Written By: Colleen Francis
Current clients who refer you consistently to new business tend to stay clients for a longer period of time.
You will grow revenue more quickly and profitably by leveraging your current clients for referrals.
With referrals, you’re not taking any additional time with the sales process and probably less time to prospect, with results that are leaps and bounds better.
Accordingly, by simply switching to a referral-based sales process, your team will see a dramatic increase in their sales numbers. In this article, we will look at one effective way to gather internal referrals.
Internal referrals from a client to other buyers in their business such as to other buyers, divisions, or departments; and External referrals, introductions to friends, family, suppliers, vendors, and partners outside of their business. To find the best internal referrals start with identifying the key new contacts you want to meet:
Next, conduct a business review on-site with your client to meet these new contacts in a non-threatening way. At a minimum, you should be conducting them twice per year.
Business reviews are critical to internal referrals because they ensure you are in front of the client more often than the competition, building deeper relationships with increasing numbers of people and delivering them value beyond the expectations of the project.
A business review is NOT a sales meeting. And, this is precisely why it is such a great tool for referrals. Business reviews are your opportunity to have a value-based discussion focused on the client’s needs and interests in four areas:
Business reviews must be attended by your buyer, as well as any key stakeholders and project participants. This is also your opportunity to add new relationships by identifying people you have not met and inviting them to the business review.
You will find that it’s easier to both get new contacts to meet with you the first time and get your clients to refer you internally to other people when you are requesting they attend a group meeting.
Simply put, meeting in a group is less threatening than meeting one on one with a salesperson!
Treat internal referrals as something you obtain from clients as a rule—not as an exception. They are vital to growth.
Not only do they help attract new projects, but they also help you broaden your network and maintain customer loyalty.
Current clients who refer you consistently to new business tend to stay clients for a longer period of time.
They want to stay because their entire network is in your community and/or because you have become a high trust and pervasive supplier to their organization.
I suspect over the next years we will see an even greater disparity in results between making cold calls with and without referrals.
The perceived risks associated with buying from a stranger in the mind of buyers aren’t going to go away and as a result, people are going to be more prone to sticking with whom they know.
Referrals keep you in the “know and trust” category in the minds of buyers.
Colleen Francis
Colleen Francis, Sales Expert, is Founder and President of Engage Selling Solutions. Colleen Francis…
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