Some
book publicists and marketers operate almost exclusively by email, social
media, and texting. Many consumers and
members of the media prefer it that way.
But there’s still a place for good ol’ fashioned phone calls and because
some people use the phone far less often than a decade ago, any phone call
seems to stick out with far more greater impact.
So
what are the keys to good phone etiquette?
- Keep it short - no one has time for you to blab on.
- Only call people that you
cannot seem to reach any other way and are too important/valuable not to
call.
- Don’t bother leaving a
message; instead, try again at another time or on another day.
- Be a polite caller and a
good listener. No one wants a call
that comes on with blatant selling.
- If you get through to the
person you want, don’t ever put them on hold.
- Use the call to get their
attention for your emails or letters and leave the details in your
correspondence.
- Give them your best pitch
and then get a sense of their reaction, needs, roadblocks or desires.
- Get the recipient to agree
to an action step to click on a site, agree to receive a book, a promise
to respond to an email. It can be
step one of a two-part closing process – just get them to agree to do
something.
- Use the call to hear the
passion, conviction, sincerity, energy, and happiness in your voice. Let them fall in love with your phone
persona.
- Do not hound them or call
back repeatedly. You get one shot
to impress them.
How
you establish rapport with someone depends on who you are calling and the
subject matter but suffice to say asking how the weather is, flirting, or
expressing extreme or controversial viewpoints on unrelated topics is probably
not the way to leave a good impression.
Lastly,
even if they can’t see you, those whom you call can sense it if you are
smiling. Always smile and talk as if
someone is right in front of you.
Sometimes a friendly voice and a nice smile go a long way.
Brian Feinblum’s views, opinions, and ideas expressed in this
blog are his alone and not that of his employer, the nation’s largest book
promoter. You can follow him on Twitter @theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more important when discussed in the
third-person. This blog is copyrighted material by BookMarketingBuzzBlog 2012 ©
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