How to use Twitter to get 10 C-Level Appointments Per Week?—?A Case Study
Timothy "Tim" Hughes 提姆·休斯 L.ISP
Should have Played Quidditch for England
Using Twitter to get C-Level Appointments a Week
This blog is about how a sales guy is using LinkedIn and Twitter to get C-Level Appointments. People often say to me “Social Media is for teenagers, give me an example of where people are using Social Media to create, real, tangible, business.” Here is that example.
Paul @snapdragon_paul contacted me over @Twitter, he lives close to me, so we agreed to have a coffee. I was interested in his story on how he had saved £70,000 on recruitment fees by using Cloud and Social Media. We got talking, and Paul talked through his sales career (story was very similar to mine) and then talked about how he was using Social in his current sales role.
What hooked me, was when he told me he had made 10 C-Level appointments in a week! (Last week he did 12, but on average he reckons he can do 10). This blog will now share with you his secret.
Sales?—?Starting at the Bottom!
When Paul and I got our “big breaks” in sales we started from the bottom. Both of us had been given telephone directories and told to “call that”. There was no @LinkedIn, we didn’t know what a Value Proposition was, we knew nothing about how to conduct ourselves on the telephone.
Maybe it’s down to personality, but actually we were both pretty good at it. My view was, well I’m probably never going to meet these people, so if I make a fool of myself, who cares?
Cold Calling?—?Things have Changed
Paul then expanded on how over the last 20 years making cold calls had got more difficult. More voice mail, more gatekeepers employed to keep us sales people away from “Decision Makers”. There are many social selling articles written that you don’t need to make cold calls anymore, I’m not so sure about it, but it has got harder and harder.
How Do you Book C-Level Meetings using Social Media?
Paul started doing all the things I write about here from a social selling point of view. He set himself up with a buyer centric profile on LinkedIn and Twitter and started curating and posting articles that he thought would be interesting to his audience. The day before we met, he had got a C-Level meeting purely from an Infographic on LinkedIn. He showed me the dialogue on LinkedIn. As simple as that, decent content on LinkedIn and Bam! A Meeting. Anyway back to how he gets 10 appointments a week.
As all good sales professionals do, he researches his target accounts (no different than we have done for the last 30 years) but this time he does this in the social world of LinkedIn. (Paul and I both recommend you pay the subscription and get access to the Sales Navigator.) He researches the organisation, business issues, news items and executives and then looks for the people from the target account on Twitter. Paul, follows all his target accounts and the C-Level people he has researched on Twitter.
His usual, approach to a C-Level contact is “Noticed you were talking about XYZ have you considered this?” This, being some content that the contact will be interested in to drive the conversation forward.
He got a meeting with a C-Level Executive in the UK’s Post Office. There's a roll out of technology that this executive has responsibility for. Paul took a photo of this particular technology in his local Post Office and Tweeted to this individual “Great to see this technology being rolled out”, the Executive replied and they got into a dialogue. Paul telling the Executive he had a presentation that might be of interest. The executive then followed Paul back so they could have a direct message (DM) conversation. Paul shared the presentation.
Using Twitter Rooms?—?“Tag” Selling
With some good research and a degree of luck, Paul usually gets a follow back and then enters into a (DM) direct message conversation.
As with many sales organisations, Paul is a sales “generalist” so once he is in a DM conversation he brings in a colleague with specialist domain experience. He does this using Twitter rooms. He always asks permission to bring in the colleague. At the point the specialist is engaged, he closes for next action, which in his case is a meeting / appointment. He calls this tactic “shared Twitter Rooms” or “Tag Selling”.
Paul says he gets a far better response in Twitter room and says he never asks for the sale directly, by then there should be trust built between the two parties.
Results so far?—?10 C-Level Meetings per week.
Now I agree that maybe your product or service isn’t the same as Paul’s but you have to admit that using Social this way is pretty impressive, even if you got one c-level meeting you would be closer to doing your number, yes?
There’s One More Thing
He described this as “rolling out dough”. When you find a contact on Twitter, it will also suggest another three people that of a similar quality. This he says, provides a list of good quality suspects for you to follow up.
NB: While recently talking about this article to @desalescoach he said a common objection from sales people, was you need thousands of followers to make this work. At the time of writing @snapdragon_paul had 542.
I welcome comments and for your to share your own experiences in the blog comments below.
Part 2 of this discussion is to follow, where I share more of Paul’s social selling best practice.
Want to know how to stay relevant in modern selling?
If you're interested in a blueprint to help you in your move to digital and social then I recommend my book. “Social Selling - Techniques to Influence Buyers and Changemakers”. Written in a workbook style, it's designed to help you implement a digital and Social strategy across Sales and Marketing.
To pre-order follow this link to Amazon
About the Author
Tim Hughes is the founder of The Social Selling Network a company that provides support and guidance in all areas of Social Selling. He has been called "an innovator and pioneer" of Social Selling and in the recent Onalytica list of the most influential Social Sellers globally, Tim was named as number 1.
Tim can be contacted on Twitter @timothy_hughes where he has some 149,000 followers or [email protected] - You can find him at his blog The Social Selling Network
Should have Played Quidditch for England
4 年Eric Doyle - FISM ISTATOY
Founder @ GoDemandGeneration Inc. | Demand-generation strategy enablement
5 年Nails it!
Head of BTP AI at SAP | Empowering Leaders with AI-driven Innovation and Scalable Solutions
6 年Thanks for sharing :-) a very interesting story on strategy put in action. I think one very important thing not touched in that article is that you need to have good content that resonates with your audience. Isn’t it?
EMEA, US & APJ Director | Enabling companies to automate TDM & Synthetic Data with GenAI ??
8 年Niels Hoekman Emily Locker Anna S. ??????
Senior IT Consultant
8 年As a procurement specialist I'm on the other end of the cold calls. I agree that this might seem an unorthodox way for doing business, but in a word that is changing every day We need to adopt these new ways in order to stay successful. Great Story! Thanks for sharing