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Terrific Tips For Helping You Land A Student Summer Internship This Summer ore important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them.Whether you are experienced or not, there are several steps you can take to help guarantee the summer internship job you consider is right for you. First, you need to decide what type of work is most suitable for you. For example, are you interested in a fortune 500 company ? Or would you prefer a smaller company to work for? To decide, you may want to visit a few business in your area to get a feel for things. But Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottl CEO's are Linked to Their Supply Chains Yesterday I received a call from a financial planner named Richard doing a cold call. My policy is to always return those calls which help me to understand why I would personally benefit from doing business with a sales person. This one didn’t, so it ended up getting deleted.CEO’s are linking strategically into their supply chains. Their supply chain is the best place to make the most of CEO effectiveness in product needs, real savings opportunities, ultimate customer satisfaction and therefore shareholder value. New technologies, changes in asset provider capacities, transportation management options and difficulty in organizations overcoming paradigms are making the CEO’s involvement in This is what he said. “Hello, Scott. My name is Richard ______ and I’m with ABC Financial in Phoenix, Arizona. We do 401K’s for employers. My number is 480-555-1212. Please call me back.” That was it. Nothing compelling. No benefit for me in there somewhere. Nothing to incite me to return the call. The next time you are making a cold call and leaving a message for a prospect, consider these four steps in the call. First, state your name and your phone number first. The prospect usually has a pen in his or her hand when checking voice mail, so if you start with your phone number at least you’ll get on the list of people whose calls might get returned. Second, tell him what is unique about your firm. This sales person could have said something like “Our business takes the headache out of financial management for companies by being the sole outsource provider of employee investment programs. In other words, we do all the work, and make you look like a hero with your employees.” Within your unique selling proposition, or elevator speech, there must be a personal benefit for the end user. For example, when I leave a message for a sales manager for my sales training, I say “I improve sales performance of organizations by showing sales reps how to become more disciplined, more focused, and how to sell from the heart.” The focus of my USP is on them, not me. I start with their benefit, and then tell them how I do it. The personal benefit of your features is more important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them. Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottl Career Fairs Best Serve Everyone But the Jobless 5-1212. Please call me back.”Reading my Sunday newspaper yesterday reminded me of how Career Fairs do little to substantially increase local employment. It seems that no one is willing to say this, and a lot fewer are even willing to believe it, but I know it to be all but a fact.After spending 20+ years in the news business, and another 20+ years as a personal marketing specialist helping potential hires by writing upscale resumes, I can re That was it. Nothing compelling. No benefit for me in there somewhere. Nothing to incite me to return the call. The next time you are making a cold call and leaving a message for a prospect, consider these four steps in the call. First, state your name and your phone number first. The prospect usually has a pen in his or her hand when checking voice mail, so if you start with your phone number at least you’ll get on the list of people whose calls might get returned. Second, tell him what is unique about your firm. This sales person could have said something like “Our business takes the headache out of financial management for companies by being the sole outsource provider of employee investment programs. In other words, we do all the work, and make you look like a hero with your employees.” Within your unique selling proposition, or elevator speech, there must be a personal benefit for the end user. For example, when I leave a message for a sales manager for my sales training, I say “I improve sales performance of organizations by showing sales reps how to become more disciplined, more focused, and how to sell from the heart.” The focus of my USP is on them, not me. I start with their benefit, and then tell them how I do it. The personal benefit of your features is more important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them. Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottl 5 Proven Strategies for Filling Your Marketing Funnel Part 2 t least you’ll get on the list of people whose calls might get returned.This is the second of a two-part article on overfilling your marketing funnel and client pipeline.Last week we discussed that, in order to quickly fill your funnel and pipeline, you will want to have these 5 tools:1. Unique Selling Proposition 2. Attention-grabbing, memorized elevator speech 3. Client attractive website 4. Effective business cards 5. A “full practice mentalit Second, tell him what is unique about your firm. This sales person could have said something like “Our business takes the headache out of financial management for companies by being the sole outsource provider of employee investment programs. In other words, we do all the work, and make you look like a hero with your employees.” Within your unique selling proposition, or elevator speech, there must be a personal benefit for the end user. For example, when I leave a message for a sales manager for my sales training, I say “I improve sales performance of organizations by showing sales reps how to become more disciplined, more focused, and how to sell from the heart.” The focus of my USP is on them, not me. I start with their benefit, and then tell them how I do it. The personal benefit of your features is more important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them. Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottl The Three-Mile Radius , or elevator speech, there must be a personal benefit for the end user. For example, when I leave a message for a sales manager for my sales training, I say “I improve sales performance of organizations by showing sales reps how to become more disciplined, more focused, and how to sell from the heart.” The focus of my USP is on them, not me. I start with their benefit, and then tell them how I do it. The personal benefit of your features is more important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them.In last year’s animated film Shrek II, a giant gingerbread man steps on a building and sends all the customers scurrying across the street. The name of the establishment they leave and the one they run into is “Farbucks” – poking fun at the fact that an unending stream of patrons appears willing to pay four bucks for a cup of coffee.While it’s an exaggeration to say there is one on every corner, since 1992, Starb Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottl Customers Are People Too ore important than your features, and nobody cares what you do, only how that benefits them.Be more concerned with your character than with your reputation. Your character is what you really are while your reputation is merely what others think you are. --Dale CarnegieFor as long as I can remember, right up until when he retired a few years ago, my father ran his own appliance repair business. He was extremely good at it too. He had people calling him from all over the province to come repa Third, drop a name or two. Use Robert Cialdini’s principle of social proof in getting your calls returned. In his book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Cialdini explains the six reasons why people are influenced and puts them in the form of malleable principles. (For a free special report outlining those six principles, email me at scott@scottlove.com and I’ll send you the executive summary). “We work with organizations such as Pineapple Computers…” If you work with a competitor of your prospect, state that name in your voice mail. Remember that trust is a byproduct of rapport, and rapport is a byproduct of common areas of interest. By establishing a common bond with someone you have never even talked with before, you are leveraging the principles of social proof and rapport to increase the likelihood of a call back. Fourth, give them a time to call back, such as between three and five o’clock. This makes you sound busy, and if you are busy you are important. Bonus tip: Tell them that if you don’t hear from them by Wednesday (assuming it’s a Monday), then tell them that you will put another call in to them on that day. This keeps you from appearing desperate and increases the likelihood of a call back because that person knows that you are serious about talking with them. And if you every run across a guy named Richard in Phoenix who does financial planning, please forward this article to him. Copyright © 2004 Scott Love
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