I just
finished having a replacement furnace and
central air conditioner installed in my house.
The experience was such an adventure that I
thought I'd share it with you. I will
present the process from the consumer's
standpoint to reemphasize the need to reevaluate
your sales processes and training on
a regular basis.

Price Quotes
I decided to follow the conventional wisdom and
get three price quotes from area companies.
The companies I chose were the original
installer of the 20+ year old system, a company
that has a good reputation in the neighborhood
for quality service, and a company that
advertises at all of the local school functions.
All of the businesses I called are well
respected and have been around a long time. I
assume that they have developed their business
processes over time based on years of experience
and will be able to handle anything I need.
The first call
went to the local advertiser. I thought
that I'd give them a shot since they were
supporting the activities that my kids are
involved in at school. I called them in
the middle of a Thursday afternoon. The
phone was answered quickly and professionally.
I explained what I needed and they dropped the
ball. "I'll transfer you to the salesmen's
voicemail box. Explain what you want and
they'll get back to you". Since I had no
experience with the company and hate voicemail, I hung up.
The second call
went to the company that had originally
installed and serviced the system. Again,
the call was answered well. They took my
information and told me that the salesman would
call me the next day to scheduled the sales
call. He called the next day. I'm
optimistic.
The third call
went to the company with a good reputation
around 4:40 in the afternoon. The call was
answered after many rings. After my
explanation, I was told to call back tomorrow
because "None of the girls are in now". No
contact information is collected. If I did
not have strong recommendations on this company,
including a direct recommendation from within
NSPG, I would not have called them back.
The next day I called back and "the girls" were
in. They quickly scheduled the estimate.
As a
replacement for the first company, I called the
number from the web site of a well known area
company that supplied a third manufacturer's
systems. Was told to call their other
office which was closer to my location.
Again, no contact information is taken.
The other location quickly answered and
scheduled a sales call.

So, three out
of four calls could have ended with no contact
information collected. I had to call a
second time to two of the companies just to give
them my information. If I had not been motivated
by factors out of their control, they would have
lost any chance at my business. The third
company that dumped me into voicemail lost my
business. I'm sure that they don't even
know that they're wasting their advertising
dollars by their inefficient phone processes.
Only one
company out of four took my information on the
first call. If I had been like most
consumers, they probably would have gotten the
job by default. No one likes to chase you
for your services.
What can we learn
from this?
The big lesson from this exercise is that anyone
who answers your phones MUST get the potential
customer's contact information first. It
doesn't matter if you can schedule the sales
call right away. If you don't get the
information, the customer is gone. He may
call back, but why risk it.
So you say that your system
is designed properly. Are you sure that your phone
people are following that design? Training
and reinforcement of the value of the process is
paramount. You could be losing business
and never know it. You're paying big bucks
for advertising, so each lost customer costs you
money.
Some other
lessons learned from this experience:
- Local
advertising works. I called a company
that I never would have chosen through other
means. They dropped the ball, but the
ads worked. A $50 ad in a band or
track program gets them exposure to several hundred
potential customers.
- Word of
mouth recommendations are worth more than
any advertising. A reputation for good
work can sometimes help overcome problems
with your sales process.
- We're all
too busy keeping our business running to
"waste" our time and money on review and
training. Are lost sales costing you
more than review and training could ever
cost?
- The
consumer does not know anything about your
business. When he calls, he wants to
get your attention right away. Unless
you're the only game in town, he's going
somewhere else if you don't meet his
expectations.
Tune in Next
Month for the exciting saga of
The Estimates. |