word choice matters when you’re trying to get a message through. When my father passed away about a year…

    8 条评论
  • Let's Make this Happen!

    Let's Make this Happen!

    I don’t know about you, but I’m literally becoming sick and depressed about what is going on at our borders right now…

    11 条评论
  • Hey! Are you the Decison Maker?

    Hey! Are you the Decison Maker?

    We all know we need to find the decision maker early in the sales cycle but as much as we'd love to ask people straight…

    7 条评论
  • Launching the Make It Happen Community and You're Invited!

    Launching the Make It Happen Community and You're Invited!

    Earlier this week, I launched the Make It Happen community on Facebook. It's a group for likeminded sales professionals…

  • How I Made the Mental Shift with Social Selling

    How I Made the Mental Shift with Social Selling

    This post originally appeared in my Filling the Funnel blog. As a GenXer, when Social Selling hit the sales scene I…

    5 条评论
  • Make It Happen

    Make It Happen

    Today I want to share a little bit about why the tagline “Make It Happen” is so important to me and my business. Here’s…

    13 条评论
  • You want to be average? Stay average.

    You want to be average? Stay average.

    “You want to be average? Stay average.” That was a quote I said during an interview I did with SalesLoft at their…

    5 条评论
  • Why I think the phone will make a come back

    Why I think the phone will make a come back

    I’ve seen a lot of posts over the years about how cold calling is dead and the phone is dead in sales and I completely…

    14 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了